I was wondering If anybody could point me in the direction of some info on the law on rents and allotments.
For those with time/interest this is what's up:
Our small village allotment site has been much the same for years. Dozen or so plots, 50% occupancy and all for a pound a year and a share of the water bill. The fellow who ran it, had a tractor that he enjoyed driving although his interest and attentions have dwindled in the last year or two. I pushed a mower around once in a month. Things were pretty laid back, I think last time I was eventually billed after 3 years and still had change from £20. the only expenditure I can think of is a fella spent who a day fixing a wall a few years back, and also we all put in a tenner for two new standpipes.
So he's moving away and now another parish councillor lady has taken it on, she does have a small plot at the bottom of her adjacent garden. I saw an ad a couple of months ago offering plots for a fiver each.
Today, she bustles over saying that 'she doesn't know who's got what'. and how we 'had to formalise things'... So, I draw a map of established boundaries and tenants and pop it round, she mentions a mysterious unknown stopcock that shouldn't have been on during summer and that there has been a £250 water bill that the PC will meet. I gulp and mention the mysteriously increased rents in her advert and she says they'll bound to be going up, its not her and I should attend the next council meeting. I have spent the last three years extracting myself from commitees and village politics. But I do have to defend our rights and need to know if peppercorn rents can be increased 500% without notice and could they do the same again? The water leak won't help my negotiating position either. (also very irritating cos we're all frugal and it rained all summer) I need to know the law before I go anyway.
I don't want to appear mean here, but I think there is a principal to defend? This goes back to The Diggers revolt of 1649 and the General Inclosure Act (1845) which made the provision of allotments mandatory for the poor. (you may see why I don't get involved in public debates)
I fail to see what extra improvements we could really make if we pay a squid or a fiver! and is it a slippery road to £25 next year? is this land provided by the parish to the community, Is there nothing that is unprofitable left in this world?
For those with time/interest this is what's up:
Our small village allotment site has been much the same for years. Dozen or so plots, 50% occupancy and all for a pound a year and a share of the water bill. The fellow who ran it, had a tractor that he enjoyed driving although his interest and attentions have dwindled in the last year or two. I pushed a mower around once in a month. Things were pretty laid back, I think last time I was eventually billed after 3 years and still had change from £20. the only expenditure I can think of is a fella spent who a day fixing a wall a few years back, and also we all put in a tenner for two new standpipes.
So he's moving away and now another parish councillor lady has taken it on, she does have a small plot at the bottom of her adjacent garden. I saw an ad a couple of months ago offering plots for a fiver each.
Today, she bustles over saying that 'she doesn't know who's got what'. and how we 'had to formalise things'... So, I draw a map of established boundaries and tenants and pop it round, she mentions a mysterious unknown stopcock that shouldn't have been on during summer and that there has been a £250 water bill that the PC will meet. I gulp and mention the mysteriously increased rents in her advert and she says they'll bound to be going up, its not her and I should attend the next council meeting. I have spent the last three years extracting myself from commitees and village politics. But I do have to defend our rights and need to know if peppercorn rents can be increased 500% without notice and could they do the same again? The water leak won't help my negotiating position either. (also very irritating cos we're all frugal and it rained all summer) I need to know the law before I go anyway.
I don't want to appear mean here, but I think there is a principal to defend? This goes back to The Diggers revolt of 1649 and the General Inclosure Act (1845) which made the provision of allotments mandatory for the poor. (you may see why I don't get involved in public debates)
I fail to see what extra improvements we could really make if we pay a squid or a fiver! and is it a slippery road to £25 next year? is this land provided by the parish to the community, Is there nothing that is unprofitable left in this world?
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