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You are here:Home / City Hall /Halifax council aims to beef up bylaw enforcement to stop landlords from pushing tenants out illegally

Halifax council aims to beef up bylaw enforcement to stop landlords from pushing tenants out illegally

December 1, 2020ByZane Woodford1 Comment

Apartment buildings in Halifax. Photo: Zane Woodford

Tiredof hearing stories of landlords removing tenants’ doors and windows to force them out, Halifax regional councillors want to step up enforcement of the municipality’s minimum standards bylaw.

“There’s been a recent rash of very disturbing media reports that have been kind of printed at face value where some landlords — just a few, not all of them, most landlords would never dream of ever doing something like this — are deliberately making units uninhabitable in order to encourage or force tenants to move,” Coun. Waye Mason said during council’s meeting on Tuesday.

ThisCBC story by Taryn Grantis a prime example. Grant reported that landlord Adam Barrett “removed the doors, windows and kitchen sink faucet from an apartment unit in Fairview to get the couple living there to leave.” The couple hadn’t paid their rent in months, and the landlord said they were problem tenants.

“They may be doing this because they’re frustrated with the speed with which the provincial tenancy system responds to concerns when someone’s not paying rent, or whatever the case may be,” Mason said.

“There is a tenancy board and there is a process for tenancy that resolves that, and we have no role in that. The only role the municipality has in Nova Scotia is to ensure that fire and health and life safety, the minimum standards, are met. And the fact that people are openly talking about deliberately making it so those standards are not met really is problematic. To me, I find it appalling.”

Mason brought amotionto council on Tuesday asking municipal staff to incorporate a fix to the issue in an upcoming report on a residential rental registration system.

In that report, Mason wants staff to “include options for strong penalties up to and including the maximum statutory amount, and rapid respond to remediate any unit where, in the opinion of the municipality, a landlord has deliberately made a unit uninhabitable and/or non-compliant.”

The municipality’s minimum standards are included inBylaw M-200, Respecting Standards For Residential Occupancies. They include fire prevention measures, structural soundness, maintenance of windows and doors, and suitable heating.

Municipal building officials enforce the bylaw using a complaint-based system, but the municipality plans to use the coming rental registry and the recentlypublicly-posted database of violations, to start proactively inspecting units.

Mason wants to throw the book at any landlord flouting the law, doing away with warnings and moving straight to fines — potentially even using the maximum fine of $10,000, applied per day.

And he wants inspectors on site as quickly as possible.

Mason’s colleagues were on board, voting unanimously in favour of the motion. Some of them told stories about what landlords are doing in their districts.

Dartmouth Centre Coun. Sam Austin agreed there have been some “egregious examples.”

“Just today I had to refer one over to staff,” Austin said. “It’s not confirmed yet, but a landlord in my district may have taken the approach to try to get rid of his residents and turned off the elevator in his seven-storey building.”

哈蒙德Plains-St。玛格丽特的清纯甜美。帕梅拉Lovelace said she’d just received a call last week about a woman and her children being evicted.

“And what could I do? I just had another note this morning from another woman who had her doors and windows removed from her apartment,” Lovelace said.

Lower Sackville Coun. Paul Russell wanted to remind councillors that not all landlords are bad. He worried the provincial government’snew, temporary rent control— capping rent increases at 2% annually — would mean landlords wouldn’t be able to afford to maintain buildings to minimum standards.

“With that cap, we are going to see the problems be exacerbated,” Russell said. “We are going to see more housing deteriorating, we are going to see more problems with less housing being available.”

Russell voted in favour of Mason’s motion, saying he hoped it wouldn’t be necessary for long.

Though she too voted in favour of Mason’s motion, Coun. Trish Purdy, representing Cole Harbour-Westphal-Lake Loon-Cherry Brook, worried about protections for landlords.

“When I read that landlords are taking doors off of their tenants’ apartments, I don’t see cruelty there, I see desperation,” Purdy said.

For Dartmouth South-Eastern Passage Coun. Becky Kent, the word cruelty nailed it. She noted that women, single parents, and seniors are especially vulnerable to these tactics.

“This is just abusive in some cases. It’s a manipulation of a situation where women are disproportionately affected by this,” she said.

The report on the rental registration, which will now include these new enforcement provisions, is scheduled to come to council in April.


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Filed Under:City Hall,Featured,News

AboutZane Woodford

Zane Woodford covers municipal politics for the Halifax Examiner.Email:[email protected];Twitter

Comments

  1. D Smithsays

    December 4, 2020 at 6:37 am

    Pro-cop councillor also pro-landlord. I’m so disappointed in CH.

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