Vancouver Sun

Toronto tenants protest ‘loophole’ in rent controls

Landlords may hike rents for improvemen­ts

- Peter Goffin

TORONTO • Tenants at a highrise in an up-and-coming Toronto neighbourh­ood have staged a rent strike, saying landlords are taking advantage of loopholes in Ontario’s housing law to drive low-income residents out of their homes.

Over 50 tenants of a building in Toronto’s rapidly gentrifyin­g Parkdale community are refusing to pay their rent after the property manager — Nuspor Investment­s — applied for government permission to increase rent by nearly double the legally permitted amount.

“This building is going to kick people out with the rent increases if they’re allowed to go above the (provincial rent) guidelines,” striking tenant Mark Farquharso­n said. “A lot of people in this building are pensioners and they’re going to be gone in another five years because they can’t afford it.”

Last year the government of Ontario extended rent control — which previously had applied only to units that came into use prior to November 1991 — to all residentia­l properties in the province, setting an annual cap on rent increases tied to the Consumer Price Index. The cap for 2018 is 1.8 per cent.

But a long-standing policy in the Residentia­l Tenancies Act allows property owners and managers to apply to the Landlord and Tenant Board for the right to raise rent beyond the cap in order to recoup costs of certain capital expenditur­es or “extraordin­ary” increases in tax.

“This is a loophole in the legislatio­n that basically lets landlords pass off the costs of major work onto tenants,” said Cole Webber, spokespers­on for Parkdale Community Legal Services.

Landlords in gentrifyin­g parts of Toronto are increasing­ly taking advantage of this legislatio­n in an effort to squeeze out low-income tenants, Webber added.

Once a unit is vacant, landlords can legally raise rent without limit.

To be eligible for a higher-than-permitted rent increase, a landlord must show that their capital expenses were made to keep the property “in a good state of repair,” protect the “physical integrity” of the building, improve energy or water conservati­on, or maintain or increase security or provide access to people with disabiliti­es.

Nuspor Investment­s, for instance, claimed in its applicatio­n to the Landlord and Tenant Board that it spent over $300,000 in 2015 and 2016 on improvemen­ts to their building’s lobby, lighting, heating and garbage compactor. Representa­tives of Nuspor did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Farquharso­n said he and his wife paid about $1,150 per month when they moved into their one-bedroom apartment four years ago. If Nuspor’s rent increase request is approved, they’ll pay $1,250, Farquharso­n said.

“It’s not easy to save money when there’s a lot of money going towards just rent,” he added.

The Landlord and Tenant Board can approve a rent increase of up to three percentage points above the cap each year for up to three years for capital expenditur­e applicatio­ns.

More than 650 applicatio­ns for above-guideline rent increases have been made in Toronto alone since the start of 2015.

Landlords may not get the increase amount they ask for but applicatio­ns to raise rent by more than the guideline are generally approved, the Landlord and Tenant Board said.

Many tenants do not know enough about the process to challenge a landlord’s applicatio­n, while others may not be able to take a day off work to attend the hearing, said Kemba Robinson, a spokeswoma­n for the antipovert­y group ACORN Canada.

Landlords, however, say the process helps them perform necessary maintenanc­e on their properties.

“Many of these buildings may be 40, 50, 60 years old so you have things that need upgrading,” Jim Murphy, president of the Federation of Rental Housing Providers of Ontario, said.

“The (rent increase applicatio­n) process is not automatic,” he added. “The property manger or owner has to show the work that has been done, and the need for the work.”

Rather than simply focusing on rent control, the government should look at increasing income, Murphy added.

“The people who can’t afford rent are the same people who can’t afford to go to the grocery store,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS: CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Rent strikers from a rental building at 1251 King Street West and fellow protesters gather in Toronto on Friday. The tenants are upset by a proposed rent increase of nearly double the legally permitted amount.
PHOTOS: CHRIS YOUNG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Rent strikers from a rental building at 1251 King Street West and fellow protesters gather in Toronto on Friday. The tenants are upset by a proposed rent increase of nearly double the legally permitted amount.

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