The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Toronto is latest Canadian city to crackdown on payday lending outlets

- BY ARMINA LIGAYA

Canada’s largest city is the latest of a host of municipali­ties to crack down on payday lenders with bylaws to impose restrictio­ns on their business activities and rein in the number of physical locations.

Toronto City Council adopted new interim regulation­s last week that cap the number of physical locations allowed across the city and require operators to be licensed. That permit will cost lenders an initial $633, plus $309 to renew it annually.

The number of payday licenses will be capped at 212, which matches the number of provincial­ly-licensed locations already operating in the city as of May 1, according to Toronto’s municipal licensing and standards department.

Payday lenders are often a last resort for borrowers who would be otherwise be rejected for a traditiona­l bank loan. The crackdown is in addition to new regulation­s handed down by the province. The Ontario government decreased the cost of a payday loan from $21 to $18 per $100 in 2017 and dropped it again to $15 this year.

The loan rates still far exceed Canada’s criminal usury rate of 60 per cent interest when expressed annually, but because the loans are meant to be used to cover short-term expenses for a two-week period, the lenders do not express terms annually. However, many users end up carrying them for far longer than their next paycheque.

Toronto city councillor Kristyn Wong-Tam, who has long pushed for more restrictio­ns on payday lenders, said these businesses often prey on the most economical­ly vulnerable and trap them in a “vicious cycle” of debt with high interest rates that make it nearly impossible to repay the loan. A licensing system will give municipal officials more control, she added.

“Ultimately, what we want to do is reduce the number of payday lenders and try to cap some of the rates so people cannot be a victim of predatory lending,” she said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? People walk pass a pay day loan store in Oshawa, Ont., in May, 2017.
CP PHOTO People walk pass a pay day loan store in Oshawa, Ont., in May, 2017.

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