Today the Ministry of Justice has
released the latest Mortgage and Landlord Possession
statistics, covering July
to September 2021. The statistics cover the first full
quarter since the ban on bailiff enforced evictions ended in
England (31 May). The ban in Wales ended on 30
June.
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There were 4,853 landlord
possessions across England and Wales in this
quarter.
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This is a 207% increase
compared to the previous quarter (when there were
1,582 possessions), but 35% lower compared with the
equivalent quarter in 2019, before the
pandemic (when there were 7,453
possessions)
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There were 10,202 possession
claims issued, with more possession claims from private
landlords (4,373) than from social
landlords (3,681).
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Mortgage repossessions by bailiffs have
increased by 756% since the previous
quarter, from 45 to 385.
Jon Sparkes, chief executive of Crisis,
said: “These figures
make clear how damaging it was for the UK government to end the
eviction ban without providing sufficient support for renters who
had built up arrears in the pandemic. More and more
people who lost their jobs and had their lives
turned upside down are now being forced into
homelessness. As more cases make their way through the
courts, we sadly expect this to increase further
still.
“Last month the UK government did
announce a winter support package of £65m for
renters but with a million in arrears, it falls well
short of the £270m that is needed.
“The real people behind these
statistics have been left to bear the brunt of this piecemeal
support, as cost of living is rapidly increasing
and temperatures dropping. Seeing more people face
homelessness is simply unacceptable. To tackle homelessness
before it happens, we need to prevent people falling into
arrears in the first place and that must include unfreezing
housing benefit so it covers the true cost of
renting.”
-ENDS-
Notes to Editor
In August 2020, Crisis and other leading organisations
representing tenants and landlords urged the UK
government to deliver a £270m package of emergency grants and
loans to help renters who have lost income or been furloughed in
the pandemic. In March 2021, the Housing, Communities and Local
Government Committee said a package of £200-300m
would likely ‘save the Exchequer a substantial amount in
homelessness assistance’ due to the number of potential evictions
prevented.