Toronto Star

Councillor searching for ways to help tenants keep their cool

Prospectiv­e measures include firm maximum temperatur­e, apartment cooling centres

- TARA DESCHAMPS STAFF REPORTER

Councillor Mary Fragedakis is putting the heat on property owners to cool down their buildings after a few months of sweltering weather. Among the measures the Toronto-Danforth councillor said the city should be looking at are a firmer maximum-temperatur­e bylaw and encouragin­g landlords to implement green roofs and on-site cooling centres for apartment and condo buildings.

Her recommenda­tions came after her office waded through a steady stream of complaints from tenants concerned about their buildings’ temperatur­es.

Some claimed they were instructed by their landlords to ditch their window airconditi­oning units: a request Fragedakis says is unlawful unless the units are at risk of falling.

“They don’t want to pay the electricit­y so they want the units removed,” she said of the apartment and condo owners.

“It’s a serious issue and there is lots that we could be doing.”

Currently, she said, newer buildings with central air conditioni­ng must re- main at or below 26 C, but older structures without the systems are exempt from that bylaw.

Some have coped with keeping temperatur­es moderate by painting building roofs white to retract heat, while others have turned to increased ventilatio­n as a problem solver.

Geordie Dent, the executive director of the Federation of Metro Tenants’ Associatio­ns, is no stranger to hearing from tenants living “in a nightmare scenario.”

Some tell him they have to almost exclusivel­y wear shorts and a tank top in the warm months to make their units bearable, while others talk of tussles with their landlords over ventilatio­n systems.

During the last few months temperatur­e-related complaints, said Dent, amounted to hundreds of calls this summer and thousands over the past few years.

“In the cases I am listening to there is a lot of illegal activity with landlords,” he said.

“People have died in the past due to heat waves; . . . tenants just want something that is not boiling.”

Though cooler weather is on its way, offering a reprieve, Fragedakis said tenants will still have to wait for a long-term fix, which could come after the city releases a report on the potential for a maximum-temperatur­e bylaw later this year.

 ?? AARON HARRIS FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Councillor Mary Fragedakis says the city should encourage landlords to plant green roofs, such as these ones at the Pan Am athletes’ village, to keep buildings cool.
AARON HARRIS FOR THE TORONTO STAR Councillor Mary Fragedakis says the city should encourage landlords to plant green roofs, such as these ones at the Pan Am athletes’ village, to keep buildings cool.

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