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Pandemic rent arrears: don’t drink in the ‘last-chance saloon’

Gerard Tomnay offers six reasons why it’s better to mediate than arbitrate your pandemic rent arrears.

By its own admission, the government’s Commercial Rent (Coronavirus) Bill is a last resort for commercial landlords and tenants to settle certain ring-fenced, Covid-related rent arrears (being those due under tenancies of business premises adversely affected by coronavirus and which were required to close from 21 March 2020 to 18 July 2021 (in England) or 7 August 2021 (in Wales)) before the extended moratoriums on landlord enforcement end. It creates a new binding arbitration process to settle the in-scope arrears and is expected to become law in March this year.

The accompanying Code of Practice (published 9 November 2021) encourages parties to settle all Covid-related arrears (even if not in scope) and use the new arbitration process for the in-scope ones only when they are unable to reach agreement. It recommends using a neutral third-party mediator to help the parties settle when negotiations fail or stall but it’s felt that a settlement could still be achieved.

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