Housing association refused my application to run a business from home??
Comments
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Thank you for all your reply's and advice, i have already taken on board all the factors, registering,health and safety,health inspectors etc and spoken to the relevant professionals and they all seem to say its a shame your housing dept wont agree as i certainly would not take on staff,it would just be me but hey like one reply said, there are spiteful, jealous neighbours etc so thats my dream over.
I really can't afford to have a shop so back to the drawing board for me but once again thank you for all your advice.
Trying to better yourself just doesn't seem to work:(0 -
A friend had a similar issue, though with a private landlord rather than HA.
She found a local pub that used to serve food and had scaled back to just special events and Sundays and basically hired their kitchen from them during the week. I am not close to how much she actually paid them but she always claimed it was little more than providing them a few gateaux/ cakes to sell as puddings on Sunday.
Don't immediately roll over on your dream just because the first idea had a few issues0 -
OP you may want to remind your landlord that thier professional organisation, the Chartered Institute of Houisng has issued guidance that generally supports people working from home.
You can see the guidance, and perhaps send them a copy, at
http://www.cih.org/publication-free/display/vpathDCR//templatedata/cih/publication-free/data/Running_a_business_from_home0 -
OP you may want to remind your landlord that thier professional organisation, the Chartered Institute of Houisng has issued guidance that generally supports people working from home.
You can see the guidance, and perhaps send them a copy, at
http://www.cih.org/publication-free/display/vpathDCR//templatedata/cih/publication-free/data/Running_a_business_from_home
There's a big difference between 'working from home' and 'running a business from the property'
e.g. "there would rarely be a good reason to prevent a tenant from using their home as an office for an Internet or phone based business"
but the tenancy agreement "states no business's to be run from the property."While it is important to support and encourage tenants to run a business from home, there may be occasions when either permission if required is not sought or granted, or when the business activity breaches tenancy conditions. You must have a clear and documented procedure for dealing with these circumstances.
It is important to take appropriate action as soon as you know about a tenant running an unsuitable or unauthorised business from home.0 -
Working online and not doing anything that you would not do anyway as a resident is one thing - I do this myself - but actually storing stock, accepting deliveries etc. is something else.
There are no health & safety issues or inconvenience to neighbours if the freelance home work just consists of online research and producing documents, but there certainly may be if large scale cooking is involved.Who having known the diamond will concern himself with glass?
Rudyard Kipling0
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