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ZR
03-27-2017, 07:14 AM
From my perch as a paralegal, it seems everyone despises landlords and wants to make them responsible for the government’s shortcomings.
Decades ago, residential landlord and tenant law was contractual.
People signed lease agreements and lived by them.
But starting in the 1970s in Ontario, the contractual model gave way to strict, complicated and onerous statutory ones, leading up to the present day Residential Tenancies Act.
Government bemoans the lack of affordable housing, the high rents charged in major cities and alternative rental models such as Airbnb.
But it’s burying its head in the sand by refusing to consider realistic solutions to the problem its own policies created.
Governments have effectively nationalized private residential rentals, with landlords footing the bills to administer their misguided public policies.
Ontario is the worst jurisdiction in Canada for piling impossible burdens on residential landlords.
The eviction process is painfully slow.
Tenants can use delays built into the system both at the Landlord and Tenant Board and the appellate courts.
To fix the system, the province must address issues such as the time it takes to evict non-paying and disruptive tenants, the prohibition on damage deposits and the reality of so-called “lease-breaking parties” that enable a tenant to break a lease simply by acting badly.
Then there’s the onerous obligations under the Human Rights Code that make landlords, rather than the government, responsible for societal issues.
Plus, the continuing refusal of government to make direct rent payments to landlords for tenants on social assistance.
On the flip side, perhaps it’s time to change the rent control exemption in current law that gives buildings constructed after November, 1991 an exemption from provincial rent control guidelines.
As a result, we now have 25 year’s worth of residential buildings, many in downtown Toronto, that are not rent controlled.
Recently, New Democrat MPP Peter Tabuns introduced the fourth private member’s bill since 2011 in a bid to eliminate this exemption.
Perhaps it’s time to have a sliding scale, phase-out period for the rent control exemption, during which allowable annual rent increases slide back to the provincial guideline 15 years after a new building is first occupied.
While we have an acute shortage of affordable rental housing, the Ontario government has largely washed its hands of the problem.
It is practically begging landlords to rent out residential units, despite the financial risks they must take and the unattractive environment the government has created.
To be sure, the 2011 Strong Communities Through Affordable Housing Act and the recently passed Promoting Affordable Housing Act, 2016, which promote inclusionary zoning, are honest government efforts to create more accessible and affordable housing.
But many smaller landlords won’t open up their homes to residential accommodation until some of the risk is mitigated and the playing field levelled.
Of course, many anti-poverty activists are satisfied with retaining tenant-centred policies that have helped to create the rental accommodation crisis.
They imagine that more non-profit housing, built and operated by government, will be the end result.
But government coffers are empty.
So are hundreds of thousands of potential basement apartments, that could otherwise become affordable housing, save for the current onerous rules for renting them out.
Fine is a Toronto paralegal and a former member of the Landlord and Tenant Board.

ZR
03-27-2017, 07:16 AM
I fall into the above category of having a basement apartment that we will never ever ever rent again. Just too much govt bullshit to remove problem or non paying tenants to make the grief worth it.

Quicksilver
03-27-2017, 12:05 PM
I fall into the above category of having a basement apartment that we will never ever ever rent again. Just too much govt bullshit to remove problem or non paying tenants to make the grief worth it.

That's what I've been saying since I sold my apartment building in 2007. Just ridiculous how everything is in the side of the tenant.

Snaketamer
03-27-2017, 06:04 PM
It's a joke...I would never be a landlord.
A buddy had a basement rental nightmare. A young girl was renting from him and started to miss rent payments. He couldn't get the money and couldn't kick her out. He found out she was a heroin addict and had a addict boyfriend move in. Worried she would destroy the place, he decided to pay her cash to move out...she took the money...probably for her next fixes.
He won't be renting out anymore...

ZR
03-27-2017, 10:27 PM
First thing I got asked at the Tribunal, how much are you willing to pay them to leave..........insane.

Armen
03-27-2017, 11:07 PM
Not really related to the story but relates to affordable housing...

My little semi detached 1 bathroom house sold for 305,000 last year. A place just like it two houses up just went on the market the other day... asking $449,000. I absolutely cannot believe how crazy prices have started to go north of Hwy 7. It's nuts. I'm gonna keep an eye on it and see what it goes for. If they get anywhere near asking, it's fkn crazy.

NickD
03-27-2017, 11:58 PM
Parents paid 350 for their house in 2000, last they checked its high 9s now a smaller bungalow across the street is listed at 1.3, how the hell do they expect anyone to enter the market

stangstevers
03-28-2017, 06:29 AM
I read that as "shortage of affordable Mustang" LMAO!

ZR
03-28-2017, 06:30 AM
Roger that.

WTF
03-28-2017, 07:34 AM
Not really related to the story but relates to affordable housing...

My little semi detached 1 bathroom house sold for 305,000 last year. A place just like it two houses up just went on the market the other day... asking $449,000. I absolutely cannot believe how crazy prices have started to go north of Hwy 7. It's nuts. I'm gonna keep an eye on it and see what it goes for. If they get anywhere near asking, it's fkn crazy.

you've heard me talk about my little North York bungalow over the years

builder next door putting up the McMansion offered me $1,400,000 the other day...without blinking an eye

as always...it's not for sale

that's 5.7 times what I paid for it 19.5 years ago....complete and utter lunacy

and they're suggesting the prices may go up another 25% this year

RedSN
03-28-2017, 08:07 AM
Just a bad situation for everybody.

Sleazy landlords made it so the government had to step in. Government (as usual) makes things worse and swings the balance the other way. Now tenants use the system to fleece the landlords.

Add to that the insane skyrocketing property values....