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Sunday, 24 February 2013
Bedroom tax facts, myth and legends: why evicting households for bedroom tax arrears makes poor financial sense in Scotland
The debate on whether Scotland should introduce a 'No evictions for bedroom tax' policy is gaining widespread public support, with many councillors, some councils, MSPs and MEPs now backing the principle of GLC's Scottish Parliamentary petition. GLC is aware, however, that some people and politicians remain undecided about the workability of not evicting tenants for bedroom tax arrears, and that a number of assumptions and assertions are circulating against the principle of the petition, which can be summarised as follows:
Not
evicting someone for bedroom tax arrears will mean many people who can pay
won’t pay, which is unfair for those tenants who choose to pay, or are unable
to do so.
It would take several years to build up a sufficient level of
arrears before a social landlord considered going for eviction, so what is all
the fuss about?
It would be unworkable for a social landlord to separate
‘bedroom tax arrears’ from other rent arrears, and therefore not evicting
people for bedroom tax arrears cannot be practical.
Not evicting tenants for the bedroom tax will damage the
revenue streams of social landlords, make their business operations
unsustainable, and ultimately damage the interests of other tenants who do pay.
Accordingly, in the interests of well informed public debate, GLC is publishing a 'Bedroom Tax Facts, Myths and Legends' paper (opens as PDF)which explains the hard facts with reference to the relevant law, practice, and empirical evidence available in Scotland. We believe the facts overwhelmingly support the case for not evicting tenants for bedroom tax arrears in Scotland and hope that you will consider lending your support to our campaign by signing our petition here and tweeting and disemminating this post to a wider audience.
Why only Scotland? And if the HB goes direct to the tenant how does the landlord know what amount is for what. And can it change daily/weekly when the tenants makes a payment?
Why only Scotland? And if the HB goes direct to the tenant how does the landlord know what amount is for what. And can it change daily/weekly when the tenants makes a payment?
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