
Huge call on hated rental rule
The Residential Tenancy Commission (RTC) ruled Tasmanian tenants are only required to get on the tools if they leave the carpet in a worse state than when they began their lease.
It is understood the requirement appears in rental contracts 'all the time' as it is in the standard lease agreement provided to landlords by the Real Estate Institute of Tasmania.
The finding by the RTC reads: 'A tenant is not responsible for carpet cleaning performed as a matter of general practice as opposed to any real need or genuine failure of the tenant, in accordance with their obligations.' It is understood the requirement appears in rental contracts 'all the time' as it is in the standard lease agreement provided to landlords by the Real Estate Institute of Tasmania. Credit: News Regional Media
The Tenants Union of Tasmania represented the tenant regarding the Burnie property.
It said this was the first definitive ruling on the matter and was a legally enforceable decision.
'It really shines a light that a blanket clause in standard tenancy agreements that says you have to have premises professionally cleaned is invalid,' Tenants Union senior solicitor Andrew Smith told ABC News.
'A tenant has the right not to do it, if they've left it in the same condition as when they moved in and there's proof of that.
'So as always, tenants should take their own photos when moving in and carefully make any notes in any condition reports they (are) provided,' he added. The case which led to the ruling was over a 'small yellow stain' on the carpet of one of the bedrooms in a Burnie property. NewsWire / Andrew Henshaw Credit: News Corp Australia
'It is in the standard Real Estate Institute lease that almost all real estate agents will use and a lot of private landlords will choose to use, even some social housing providers are using these leases.'
The case which led to the historic ruling was regarding a 'small yellow stain' on the carpet of one of the bedrooms – which was not recorded in the ingoing condition report at the start of the lease.
No other photos of the carpet's condition were provided at the end of the lease period, with the commissioner ruling the tenant was only responsible for the cleaning of that one stain.
'Given the stain in question is very small … the owner is awarded $25 for carpet cleaning.'
The Real Estate Institute of Tasmania has been contacted for comment.
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The Advertiser
13 hours ago
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Mr Rockliff has declared he has a mandate to govern with the most seats, but Mr Winter hasn't ruled out relying on confidence and supply of the Greens to govern. Several independents have said they're open to backing either Mr Rockliff or Mr Winter as the state's next premier. With three-quarters of the count completed, Labor's primary vote has dropped 3.2 per cent to 25.8 - the lowest for the party in Tasmanian history. It came despite a massive swing toward Labor in the state at the May federal poll. The Liberals ran a campaign narrative of laying the blame for an early election at the feet of Mr Winter, after a Labor-led no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff was successful. "It may have been a case of 'we've given you a chance and rewarded you at federal level and now you want to be rewarded again?'," election analyst Kevin Bonham said of Labor's poor showing. Labor has been in opposition since 2014 and has struggled for traction despite ballooning net debt and infrastructure stuff-ups under the Liberals. The Liberals picked up a 3.2 per cent swing with a primary vote of 39.9 per cent, well away from their 48.7 per cent when they were elected in majority in 2021. One-third of the state didn't vote for the major two parties, with several independents increasing their support. The Liberals were plunged into minority in 2023 when two MPs quit to the crossbench. A snap 2024 poll delivered a hung parliament but Labor refused to govern. While it wasn't the end of majority government, it was now more difficult for the majors to get there, Dr Bonham said. A roughly 20 per cent cohort of voters who traditionally swung between the major parties in Tasmania had seemingly broken down, he said. Labor went to the election without big vote-getter Rebecca White, who has switched to federal politics, and popular ex-Speaker Michelle O'Byrne, who retired. 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It came despite a massive swing toward Labor in the state at the May federal poll. The Liberals ran a campaign narrative of laying the blame for an early election at the feet of Mr Winter, after a Labor-led no-confidence motion in Mr Rockliff was successful. "It may have been a case of 'we've given you a chance and rewarded you at federal level and now you want to be rewarded again?'," election analyst Kevin Bonham said of Labor's poor showing. Labor has been in opposition since 2014 and has struggled for traction despite ballooning net debt and infrastructure stuff-ups under the Liberals. The Liberals picked up a 3.2 per cent swing with a primary vote of 39.9 per cent, well away from their 48.7 per cent when they were elected in majority in 2021. One-third of the state didn't vote for the major two parties, with several independents increasing their support. The Liberals were plunged into minority in 2023 when two MPs quit to the crossbench. A snap 2024 poll delivered a hung parliament but Labor refused to govern. While it wasn't the end of majority government, it was now more difficult for the majors to get there, Dr Bonham said. A roughly 20 per cent cohort of voters who traditionally swung between the major parties in Tasmania had seemingly broken down, he said. Labor went to the election without big vote-getter Rebecca White, who has switched to federal politics, and popular ex-Speaker Michelle O'Byrne, who retired. The Liberals ran ex-federal MPs Bridget Archer and Gavin Pearce, who were both elected. Tasmania's politicians might need to get used to sharing power amid a falling Labor vote and crossbench rise. Incumbent premier Jeremy Rockliff and Labor's Dean Winter are courting the support of independents after Saturday's snap poll delivered another hung parliament. 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Herald Sun
16 hours ago
- Herald Sun
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