Tenant accused of turning condo into Airbnb rental
Unit’s owner says her ordeal shows urgent need for regulation in the new sharing economy
After buying a 625-square-foot condo on King St. W. as an investment property, Vivian Mah hired a realtor to find a “Triple AAA professional tenant” who would pay the rent on time.
“I wanted to make sure it was someone decent who would take care of my property,” said Mah, who is an urban planner.
Elizabeth Tremblay seemed to fit the bill.
The soft-spoken 53-year-old presented herself as an executive director of a notfor-profit organization who was relocating to Toronto from California. She submitted references, an employment letter confirming a yearly salary of about $70,000 and a credit report that raised no red flags.
The realtor said “you should go with her,” and Mah did, renting the one-bedroom corner unit to Tremblay for $2,100 a month beginning May 1.
But within days, before the rent cheques started bouncing, Tremblay’s tenancy turned into Mah’s nightmare when building staff advised the female occupant was renting the unit to multiple individuals, probably through Airbnb, a website offering short-term rentals in private homes.
“The moment she got in, she Airbnb’d my property, even though she’s not allowed to be doing that,” Mah said.
During an Aug. 3 hearing at the Landlord and Tenant Board, Tremblay, who represented herself, denied renting out Mah’s condo.
“I love the building. Why do you think I would Airbnb it?” Tremblay told Guy Savoie, the board’s vice-chair.
Mah’s condo tower at 224 King St. W., known as Theatre Park, does not permit rentals of less than three months.
“This condo I acquired through years of hard work and savings has become her free source of income,” Mah said. “It worries me, so much so that it has caused an impact on my health . . . I can’t sleep, I’ve lost my appetite and have heart palpitations.”
Last month, Toronto police officers arrested Tremblay at the Landlord and Tenant building on St. Clair Ave. She was taken into custody and charged with uttering a forged document, in connection with her rental application, and three counts of false pretenses relating to bad rent cheques. She was released and ordered to appear in court again Nov. 3.
Police allege Tremblay has a history of moving into a condo, not paying rent, then using “the legal system against the landlord for months or longer, until the landlord can have her evicted by the sheriff. In the meantime, she allegedly lives free, subletting the condos to earn money while the landlord is taken advantage of,” a police spokesman said.
Mah said her experience is a cautionary tale for both property owners and online renters in the socalled sharing economy, which has city hall grappling with how to manage Airbnb and other short-term rental companies.
Such “horror stories” underscore the urgent need for regulation to ensure only licensed hosts are renting units that are safe and in compliance with all bylaws, said Thorben Wieditz, a spokesman for a new coalition called Fairbnb.ca.
“Then there’s some form of transparency and accountability, and we can actually trace people and hold people accountable.”
Mah’s case also highlights the inadequacies of the provincial 2006 Residential Tenancies Act, said Cheryl Sereny, the paralegal to whom Mah turned in June to begin eviction proceedings. Amendments should be made to prohibit tenants from letting a rental unit on Airbnb and to allow for the immediate termination of tenancy upon proof the unit is being used that way, Sereny said.
Mah said she is disgusted with the process. “All I want is my unit back, and I’ve been going to the Landlord and Tenant Board since May. She (Tremblay) uses stall tactics and delays the process. Only last week did they issue a notice that her tenancy was terminated as of Oct. 10.
“If she doesn’t leave voluntarily, I have to spend more money to pay the sheriff to get her out.”
In June, in an attempt to expedite the eviction proceedings, Sereny filed a copy of a Kijiji ad with the Landlord and Tenant Board.
The ad, under the headline, “Actor 1-3 Hours Tuesday $100.00 CASH” asks for a representative to appear at the Landlord and Tenant Board “to request an adjournment for an ill individual.” Sereny said Tremblay placed it last March during a dispute over unpaid rent with another condo owner.
In an email to the Star, Tremblay said she expected her words would be twisted and suggested an unnamed person had lied on the stand. “The advice I got today was that Mr. (Mike) Duffy is a good example of scandal versus the weight of facts.”
According to her LinkedIn profile, Tremblay is executive director of business development at Serve to Care.
The company’s website states that it leads “the future in corporate, individual, philanthropic and not-forprofit collaborations.” The address listed is 77 King St. W. No such company is listed in the downtown officer tower directory.
Digging into Tremblay’s background, with the help of a skip tracer, Sereny discovered she was the furthest thing from a “Triple A” tenant.
Tremblay used falsified documents to rent Mah’s condo and has an undischarged bankruptcy. She is unemployed and collects an ODSP shelter allowance of $479 a month, Sereny told a Landlord and Tenant hearing in August. She did so allegedly to hide her abysmal credit history, Sereny said.
On her rental application, Tremblay claimed she lived in California from 2011 to 2015.
But Sereny told the tribunal she has been kicked out of six Toronto con- dos since 2014 for not paying rent and continues to owe tens of thousands of dollars to landlords.
During the Aug. 3 hearing, a former police officer and owner of the company that provides security and concierge services at Theatre Park testified to numerous examples of Tremblay entering and leaving 224 King St. with “multiple individuals,” often carrying luggage.
None of the “guests” was registered at the front desk, as per condo rules, he said, adding there was “no question” Tremblay was renting out the unit.
Security staff at 224 King already knew Tremblay. She had previously rented two other units in the building, before being ousted for nonpayment of rent.
Another witness testified at the Aug. 3 hearing about showing up at her family-owned condo, also rented by Tremblay. She described how, days earlier, she found Tremblay inside with three young men in town for Caribana celebrations.
Tremblay insisted the trio were her son’s friends, though he wasn’t there. A sheriff evicted Tremblay from that condo Aug. 16 for unpaid rent.
Mah said it took some time, but she eventually found the listing for her condo on Airbnb. It was under Tremblay’s daughter’s name and included a mix of positive and negative reviews. When Mah contacted Airbnb and told them her tenant was renting her condo out without permission, the company cited a “confidentiality clause” and said there was nothing they could do, she said.
“That host’s listing is no longer available,” Airbnb said in a statement. A company spokesman sent the Star a link to a section on its website on its guest and host vetting policy, under the heading Trust at Airbnb.
One of the reviewers, Vanada Kong, identified Tremblay from photos sent to her by the Star. When Kong, three friends and a dog and cat arrived in Toronto from Montreal last month, Tremblay told them the unit they thought they had rented a month earlier, for $159 a night, was unavailable.
They ended up at 224 King St., in Mah’s condo, Kong said. She and two of her friends slept uncomfortably, sharing a queen-sized bed. The fourth friend slept on an air mattress in the living room.
Tremblay slept on the balcony, where she was joined, in the middle of the night, by her son and daughter. The next night, Tremblay transferred the guests to another condo, at 30 Nelson St., “and everything went smoothly,” Kong wrote in an email. Still, she said, she is waiting for Tremblay to refund her money.
Last week, the Landlord and Tenant Board terminated Tremblay’s tenancy in Mah’s condo as of Oct. 10 and issued an order that she is not allowed on the property. But she still has possession of the unit, and Mah said she believes Tremblay’s daughter is living there. Tremblay has made some payments, but currently owes Mah $2,160, including NSF fees, Sereny said.
In an earlier life, Tremblay was described by a National Post society columnist as a “Forest Hill tennis buff” who started a charity tournament in 1999 to raise funds for the hospice movement in Ontario.
But by 2006, Tremblay’s 20-year marriage was on the rocks and the couple was embroiled in acrimonious divorce proceedings, arguing over child and spousal support, according to court documents. Summarizing the family history, the judge wrote it was a case of “both financial irresponsibility and bad behaviour.” Tremblay racked up close to $200,000 in debts when the marriage dissolved, and, without her exhusband’s knowledge, she placed an additional mortgage on the home by forging his signature, court documents show.
In 2008, Tremblay pleaded guilty to two of six charges laid against her. She was convicted and given a suspended sentence and was placed on probation for 18 months.
“Ms. Tremblay’s spending and failure to pay debt continue,” the judge wrote in 2009.
“Her sense of entitlement knows no bounds.”