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hatrack

(64,722 posts)
Sat Mar 7, 2026, 10:50 AM Saturday

Corrupt, Shit-Spilling UK Water Companies Sent 10s Of 1,000s Of Bailiffs For Unpaid Bills, Most For Less Than $1,000

Tens of thousands of people a year have bailiffs sent to their homes by water companies in England and Wales, data shows. Many thousands of these visits by debt collectors were for sums worth under £1,000, according to the data released by the House of Commons environment, food and rural affairs (Efra) committee. Bailiffs are debt collectors instructed by a court, who can seize items from those in debt, including electrical items, jewellery or vehicles.

It is a postcode lottery as to whether a water company would send a bailiff to a person’s home to recoup unpaid bills. While Wessex Water has not used bailiffs in 10 years, the water companies that made the most use of bailiffs in 2025 – adjusted for population – were South West Water, Southern Water and Yorkshire Water.In the financial year 2016-17, Yorkshire Water sent bailiffs to customers’ homes 405 times, but in 2024-25 there were 6,124 bailiff visits.There were also high peaks of overall usage by some companies. In 2022 Severn Trent instructed bailiffs 11,574 times, and in 2019 Southern Water instructed 15,707 bailiffs.

EDIT

The use of bailiffs by water companies that had been found to have broken the law themselves was unfair, the Labour MP John McDonnell said. He said: “Only five directors of water companies have been prosecuted in the last 30 years. Contrast that with the thousands of mainly poor people the water companies set the bailiffs on each year. “The system is more interested in prosecuting families that are struggling to pay their water bills than the company directors responsible for polluting our rivers and seas while lining their pockets from profiteering at the expense of both their customers and our environment.”

Some companies told the committee they were trying to focus the use of bailiffs only on those who could afford to pay their bills but chose not to. Water companies themselves are in a vast amount of debt, which critics have said has made it impossible for them to properly invest in infrastructure. Water companies in England and Wales are now in more than £80bn of debt. The companies are also liable for £200m of environmental fines for actions such as illegal sewage spills.

EDIT

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/mar/06/bailiffs-debt-recovery-homes-water-england-wales

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Corrupt, Shit-Spilling UK Water Companies Sent 10s Of 1,000s Of Bailiffs For Unpaid Bills, Most For Less Than $1,000 (Original Post) hatrack Saturday OP
This seems a primitive way of doing things. hunter Saturday #1

hunter

(40,616 posts)
1. This seems a primitive way of doing things.
Sat Mar 7, 2026, 01:30 PM
Saturday

Quick search says only 40% of homes have water meters in England and Wales.

I know what happens here in our city when people don't pay their water bill. The water company sends a burly guy out to turn the water off at the meter and lock it. Usually they are quite stealthy about it, preferring to avoid confrontations. Unpaid bills eventually end up as a lien against the property and the property can be red-tagged as uninhabitable. Cutting the lock off a meter or attempting to bypass it becomes a criminal offense. (With smart meters the electric companies have it even easier. They can turn the power off remotely and anonymously. No need to send someone out.)

Sewers can't be shut off for obvious health reasons which is why most landlords pay that separate bill as part of the rent. Properties can accumulate some fairly hefty liens before any action is taken.

That's my understanding of it, anyways, having suffered through times and couldn't pay my bills, and having worked in my youth for some pretty sketchy landlords. ( I would not like to be a landlord. )

Maybe it's set up that way here because we are a violent nation.

England privatized it's water and sewer systems expecting the new owners would modernize them. Instead, these new owners sucked all the money out of these systems they could, leaving the water and sewer systems in a decrepit state and burdened with loans.

Vulture capitalism at its finest... leaving the community to deal with the mess.




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