A family of nine were evicted from their home today and moved into two separate flats by a council.

Lee and Katrina Parker, 42 and 40, and their seven children were allocated a four-bed property six years ago as ‘temporary accommodation’.

They lived happily there until the Tories introduced the Benefits Cap - leaving them unable to afford the rent and feed their family. Find out if you're affected by the cap here.

Just one week ago the family learned they were being evicted and today bailiffs drilled the lock on their front door and led the tearful Parkers from their home.

Brutal: Bailiffs force their way into Colchester property (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

Lee, Katrina and their kids Bradley, 19, Holly, 14, Autumn, 12, Stanley, 10, Honey, six, Bluebelle, six, and India, three, had faced living five to a room in a two-bedroom flat.

Only after the Mirror stepped in did the council housing team agree to provide them with a second two-bedroom flat.

Parker family (L-R): Honey, 6, Lee, Autumn, 12, Katerina, India, 3, Bluebelle, 6, and Holly, 14 (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

But despite the extra room, the family now face living apart.

Lee said: “We’re going to have to split our family across two flats - it’s far from ideal.

“Katrina will sleep in one flat with half of our kids and I’ll be in the other with the rest.

“We plan to meet up as a family during the day.”

Making exit: Lee and Katrina with belongings (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

The couple have been told they may be moved into a three-bedroom house in the next fortnight.

Lee added: “We shouldn’t have to fit our family into a tiny home in this day and age. We live in Britain, not a Third World country.

“The benefits cap introduced by the Tories is almost criminal. It’s just not designed for families as large as ours.

“All I want for me and my family is a home.”

Lee and Katrina were moved into the property in Colchester, Essex, in 2009 by Colchester Borough Council.

Around the same time Lee, who had worked at Asda for 13 years, was made redundant shortly after switching jobs.

Since then he has struggled to find work despite applying for hundreds of posts.

Difficult climate: Lee has been unable to find another job (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

Council workers promised the accommodation was only temporary while a more suitable home was found.

But the Parkers spent six years there and had to make do with sharing one shower among nine people.

Katrina said: “We have been living in limbo for the last six years - it’s been really difficult.

“They said they would find us a home within two years so we haven’t had the stability other people take for granted.

“Living without a bath has been tough - we are forced to bathe our younger kids in a plastic storage box.

“Some of the girls sleep three to a room and my eldest son lives in the room downstairs.”

Sadness: Lee with 12-year-old daughter Autumn (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

The rent on the £950-a-month property, which is privately owned, was initially paid for via housing benefits.

But in 2013 the coalition Government introduced a benefits cap of £26,000 a year per household.

This meant Lee and Katrina had to feed and clothe their nine-strong family, pay all bills and run two cars on £500 a week.

Covering the rent was impossible, so the council stepped in and met the bill with discretionary housing payments.

But these were suddenly halted last Autumn, leaving Lee and Katrina in a dire financial position.

Last Thursday the Parkers were informed they were being evicted and bailiffs arrived at 11am today.

Demand: Bailiffs at the door (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

Katrina says providing for her large family was a balancing act even before the Benefits Cap came in.

She said: “On a day-to-day basis it’s hard work, but it’s no harder than life for any other parent.

“They do look after each other and themselves to a certain extent.

“I should probably say it’s been difficult to survive on £500 a week but we are very responsible with our finances.

"The children wear second-hand clothes and shoes and we don’t ever drink, smoke, go out or have holidays.

“Our primary concern is the kids - they are gifted and talented, Holly’s currently doing GCSEs and she’s capable of As and A*s.

“Everything we have is spent on them.”

Time to go: Family will stay in two separate flats for now (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

Even the couple’s landlord wanted them to remain rather than be evicted.

Hayward Frost, 56, said: “I wanted to resolve this amicably but I couldn’t because the housing team wouldn’t engage with me.

“I don’t want to evict anybody but I’m being forced to because the council have stopped paying the rent.

“It’s a political thing to be brutally honest. It’s the benefits cap and it’s only going to get worse.”

Cruel: Tory benefit cuts hurt those who need help (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

Lee and Katrina made headlines last year after winning a court battle for custody of their granddaughter.

Their eldest daughter, who is aged 21 and does not live with them, could not care for India because of mental health problems.

The toddler was within 48 hours of forced adoption by strangers when the Parkers began their legal fight.

Following an 18-month battle they won custody in August 2013 after a top judge ruled in their favour.

Defiant: Family outside home after eviction (
Image:
Daily Mirror / John Alevroyiannis)

On Wednesday it was announced in the Queen’s Speech that David Cameron will reduce the controversial benefits cap further to £23,000.

Katrina said: “Our eviction is completely down to the benefits cap, it’s a disgrace.

“There are families like us across the country who have individual circumstances yet the rules don’t take that into account.”

A spokesman for Colchester Borough Council said: “We have helped Mr and Mrs Parker along with their family for a number of years.

“Due to their imminent eviction we have placed the family into one of our spacious temporary accommodation flats which has been agreed as suitable by Mr Parker’s representative from Shelter.

“Because of the size of the family we have had to make these emergency arrangements but this will only be temporary and we have identified another large property which will be available in a fortnight.”

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