The government suspended its evictions for a month after warning that temporary evictions would cause a “wave of homeless people”. The Department of Home Affairs, Communities and the City Council confirmed on Friday afternoon that the eviction will continue until September 20. The homeowner must also notify the tenant who wishes to move out 6 months in advance. This separate clause is valid until “at least March 31, 2021”.

However, conservative senior politicians warned that this move has not been very successful and proposed to extend the deportation ban until next spring. The plan to evacuate the United Kingdom is scheduled to resume on Sunday. It is estimated that approximately 227,000 private tenants and 174,000 tenants due in late June are in danger of being evicted by landlords or agents. The Scottish Government will increase the ban on full evacuation by March 2021 and in Wales, the new extension will also apply and require a period of six months’ notice for any exclusion. “I would like to wait until the spring season,” said former Conservative Cabinet Minister Lord Perkins. This, he said, would give the government some time to adjust so that the effects of the sanctions could be reduced. He told the BBC that by the end of the government holiday plans between now and the end of October, “it will be clear how many people have lost their jobs.” Many Tory MPs believe that he ended up on Cliff’s side this week as well. Labor leader Sir Keir Stammer, who asked the Independent for an extension earlier this week, said: “This eleven-hour extension was necessary, but such a short extension posed a real risk to be enough. Vegetarians need a few days in the neck. I’m ready. “

He added that the prime minister “warned a few months ago that an evacuation crisis was imminent, but washed his head” and urged the government to stop evictions as promised under Article 21. The Public Policy Research Institute (IPPR) also said the government should go further and extend the ban to six months. “Today’s announcement gives owners some space to breathe,” Said Luke Murphy, IPPR’s deputy director, “but we know they are more likely to be negatively affected by Covid-19.” Said. So far, the government is withdrawing support to private tenants sooner than landlords who are entitled to take out mortgages by the end of October. “The minister should ban evictions for the next six months to prevent an increase in the number of homeless people.” Liberal Democrats and Greens say expansion is not going well. Ha Char Singh charities welcomed the move, but said more needed to be done. Asylum Executive Director Polly Knight said the government avoids “shooting” the homeless, that “this short time should be used wisely to provide adequate protection for tenants.”

Reports continue this week on families affected by the economic epidemic, displaced families as a result of the lifting of the ban. But as long as the evictions are permanent, you are free of rent arrears, and the government will easily knock on the box, says London Tenants Association organizer Rent Azale Haken.” We have a lot of short-term expansion. It was a very difficult test. It has put pressure on tenants like me. The prize. “Pencil prices have been rising for decades; infectious diseases have reduced our profits and this decline has only just begun. One group that has been frustrated by the news is the National Association of Landlords, which has called the presentation “inappropriate.” The Department of Health and Housing has warned of a possible coronary heart infection if the government refuses to restrict housing rights in the UK on Sunday. In a letter to Home Secretary Robert Roberk, it is said that 16 medical doctors, including British hospitals, medical centers and the Royal University of Health, and our service providers are driving people out of their homes in search of overcrowding and homelessness. “It can help, support for Covid-19 has increased significantly.”

The group extended the ban to the government, demanding that “no one should lose money to homeless people due to Covid-19.” In March, landlords in England and Wales were banned from hijacking tenants and returning property after the coronavirus outbreak in the UK. The ban ends on August 23. According to Housing Singh Charity Shelter, 3 per cent of all private renters in England have in arrears in rent since the start of the pandemic and are at risk of eviction if the ban is lifted. “This is confusing and detrimental to families through government negligence and dismissal,” said Amina Gichenga, who brings the Newham tenant to the London Tenants’ Association. He added that lifting the ban would be more detrimental to the excluded community, as blacks, Asians and minorities work in precarious jobs that pose a particular risk. That was all. “Be prepared for more people to evacuate from your area, which will have roads without housing. It will not happen there, but it will grow, especially if the permit expires.” “They said, referring to the government’s employee protection Plan, the plan will end in October.

If the ban is lifted, British farmers will have less protection than Scotland and Wales. The Welsh government issued a notice to the farmers three months before the deportation was announced. Scotland proposes to extend the ban until March 2021. In addition to public health agencies, many charities, sports and labor parties have criticized the government’s plan to lift the ban. Shadow Housing Minister Thanjam Debonaire sent a letter to Generic on Tuesday urging a review. It is not possible to run one country from one problem to the next. If they fail the test cuts, the government should urgently addressed to avoid looga frustrations. “The Ministry of Housing and Local Government said it had “taken unprecedented steps to support tenants, prevent people from falling into the economic crisis and pay companies wages, which means they won’t.” the tenant lives in the house as a judge of the spread of the disease.” The MHCLG will provide more than £ 500 million to fight homelessness and poor sleep in 2020 and 2021, he said.