The tenant campaign group's generated rents claim that introducing rent management is “common sense.”
In a move to copy Scotland, the group looks at the UK rent cap and hopes to prevent landlords from increasing unchecked rent levels.
In the new “Mission Statement,” Generation Rent also calls for additional measures to prevent tenants from leaving.
Not enough
The group says it is a tenant rights bill that has progressed through Congress.
“Therefore, limiting rent increases is common sense and is already happening in Scotland and many similar countries overseas.
“Therefore, it's “unfortunate” that the government didn't proceed with the amendments to introduce a rent cap within tenants to limit the amount the government can raise tenants' rent,” Generation Rent said. Masu.
The short-term rent cap in Scotland, introduced to help tenants deal with living costs, will end on March 31.
However, the Scottish government is currently consulting on new caps in some regions. This forms part of the upcoming Housing (Scottish) bill and will come into effect in 2027.
The impact of eviction
Based on the eviction, Generation Rent said: “The long-term strategy should focus on the immoral, legal and illegal effects, and take steps to prevent evictions from enforcing debt, poverty or homelessness.
“If we can't complete the eviction, it's a time when tenants are compensated for movements outside our control,” it says.
Landlords who fail to comply with the standards will need to refund their rent and face serious penalties and bans from orders. ”
“The minimum standards for private rental housing vary across the UK, and councils across the country don't have the resources to stop landowners from renting unsafe homes to live in.”
And the group asks that “landlords who fail to comply with the standards must refund rent to tenants and face serious penalties or bans from orders.”
Here's a detailed description of the rent for generations.