Housing group wants city to license landlords - Action News
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Ottawa

Housing group wants city to license landlords

An advocacy group for low-income tenants is urging the City of Ottawa to crack down on shabby living conditions by licensing landlords, but landlords say that will just worsen the capital's rental housing crunch.

Renters, neighbours, landlords asked to fill out survey by Sept. 4.

The City of Ottawa is looking at how it regulates all sorts of private rental properties from traditional apartments to student housing and short-term vacation rentals. (CBC)

An advocacy group for low-income tenants is urging the City of Ottawato crack down on shabby living conditions by licensing landlords, but landlords say that will just worsen the capital's rental housing crunch.

The city plans to come up withnewrules this fall that could affect allprivaterental properties, from traditional apartments and rooming houses to student housing and short-term rentals like Airbnb.

Members of the advocacy group Acorn Ottawa have been going to public meetings to argue people shouldn't have to live with bed bugs, cockroaches or unresponsive landlords.

Acorn'ssolution is to license all landlords who own more than three units, and subject them to regular cityinspections.

"Bad landlords don't exist in just one area, or a couple of areas. They're throughout the city," said Acorn's Blaine Cameron.

Licensing would be 'counterproductive'

But the Eastern Ontario Landlords Organizationsaysthe city simply needs to better enforce the bylaws it already has,and target thefew problematic buildings for which it regularly getsnoise and propertycomplaints.

"Let's address those problems. Let's not bring in all kinds of regulations andall kinds of cost and bother to the 95 per cent of landlords who behavewell and are maintaining their buildings well," said its chair John Dickie.

Broad licensingof landlords would be counterproductive, he added.

Licensing all landlords would likely lead to fewer units, higher rents, and not even improve living conditions, argues John Dickie, chair of the Eastern Ontario Landlord Organization. (Kate Porter/CBC)

"It would discourage people from renting out units, which at this point, that's the last thing that should be done," said Dickie.

Ananalysis of the rental market for the City of Ottawa describes how rents rosesharply between 2016 and 2018, and the 1,123new units that came on the market in that time couldn't keep up with 5,388 more renters.

The affordabilityand supply of rental housing arebig issues but are more likely to be dealt with through the new official plan and homelessness strategy.

Online surveycloses Sept. 4

MaclarenMunicipal Consulting, which the city hiredtotakestock of Ottawa's wide-ranging rental issues, offered the city more policy choices to deal with housing conditionsin a report this month.

Toronto, for instance, has a registry of large apartment buildings and requires them to deal with pests. Oshawa actually licenses rental housing, but only near its post-secondary campuses.

Another option would be to have bylaw officers write tickets when they see anunkempt property, the same way they write parking tickets, instead of only following up oncomplaints.

Residents have until Sept. 4 to fill out a surveywith their feedback, which will feed into what regulations or enforcement staff recommend tocity councillors this fall. Any new regulations will not extend to social housing or long-term care homes.

A second survey on options for regulatingshort-term rentals, such as Airbnb, closesthe same day.