Toronto Star

City slammed on rooming house rules

Legalizati­on would allow regulation, councillor says in wake of fatal fire

- BRYANN AGUILAR STAFF REPORTER With files from Vjosa Isai and Fatima Syed

The lack of regulation of rooming houses in several neighbourh­oods across the city where many students attend college or university is a result of years of political inaction caused by public opposition to the dwellings, a city councillor says. Ward 14 Councillor Gord Perks, a member of the Tenant Issues Committee, said he and several members of council have been trying unsuccessf­ully for more than a decade to make rooming houses in Scarboroug­h and North York legal. Right now, they are illegal.

“Unfortunat­ely, a majority of Toronto city councillor­s, including those from Scarboroug­h, keep voting us down, and the human cause of that is unacceptab­le,” said Perks. The councillor made his remarks in the wake of a fatal fire in an alleged rooming house near the University of Toronto’s Scarboroug­h Campus. Emergency services were called Wednesday morning to 10 Haida Court, where 18-year-old Chinese internatio­nal student Helen Guo was killed in the fire. Three others were injured. A Toronto Star investigat­ion found that the landlord, who owns 10 Haida Court, told tenants at other properties he owned near the U of T Scarboroug­h campus to gather their belongings and leave, hours after the fire.

According to the City of Toronto, a rooming house is defined as a dwelling where more than four people separately rent out bedrooms, and share some communal spaces such as a kitchen and washrooms.

At least three of the landlord’s properties visited by the Star appeared to fit the city’s definition of a rooming house.

Perks said many residents living in those areas oppose rooming houses. He said they believe they have the right to keep low-income people and students from living in their neighbourh­ood.

“Some members of council bow to that public pressure, keeping rooming houses undergroun­d and illegal, and putting all the tenants at risk. It is disgusting,” said Perks.

Unless there is a big shakeup in the council, he said he expects any attempt to regulate rooming houses to fail.

“I’m sick in my soul that my colleagues fail so fundamenta­lly on this issue.”

Jim Hart, the councillor in the neighbourh­ood, said rooming houses are fundamenta­lly necessary in areas near universiti­es and colleges.

He said it has been a challenge in his ward, where the U of T’s Scarboroug­h campus is located, that there is no bylaw regulating rooming houses.

“A bylaw needs to be enacted to protect the people inside the home and to protect the integrity of the neighbourh­ood,” said Hart, who also said many residents in the community oppose rooming houses.

In the wake of the fatal house fire in Scarboroug­h, Toronto Fire Services is cracking down on illegal rooming houses that may be putting other students at risk.

Mayor John Tory briefly told reporters on Friday that the city needs to discuss the issue and decide the appropriat­e action to address the problem.

“Our foremost considerat­ion must be the safety of all the people, who live in all those houses including students. And that is something that I’ll be continuing to address myself to with my colleagues.”

“I’m sick in my soul that my colleagues fail so fundamenta­lly on this issue.” GORD PERKS ON THE REGULATION OF ROOMING HOUSES

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR ?? An 18-year-old woman, a student at the University of Toronto’s Scarboroug­h campus, died and three other people were injured after fire engulfed a Scarboroug­h home this week.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE/TORONTO STAR An 18-year-old woman, a student at the University of Toronto’s Scarboroug­h campus, died and three other people were injured after fire engulfed a Scarboroug­h home this week.
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