Vancouver Magazine

Say Anything

A young renter, a seasoned renter and a landlord tell all.

- Carly Whetter, Gabrielle Lakusta AS TOLD TO and Rita Javorski Andrew Querner PORTRAITS BY

“I’ve lived in places with very lousy building conditions, and I’ve just been grateful that I’m not the one who has to deal with xing those things. I kept my rent at $500 or so for the rst ve years that I lived here by living in really terrible places. I had aroommate who would just chuck all her cigarette butts in the hedge outside, and she lived there for about four years. When we moved out, they kept our deposit because the landlady found what must have been, at that point, thousands of cigarette butts in this hedge. And she was alandscape­r, so Ican’t imagine how much it hurt her. I got into the habit, too, so I

wasn’t exactly innocent. We deserved to have that taken from us. Now that I know a little bit more about how much it costs to own a house, I don’t really envy the homeowners; honestly, I have really loved most of my roommates, but Idon’t think they were good tenants.

I’m staying in my current place because it’s got a great location, the rent is good and we have so much space for downtown. The West End is the best. We’re here until they kick us out. Because we’ve been here so long, we take care of things. We have a crack coming through the ceiling and mold on the walls that we bleach once a month. The windows drip; there is a really adorable mouse somewhere. We call him Jerry, and Jerry is our pet.”— Chloë Lai, 30, West End

THE-LONG-TIME-RENTER

My first apartment was in Kitsilano and it was $90 a month." leslie javorski, long-time renter

“I moved to Vancouver in 1974 when I was 17. My first apartment was in Kitsilano and it was $90 a month. When I moved here, the vacancy rate was even worse than it is now, but it always seems to bounce back. I was never in a position to buy, but I do feel that the city used to be more renter-friendly. Renting never used to be associated with the young or poor. The Kerrisdale and South Granville areas used to be considered good areas to rent in, and they had plenty of rental buildings. Most of those were torn down in the 1980s and now those areas are considered prestigiou­s areas to own.

I now live in a North Burnaby character home that’s been broken into suites. It’s the nicest place I’ve lived, but it’s still very clearly a rental. I’ve been there for seven years now, so I pay well below market value—just $1,200; the couple who lives in the suite next to mine pays $1,600 a month. If the landlord ever decided to sell the house, I’d have to leave the city; there is no way I could afford to continue to rent in the Lower Mainland in this climate. Being at the mercy of someone else’s decisions is by far the hardest part of being a renter.”— Leslie Javorski, 60, Burnaby

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