Here is one that has been bubbling away for the past 4 years, I will try and be brief.
A young lad is living in emergency housing after finding himself homeless in unfortunate circumstances. The local authority help him into accommodation and ensure that he is receiving appropriate benefits, this relies on his signing on to ensure that they receive their payments from the DWP in housing allowances and that he is eligible for council tax relief. All going well.
Now the young lad fails to sign on, this happens a few times so his benfits stop. Since the benefits stop he goes into rent arrears and becomes liable for council tax which also goes into arrears.
The authority sends out a housing officer, he meets with the lad, sees that he is struggling in abject poverty and living with no heating or light, they escort him to the bank to prove that he has no funds demonstrating that he can't meet any of his bills. No help initiated from social services.
Two months later the lad arrives home to find his locks changed, he has been evicted. There had been notices issued but the lad had not been reading his mail. His furniture (mostly donated by relatives) and his clothes have been seized. The boy is on the street.
His parents find out what has happened through word of mouth. They take the boy back in at home.
One month later the lad is diagnosed as autistic. The local authority are notified but they are only interested in having their debts paid. They refuse to return his property it has effectively been held hostage. Estimated value fo the "debt £800", replacement value of the property and clothes £2,000.
The young lad is forced to move to another authority where he secures supported accommodation due to his disability.
Four years later the first authority are still chasing their "debt". This means that now if the lad wanted to move back to his "home area" he cannot do so because they would not entertain this problem tenant despite his identified needs.
How does this stand legally?
A young lad is living in emergency housing after finding himself homeless in unfortunate circumstances. The local authority help him into accommodation and ensure that he is receiving appropriate benefits, this relies on his signing on to ensure that they receive their payments from the DWP in housing allowances and that he is eligible for council tax relief. All going well.
Now the young lad fails to sign on, this happens a few times so his benfits stop. Since the benefits stop he goes into rent arrears and becomes liable for council tax which also goes into arrears.
The authority sends out a housing officer, he meets with the lad, sees that he is struggling in abject poverty and living with no heating or light, they escort him to the bank to prove that he has no funds demonstrating that he can't meet any of his bills. No help initiated from social services.
Two months later the lad arrives home to find his locks changed, he has been evicted. There had been notices issued but the lad had not been reading his mail. His furniture (mostly donated by relatives) and his clothes have been seized. The boy is on the street.
His parents find out what has happened through word of mouth. They take the boy back in at home.
One month later the lad is diagnosed as autistic. The local authority are notified but they are only interested in having their debts paid. They refuse to return his property it has effectively been held hostage. Estimated value fo the "debt £800", replacement value of the property and clothes £2,000.
The young lad is forced to move to another authority where he secures supported accommodation due to his disability.
Four years later the first authority are still chasing their "debt". This means that now if the lad wanted to move back to his "home area" he cannot do so because they would not entertain this problem tenant despite his identified needs.
How does this stand legally?
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