Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'may'.
-
Opus Energy Limited (May 2011) Investigation into the reporting under the Renewables Obligation (RO) by Opus Energy Limited Ofgem is investigating Opus Energy Limited’s compliance with the requirements under the RO for the reporting of electricity supply data to Ofgem. The RO Orders for England and Wales and for Scotland, which are or were in place at the time to which this investigation relates, require electricity suppliers to report to Ofgem, by 1 July each year, all electricity supplied to customers during the preceding compliance period (from 1 April to 31 March).
-
Hello, I'm new to this forum, I have an eviction date for the 30th of May! My lender holds an outright possession order which they obtained in 2008. I agreed terms with them at that time and the order was suspended. I continued to pay the mortgage but from time to time slipped into arrears again, but also managed to agree terms with the lender and carry on with my payments. In February 2011 my lender served me with yet another eviction notice but I filed an N244 to ask the judge to allow me and children to stay. This was agreed and a suspended possession order granted (and the original order varied on the basis that I make the mortgage payment and pay £100 towards the arrears). I kept up with this payment until December 2011 and have since fallen back into arrears again. My lender has now sought to enforce the original order granted in 2008 and we have an eviction date of the 30th. I feel I have no defence as I have not kept to the terms of the suspended order and I don't know what to do now to stop the eviction. In desperation last week I contacted a charity called Homeowners Rescue Advice Centre who assured me that they would be able to help. After delaying the case, I finally pinned them down today only to be told that they couldn't deal with the case and was referring it to a fee paying company that they normally use called Homeowner Management Service. These people called me and confidently told me that they could take my case on and with their success rate I will be able to stop the eviction. What they said they would do is to write a letter to the judge and based on that alone the judge would be sympathetic to my plea, for this they wanted an upfront fee of £650. Ofcourse at this point alarm bells started ringing and I decided not to go ahead with them... so here I am now back to square one but with less time than I started off with and I still have no idea of what to include on my N244 form that I have to submit to the court by 10.00am in the morning. Can anyone please help????