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Landlords accused of bullying, harassment and showing disrespect

The Tenant Farmers Association says its latest survey of tenant farmers paints a bleak picture of the relationships between landlords and tenants.

The survey concludes that many tenant farmers feel disrespected by their landlords or landlords’ representatives, often ignored and at worst harassed and bullied.

TFA chief executive George Dunn says: “it was particularly shocking to find that 30 per cent of respondents to the survey felt ‘bullied or harassed’ by their landlords and that this statistic rose to 37 per cent in dealing with landlords’ agents and representatives. 

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“Tenant farmers are entitled to the quiet enjoyment of their holdings, and it is completely unacceptable in this day and age for anybody to feel either bullied or harassed by their landlords or their agents. It is bad enough that 40 per cent of respondents felt ignored by their landlords and that 70 per cent of tenants responding didn’t even meet with their landlords on a regular basis. These metrics need to change without delay.”

Respondents to the survey were also given the opportunity to provide their own, free text comments. Over a quarter of those who responded chose to do so.

“Although, on the one hand, the statistics generated from the survey tell a sorry story by themselves, it was the scores of comments provided by respondents that really hit hard. They demonstrate just how difficult tenant farmers are finding their relationships with their landlords and with their landlords’ representatives. There is clearly a huge distance to travel before tenant farmers feel that they are being treated fairly, reasonably and with respect. Having been a member of Baroness Kate Rock’s agricultural tenancy working group, which received a raft of similar evidence, I am not surprised, but it is hugely disappointing” adds Dunn.

The survey was conducted by the TFA to feed into the call for evidence issued by DEFRA on the potential role for a new Tenant Farming Commissioner as recommended by the report of the Rock Review.

“There is no doubt of the need for both a robust Code of Practice for the landlord tenant sector and a new Tenant Farming Commissioner, as recommended by the Rock Review. There was almost a unanimous view from respondents that both initiatives would be massively helpful in improving landlord tenant relationships. 

“I very much hope that DEFRA will listen to these heartfelt views and doesn’t delay any further in taking the actions that are necessary to set relationships within the sector on a better trajectory.

“Although these results stem from a survey of a few hundred tenant farmers, they do indicate that there is a lot to do to reach the aspiration set out within the report of the Rock Review, which was to see a greater degree of collaboration within the landlord tenant sector of agriculture. Landlords and landlords’ representatives need to be more openhanded, available to meet and reasonable in their approach. Fairness and mutual respect must be the hallmarks of these relationships going forward” concludes Dunn.

 

 

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    I know of one..My ex landlord he's a real piece of scum but his day is coming.

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    Maybe his mistake was having scum tenants Sandra ?

     
    Peter Why Do I Bother

    Come on Sandy B, lets hug it out..!!!

     
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    i think you may be a very difficult person to get a long with. Perhaps your landlord did a good job but there was no pleasing you? People of benefits are usually unappreciative of everything. They get given money for free from others, but not a lot to live a life of luxury like their 'rich landlord'. They lack things to be proud of and have a low self asteem. Maybe you could try working, or perhaps some sort of therapy?

     
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    You were a tenant farmer? 🤔

    I don’t believe it, Sandra. They work very hard. 😂

     
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    Annoyed,

    It appears Sandra claims PIP benefits if you google her name. She aint no farmer. But she is fully up to date on what she's entitled to for doing nowt.

     
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    Are you a tenant farmer then? As that's all this article is about

     
  • Peter Why Do I Bother

    What has this article got to do with private landlords?

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    They never tell you the full story. Are the tenant farmers paying their rents, meeting their own responsibilities and obligations. It is always one sided story. We need to have full story or they should not publish. Farms is considered commercial properties, so have different obligations and responsibilities, so not same as PRS.

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    • S S
    • 07 February 2024 22:50 PM

    Landlords who rent to Tenant farmers are completely different to Landlords in the PRS.

    Tenant farmers have a right of succession, I believe for as long as a direct family member wants to farm the land. Locally, a tenant farmer was encouraged off the land so that it could be sold for a 2,000 house development. From what i understand his compensation to leave the land was substantial, but still hard for him to have to accept as he has lost his way of life, not just his job.
    But I know that the Landowner is a particularly unpleasant person to deal with.

    Landowners, the landlords to a tenant famer are not the same entity as a person who owns a single house which is privately rented.

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