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Andrea Peacock
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Its also about how barking dogs ruin the environment and health of all the neighbours. So many people cannot train a dog not to bark and some leave dogs alone which can bark whine and howl for hours if we cant evict tenants soon how will we deal with the complaints of really unhappy neighbours?
From:
Andrea Peacock
15 June 2022 11:50 AM
Also definitely no pets if any sort in an HMO i will sell mine if they insist
From:
Andrea Peacock
15 June 2022 11:40 AM
As long as the tenant takes time off work to allow maintenance access as my tradesmen will not go into properties where pets are present without owners there Dogs can attack them and cats sneak out as they get tooks out of vans etc Also dogs shut in small properties 24/7 increase condensation
From:
Andrea Peacock
15 June 2022 11:38 AM
In our area we have very few HMO s if this happens to me i will have to evict and sell immediately My tenants are lovely hardworking people on minimum wage initally i imagined the market would be for young people but now i find they are middle aged divorced women who mainly work in care and couldnt possibly afford to rent a flat or house even if there was one to rent. In Devon they are all holiday lets. The extra 100 ponds a month would kill them financially they have to run cars as no public transport to visit elderly clients in country villages Horrible to see really hardworking people at their lowest being pushed under
From:
Andrea Peacock
02 March 2022 11:17 AM
Shelter are part of the problem not the solution. Very few landlords remove a good tennant and the constant pressure on landlords and HMO owners is causing them to sell thus reducing the number of properties in the rental sector and pushing up prices and pushing landlords to seek guarantors which middle classes can provide but working people cannot always find a homeowner to back them Shelter should spend their money on building or renting property not high salaries for its execs
From:
Andrea Peacock
02 February 2022 10:02 AM
Adrian i totally agree. Approaching retirement if this onslaught of legislation continues i too will sell up and that really really wont help anyone who rents. In 30 years i have never let out a home not fit for habitation but clobbering good landlords for the sake of a minority of poor landlords will deprive the market of decent housing which is desperately needed. As a rural landlord my agent receives more than a hundred applications for any property that comes up to let, she has thousands on her waiting list in a small Devon town. The council has no available housing why are Shelter, the government, GR so hell bent on fixing the wrong problem?
From:
Andrea Peacock
01 February 2022 07:23 AM
Leading to homelessness none of my tenants in rural Devon would be able to buy especially when mortgage companies will soon stipulate that only properties banded C and above will be eligible for finance My properties will be sold to cash rich incommers as holiday homes adding to the existing housing crisis
From:
Andrea Peacock
05 November 2021 06:47 AM
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05 November 2021 06:47 AM