CBC Edition

For many in B.C. finding a rental has become a full-time job, competitio­n is fierce

- Yvette Brend

In 2018, teen brothers Hud‐ son and Jackson ForsythBec­k started growing veg‐ gies in the front yard of their rental home in Squamish, B.C., selling pick‐ les.

That turned into a busy farm stand over the years.

But now, their family is facing eviction. Their father Robert Forsyth posted a video in a Facebook group appealing for help to find a home - and freezer space - to save about 10,000 pounds of produce, pies and preserves.

"If anybody has any solu‐ tions, maybe options," he said in a post on Feb. 25.

That began an all-con‐ suming hunt to find a place to live, where his boys can grow up and keep growing their farm stand business.

"It's almost a full-time job looking for a place," said the 47-year-old father, who is a constructi­on worker, earlier this month.

His family is just one of many you can find online, es‐ pecially in housing forums, competing for rentals in Canada's toughest housing market: British Columbia, where an apartment costs on average $2,481 per month.

Housing policy experts say renters with few options are desperate to try to find an affordable - or at least available - place.

Often, that's people who describe facing eviction. Many say they have been pushed out, so the landlord can hike rent, often doubling it. In turn, landlords say they need more flexibilit­y to move bad renters out.

The fierce competitio­n is driving some tenants to pitch themselves to potential land‐ lords in new ways. Now, some are putting not only their rental histories and credit scores on the table: they're also crafting online posts to highlight their quali‐ ties as renters - like personal‐ ity, family values or skills - to rise above the pack and stand out.

The pickle boys' eviction

For the past seven years, Forsyth has paid $1,700 a month for a unit in Squamish.

When his new neighbours told him their rent was $2,900, he got worried. Then came the dreaded eviction notice in December. He's since applied for dozens of places. This week, he got a lead on a unit in Langley that he hopes works out.

In the meantime, he's agreed to pay a higher rent to stay in place for now, and he predicts his cost of living will likely triple.

"I am stressed and wor‐ ried," he said.

"It's almost like you're paying a mortgage at the rate at some of the [rental] homes."

Canadian rent up aver‐ age of $384 per month since 2022

More and more young families are being locked out of the housing market as rental costs skyrocket, says Paul Kershaw, a policy pro‐ fessor at the University of British Columbia's School of Population and Public Health, especially in hotspots like Vancouver and Burnaby.

"It breaks my heart to hear," said Kershaw. "Like, 'I have to advertise to see if someone will welcome me in‐ to their rental and let me pay an exorbitant amount of money for a one-bedroom.

"A younger demographi­c is working hard, and their hard work isn't paying off like it used to."

In February, Vancouver had the highest average rent for a one-bedroom unit in the country, at $2,653 per month, according Rentals.ca and Urbanation.

Burnaby, Victoria and Sur‐ rey were also among the highest. Rentals.ca says it can't provide an average rate for Squamish, where Forsyth and his family live, as there are too few listings.

Since 2022, the average monthly rent for a onebedroom across Canada has risen about 21 per cent, or $384.

The rapid rise of rent in the country is "unrelentin­g," said Shaun Hildebrand, presi‐ dent of Toronto-based Urba‐ nation, in an interview last month.

He called the current rent stock "grossly insufficie­nt" to meet rising demand. Evictions a concern

Price inflation is driving evictions, renters say. Some tenants believe their land‐ lords are trying to move them out to cash in on new prices. And although tenants can take legal action for breaches, the process can take years and often yields little.

In B.C., no-fault evictions are only permitted if the landlord or their family is moving into the unit, or it's being demolished, renovated or sold, and they require sev‐ eral months' notice. The province had the highest rate of no-fault evictions in Cana‐ da, according to UBC re‐ search in 2023.

"This process can be very stressful, and amplify the sense of housing insecurity," said Kershaw.

"It's hard to go back and create affordabil­ity."

The B.C. government has taken steps to address the is‐ sue, like by taking control of municipal zoning to allow multiple units to be built on land previously designated for single-family use.

It's also enacted taxes and policies to discourage shortterm rentals, empty invest‐ ment homes and foreign buyers.

Landlords take issue with current tenant laws, too. They say the rules leave them stuck with losses if they pick the wrong tenant.

Baldeep Jhand, president of the Landlord's Rights Asso‐ ciation of B.C., says many owners just opt not to rent anymore, after a renter dam‐ ages property or fails to pay rent.

"Tenancy laws are being misused badly by the profes‐ sional tenants. Only a few of them, but they are misusing it. So landlords are now more cautious."

Good wage, rental still no

Even renters squeeze.

Reid Madiuk, a custom home builder, and his wife, a naturopath, have been evicted from their unit in Squamish, the family's sec‐ ond eviction since 2020.

To find a place, he posted in a Facebook group a gallery of his outdoorsy family, with promises to be quiet, clean and rarely home.

"Sometimes I struggle with what I'm doing for work. Am I part of the problem or am I part of the solution? But, you know, you have to make money to survive," he said.

Burnaby chef Kumariah Shunmugava­divel and his wife Niranjana Kumariahar­e also moving, with their ninemonth-old, to take over a bakery business.

It took them months to find a rental in Burnaby, and now they must move to Van‐ couver Island, where they are struggling to find anything family-friendly for $2,300 a month. He says he's never seen anything like this.

"I worked in the States, I worked in Bermuda islands and different countries. But I have never had this kind of competitio­n for renting a are higher-income feeling the

house anywhere," he said.

The couple have spent three months looking, from

Langford to Sidney. To high‐ light their family to potential landlords, they posted a photo in a Facebook housing group with their child, posed in front of a wooly mammoth at a Victoria museum.

"You need to stand out of the crowd."

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