This is the best summary I could come up with:
It’s a bit dishevelled – missing tiles, cracks, a hole in one of the doors that leads to a backroom they are not allowed to use – but they want to stay on for a few months before moving to Queensland while Brock sorts out his mother’s estate after her death late last year.
“We’re working through the complexity of reforms to end no-ground evictions carefully because renters deserve better than changes that risk unintended consequences, like higher lease turnover or less supply,” Chanthivong says.
Tenancy advocates argue that the existence of no-grounds evictions means tenants may hesitate to ask for repairs in case they are seen as unreasonable.
Leanne Pilkington, the president of the Real Estate Institute of Australia, says there are strong protections in every state and territory against unreasonable evictions.
After years of problems with the plumbing at her Launceston rental, Katrina Cook asked the council to check the sewage smell.
“The power imbalance between landlords and tenants and the lack of supply means that in many cases renters would rather put up with unhealthy homes than demand the repairs needed.
The original article contains 1,139 words, the summary contains 184 words. Saved 84%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org 7 months ago
As much as no-reason evictions are bullshit, don’t let them convince you that any reason is a good one. Even the landlord wanting to move in should not be reason enough. These are people’s homes already.
Zagorath@aussie.zone 7 months ago
I’m going to be honest, I don’t agree. I think our laws currently go far, far too far in favour of landlords, but this is one place I would draw the line.
The idea that “end of a fixed-term lease” is currently a valid reason is fucking gross, and basically acts as a loophole around every other protection we could possibly put in place. End of a fixed-term lease is “no grounds”, as far as I’m concerned. But if they own a property and want to move in, assuming it’s done with sufficient notice (including not being before the end of any existing fixed-term lease, as well as a certain number of months in advance), they should be allowed.
For example, what if they used to own two places, decided it was more work than they cared for, and are going to sell the one they currently live in. As a renter’s rights advocate, that’s a scenario I have often said is what should happen, rather than them putting up the price of rent constantly or failing to continue to maintain the rental property. Maybe they’re downsizing and decide they’d rather move in to the one that currently is rented out. I think they should be allowed to do that. Or alternatively, what if they live here and own property, then decide to move overseas for work for a period of 5 years. For that duration, they want to rent out their property. It’s not long enough that selling makes sense, but it’s far too long to leave vacant entirely (or it should be too long to leave vacant, under good housing laws). The last thing we want is to encourage a position where that person is going to leave their house empty for 5 years, reducing the effective supply of housing.
It’s absolutely critical that people not be allowed to exploit this. If moving back in, there needs to be a minimum amount of time before they can rent it out again (I’d start the conversation at 24 months), and “changing their mind” is absolutely inexcusable. But if they genuinely do want to move back in, let them.
DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org 7 months ago
Thanks for the considered reply. I think we can agree that it’s a difficult balance between the incompatible interests of two parties who both want to live in one place. Maybe my take is too extreme, I’ve just seen enough of disadvantaged people getting the short end of the stick.
In Aussie society, we tend to treat housing like other property, where the owner has ultimate control albeit bound by a contract and (IMO weak) renter protections. My view is housing is in a fundamental way a class of its own and should lean towards the resident who has the real interest in it rather than the owner who has a financial interest. That’s not to say the owner should be at the mercy of a bad tenant who is damaging the property or anything–the rules around upkeep and maintenance are not too bad. But around decisions of who gets to live there, the bias should be towards the person who has made it their home. If the owner wants to live somewhere else, then they can find somewhere else that’s available. They would even get the benefit of the timing being on their own terms, unlike an evictee. I’m sure there would be social and economic impacts from that.
Anyway, I want to take a minute to praise the landlords that provide longer than required notice and any other assistance to the tenants they evict. Landlords aren’t all bad, it’s just a system that needs change.
quoll@lemmy.sdf.org 7 months ago
i read in canada the new owner has to honor your lease
Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone 7 months ago
A lease is a lease and when its upnits up to the owner not the renter.
Sure it sucks but thats the way it is.
Think of it the other way. You own the house and mortgage is 400 a week.
You rent it for 400 and pay nothing extra beyond repairs etc.
Then mortgage goes up 100 dollars a week because locked in rates change.
Why shouldn’t you pass on the cost? The renter now lives in a house that costs 500 a week to live in, so they should pay the cost.
DarkDarkHouse@lemmy.sdf.org 7 months ago
Which section of society needs more help, renters or investors? Let’s say you pay off your rental property and it now costs you $100 per week. Let me guess, for some reason you can’t lower the rent.
breakingcups@lemmy.world 7 months ago
Because you, as a business owner, took that risk. Mortgage could have gone down too. It’s not the renter’s problem nor fault.