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We live in a house, that is owned by a Housing trust (funded by Housing Assocation) & also registered as a charitable organisation.
We have lived here for eleven years now.
Before taking occupancy of this House, we lived under the borough of Kensington and Chesea, where my Mum was a secure tenant for 28 years.
I looked at the tenancy agreement for this place, that was signed in 1996, and it states 'assured tenancy' albeit a law book I read today states :
'The tenant of a regstered Housing asscation has a secure tenancy, exactly the same as Council tenants.'
I was 10 when we moved in here in early 1996, so I have lived here over half my life ...I am now 21.
My Mum is hoping I can get a place nearby, and is helping me all the way.
I need to move out....
Albeit Mum's name is the sole tenant, have I any rights to ask our Housing Trust, to re home me locally.
Naturally when we all moved in, I was part & parcel of the Family, & albeit I am not known as tenant, do I have any right

2007-05-18 23:42:34 · 3 answers · asked by susan8589 3 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

Hi, thank you for answers so far, it is a good point in Law, I think, it is like when say 5 students share rented house,but naturally only one is on tenancy agreement... what happens to the other 4 if that one moves out?

burning brightly,
how would we go about asking the housing trust to alter and supply a new agreement with both our names as tenants on.
OR can anyone else explain this to me,as this sounds a good way. As if my Mum took a Partner, he would succeed to tenancy, even if it is assured, as Mum is sole assured tenant. But Mum wil not marry again.... any more advice plase and is itwe are assured or secure tenants/thank you I WISH i could vote all of you as best
Thank you again

2007-05-19 01:00:54 · update #1

3 answers

You don't, have much of a claim but you and your mother together may be able to have the housing trust people alter and supply a new agreement with both your names as tenants.~~

2007-05-18 23:48:27 · answer #1 · answered by burning brightly 7 · 1 0

After so long and at your age, I guess it mostly depends on
your social,work, and economic state to qualify for certain
schemes.Wonder under what category you guys first moved in in order to ask for re-homing of individual members,unless
there could be some state legislature which I am not too sure
of.
I am sorry if I have contemplated wrongly but your question
certainly gave opportunity to learn some rights.Good luck.

2007-05-19 00:09:21 · answer #2 · answered by BAYANT S 1 · 1 0

Cant say I know english law but it would seem the rights are with your mother and with her being alive they would not pass along to you for any reason.
I could be wrong but are you disabled in any way?
This also could affect your eligiblity, are you working and this is subsidised housing?
In America without children at your age you would be out of luck.
But good luck to you, it hard to not know if you have a home or not.

2007-05-18 23:51:14 · answer #3 · answered by Jack L. W. 3 · 1 0

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