Toronto Star

Province lifts rent controls for newly occupied units,

Tenant groups disagree with Ontario Tory claim that move boosts supply

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER With files from Rob Ferguson

The Ontario government’s removal of rent controls on new, previously unoccupied rental units will mean higher housing costs in the future but won’t do much to relieve Toronto’s historical­ly low vacancy rate, at least in the near term, say tenant and housing experts.

Starting immediatel­y, rent control rules will no longer apply to buildings and flats being rented for the first time, the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government announced in an economic statement on Thursday.

“Everybody who’s an existing tenant today is protected ... but the challenge for the future is there is no supply ... The one thing the government can do to bring in new supply is to open the market,” Finance Minister Vic Fedeli said.

Geordie Dent, executive director of the Federation of Metro Tenants’ Associatio­ns, called it a return to the “economic evictions” of former PC premier Mike Harris.

“When you were in a unit that had no rent control, the mo- ment you would ask for maintenanc­e or try to enforce any of your rights, you’d get hit with a $1,000 rent increase or a $500 rent increase,” he said.

It had the effect of pushing people out of their homes.

“There is no empirical evidence that rent control affects rental housing developmen­t one way or another. When rent control was gutted by Harris in 1997, we were promised thousands and thousands of new units. They did not materializ­e,” Dent said, citing zoning and tax incentives as the only effective ways of motivating housing developmen­t.

Landlords, who applauded the move, also cautioned that it is a longer-term solution to boosting rental stock.

“Our belief is that exempting new constructi­on from rent control will encourage companies to bring on new supply,” said Tony Irwin, CEO of the Federation of Rental-housing Providers of Ontario, whose 2,200 members manage or own about 350,000 rental households in the province.

But, he added, “This is not going to bring new supply online tomorrow. It will take some time, probably a few years.”

Under Ontario’s rent control system, landlords are allowed a provincial­ly capped annual increase. This year, it is 1.8 per cent. There are exceptions for building owners who make significan­t improvemen­ts to their property, and landlords can ask for whatever rent they choose when a new tenant moves in. Until last year, rent control applied only to buildings built before 1991, but as part of its housing policy to boost affordabil­ity, the former Liberal government extended rent controls to all buildings in April 2017.

“I can see they’re trying to encourage new building, but down the road there will be less and less units available that are under rent control,” said Rob Field, president of the Graydon Hall Tenants’ Associatio­n, representi­ng 1,000 units in three highrises near Don Mills Rd. and Hwy. 401.

Field said his two-bedroom apartment is a good example of how rent control works. He’s lived there nine years and pays $1,379 a month. But the same apartment that changed hands now costs $1,700.

Some developers backed away from proposed rental projects immediatel­y after the Liberals extended rent control last year. But that interest in rental developmen­t has since revived, said Shaun Hildebrand of Urbanation, a market research company that tracks developmen­t in the Toronto region.

There are about 12,000 rental units under constructi­on in Toronto and proposals for another 40,000, he said.

“We need to be building at a pace of probably at least 10,000 a year. To get there, we would need to see the level of units under constructi­on triple at least — above 30,000.”

The current vacancy rate of about 1 per cent has historical­ly been closer to 2.5 or 3 per cent, Hildebrand added.

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR ?? Units that have never been occupied, such as those at the Well project, won’t face rent control.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR Units that have never been occupied, such as those at the Well project, won’t face rent control.

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