Joe315 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 18, 2024 5:49 am
Daily Express bot wrote: ↑Thu Jan 18, 2024 5:31 am
Joe315 wrote: ↑Wed Jan 17, 2024 10:43 pm
Like you've not blamed spellchecker before.
Unsaleable flat ?
I'm sure someone will buy it
Unlikely to be a Scumlord like you though.
Only person who can buy that will be a cash buyer not reliant on a loan . Likely to be someone who wants a Buy To Let Investment. I have seen them go for a lot less that that in there though as it is such a poorly maintained block. You sound very bitter about private landlords for some reason you are not disclosing. You cannot accept that they play a very important role in supporting the local authorities house those they have a duty to accommodate .
Waltham Forest Council have a good working relationship with Private Sector Landlords, Landlords have Licenses and attend Seminars and gain Accreditation.
Waltham Forest also offer various grants to Private Landlords to improve their accommodation for tenants. The Council would hardly offer grants if Landlords were ‘scum’.
Grants such as these;
https://www.walthamforest.gov.uk/guidan ... 20services.
You can continue seething and being venomously envious but why not try and just improve your lot and feel better in yourself? I am always willing to offer advice and guidance as I know things.
Envious not a chance. Councils offer to do up places because scumlords won't cut into profits. Earn some money by graft rather than benefit from others Misery.
You are either trying to antagonise me or are really showing your ignorance about the subject. If the latter, I feel really excruciatingly embarrassed for you.
I can reliably inform you that there are thousands of very satisfied private tenants out there who have an excellent relationship with their Landlord and mutual respect for each other and would find your bluster so far from the truth. There are all kinds of private Landlords. The ‘accidental’ one property Landlord who finds themselves with a flat say spare by inheritance possibly or have bought elsewhere with a partner and cannot sell their former home so decide to rent it out.
There are medium sized Landlords with say 10 to 100 properties and then there are the larger Landlords with several hundred. The larger one are a big business employing people. There will be a few bad apples like everything else but it is really difficult to be a bad Landlord these days as the penalties can be vast including:
Having property seized by councils who will manage them.
Having rent seized and fined multiple times the amount.
Being banned from being a Landlord.
Your adversity to private landlords may have been appropriate in the ‘Rachman’ years of the 1960’s but not in 2024, far too many saveguards thankfully with Licensing Regulations which ‘police’ the pitfalls you allude to.