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<blockquote data-quote="Hyaenidae" data-source="post: 31214328" data-attributes="member: 530392"><p><strong><span style="font-size: 18px">While the Protection of Occupants Bill safeguards tenants, the overall reform significantly benefits landlords by removing the "life-long" tenancy trap of the old Rent Act.</span></strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>Under the old law, once a tenant moved into a "rent-controlled" premises, they were protected by two main mechanisms:</p><p></p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>The "Statutory Tenant" Status:</strong> Even if the written lease ended, or if there never was one, the person remained a "statutory tenant." They couldn't be evicted as long as they paid the <strong>Authorized Rent</strong>.<br /> <br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>The Rent Freeze:</strong> The "Authorized Rent" was calculated based on property assessments from decades ago (often the 1970s). In many cases, tenants were paying <strong>200 or 500 LKR a month</strong> for houses that should have been renting for <strong>50,000+ LKR</strong> in today's market.<br /> </li> </ul><h3>Why it was a "Trap"</h3><p>The law was so skewed in favor of the tenant that it created several unintended consequences:</p><p></p><ol> <li data-xf-list-type="ol"><strong>Inheritable Tenancy:</strong> If the original tenant passed away, their spouse or children could often claim the right to stay under the same protected status. This meant a landlord could lose control of a family home for <strong>two or three generations</strong>.<br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol"><strong>The "Reasonable Requirement" Hurdle:</strong> To evict a tenant, a landlord had to prove to a court that they "reasonably required" the house for themselves or their family. However, if the tenant could prove that an eviction would cause them <em>more</em> hardship than the landlord, the court would usually let the tenant stay.<br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol"><strong>Zero Maintenance:</strong> Since landlords were receiving almost no rent, they stopped maintaining the buildings. This led to "slum-like" conditions in prime areas of Colombo and Kandy, as landlords had no financial incentive to fix a roof for a tenant paying the price of a loaf of bread in rent.<br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ol"><strong>Property Devaluation:</strong> You couldn't easily sell a house with a statutory tenant in it. Buyers knew they might never be able to move in, so these properties were often sold for 30–40% of their actual value just to get the headache off the owner's hands.<br /> </li> </ol><h3>How the 2026 Bills Fix This</h3><h3></h3><p>The <strong>Rent (Repeal) Bill</strong> presented this month is the "escape hatch" for this trap. By repealing the 1972 Act:</p><p></p><ul> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>The "Statutory" status is being deleted.</strong> After the one-year grace period, tenants can no longer hide behind the 1972 Act to stay indefinitely.<br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>Market Reality:</strong> Landlords can finally charge what the property is actually worth.<br /> <br /> </li> <li data-xf-list-type="ul"><strong>Clear Exit Paths:</strong> If a landlord wants their property back, the law will now prioritize the <strong>written agreement</strong> over the "hardship" of the tenant.</li> </ul></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hyaenidae, post: 31214328, member: 530392"] [B][SIZE=5]While the Protection of Occupants Bill safeguards tenants, the overall reform significantly benefits landlords by removing the "life-long" tenancy trap of the old Rent Act.[/SIZE][/B] Under the old law, once a tenant moved into a "rent-controlled" premises, they were protected by two main mechanisms: [LIST] [*][B]The "Statutory Tenant" Status:[/B] Even if the written lease ended, or if there never was one, the person remained a "statutory tenant." They couldn't be evicted as long as they paid the [B]Authorized Rent[/B]. [*][B]The Rent Freeze:[/B] The "Authorized Rent" was calculated based on property assessments from decades ago (often the 1970s). In many cases, tenants were paying [B]200 or 500 LKR a month[/B] for houses that should have been renting for [B]50,000+ LKR[/B] in today's market. [/LIST] [HEADING=2]Why it was a "Trap"[/HEADING] The law was so skewed in favor of the tenant that it created several unintended consequences: [LIST=1] [*][B]Inheritable Tenancy:[/B] If the original tenant passed away, their spouse or children could often claim the right to stay under the same protected status. This meant a landlord could lose control of a family home for [B]two or three generations[/B]. [*][B]The "Reasonable Requirement" Hurdle:[/B] To evict a tenant, a landlord had to prove to a court that they "reasonably required" the house for themselves or their family. However, if the tenant could prove that an eviction would cause them [I]more[/I] hardship than the landlord, the court would usually let the tenant stay. [*][B]Zero Maintenance:[/B] Since landlords were receiving almost no rent, they stopped maintaining the buildings. This led to "slum-like" conditions in prime areas of Colombo and Kandy, as landlords had no financial incentive to fix a roof for a tenant paying the price of a loaf of bread in rent. [*][B]Property Devaluation:[/B] You couldn't easily sell a house with a statutory tenant in it. Buyers knew they might never be able to move in, so these properties were often sold for 30–40% of their actual value just to get the headache off the owner's hands. [/LIST] [HEADING=2]How the 2026 Bills Fix This[/HEADING] [HEADING=2][/HEADING] The [B]Rent (Repeal) Bill[/B] presented this month is the "escape hatch" for this trap. By repealing the 1972 Act: [LIST] [*][B]The "Statutory" status is being deleted.[/B] After the one-year grace period, tenants can no longer hide behind the 1972 Act to stay indefinitely. [*][B]Market Reality:[/B] Landlords can finally charge what the property is actually worth. [*][B]Clear Exit Paths:[/B] If a landlord wants their property back, the law will now prioritize the [B]written agreement[/B] over the "hardship" of the tenant. [/LIST] [/QUOTE]
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