Minister vows to intervene as IRAC allows P.E.I.'s highest-ever rent hikes for 2023 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:47 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Minister vows to intervene as IRAC allows P.E.I.'s highest-ever rent hikes for 2023

The Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission has set limits on maximum allowable rent increases that will take effect on Jan. 1, 2023 and Prince Edward Island's ProgressiveConservative government is vowing to fight them.

Landlords' association says hike makes sense; housing advocates say it's unfair

A sign.
The Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission has released the maximum allowable rent increases that will take effect Jan. 1, 2023. (Bryan Eneas/CBC)

The Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission has set limits on maximum allowable rent increases that will take effect on Jan. 1, 2023 the highest on record and Prince Edward Island's ProgressiveConservative government is vowing to fight them.

In a statement released Wednesday, IRACsaida maximum allowable rent increase of 5.2 per cent will apply for unheated rental units or those heated with sources other than furnace oil. The same rate of increase will apply for rental mobile home units located in a mobile home park.

A maximum allowable rent increase of 10.8 per cent will apply to any rental units that are heated with furnace oil and have heat included in the rent.

This is by far Prince Edward Island's highest allowable annual rent hike on record.For the past two years, the maximum allowable increase for all rental units was one per cent.

Caps havefluctuated between one and two per cent since 2014, according to statistics on the website of the Office of the Director ofRegistered Rental Property. Going back as far as 1989, that list shows therehas never been an increase like the one announced Wednesday.

In a written statement, the commission said the increases are based on a Consumer Price Index (CPI) formula that helps determine how much rental owners spend operating their rental units.

This encampment on the property of the Christian Reform Church in Charlottetown was one of several that sprang up on P.E.I. this summer. They are populated by people who cannot find affordable housing. (Kirk Pennell/CBC)

IRAC said it also considered submissions received from 65 landlords and201 tenants, as well as109 submissions that didn't specify whether they were from tenants or landlords.

P.E.I. rent hikesalready highest in Canada

Rent has been a major factor in making P.E.I.'s inflation rate the highest in Canada for the last several months. In April, the annual inflation rate for rented accommodation on the Island was 15.3 per cent, compared to just 4.2 per cent for Canada as a whole.

The province's population is growing at more than double the planned rate, and an increasing number of Islanders are already struggling to find affordable housing. Some are living in encampments in Charlottetown and Summerside, and food banks and shelters have reported an urgent increased need for their services.

'Im not letting it happen on my watch,' Minister of Social Development and Housing Matthew MacKay says of the allowable rental increases for 2023. (Rick Gibbs/CBC)

P.E.I.'s minister of social development and housing,Matthew MacKay, was quick to issue a statement in response to the increases.

"Now is not the time to introduce record high rental increases in this province. Full stop," the statement began.

"I am working with staff in the Department of Social Development and Housing to explore all options to intervene on this decision as soon as possible.

'Not in the cards,' says affordable housing advocate

"It's a decision coming from people who aren't going through any of the issues tenants are facing on P.E.I.," saidConnor Kelly with the P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing.

'There are people who are barely getting by,' says Connor Kelly with the P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

"At a time when we are experiencing a housing crisis, compounded with record-high inflation, we cannot expect Islanders to pay five to 10 per centmore in rent next year. It's just not in the cards," he said.

There are people already working three or four minimum-wage jobs just to get by. Connor Kelly

Kelly said the200 submissions made by tenants to IRAC should have carried more weight.

"There are people who are barely getting by, affording their drugs, pharmaceuticals ... other people who mighthave to go without meals," he said."There are people already working three or four minimum-wage jobs just to get by."

Rent hike 'necessary,' says owners'association

Chris LeClair is asenior policy adviser with the Residential Rental Association of P.E.I., which represents Island rental owners.

'I think it's necessary from a landlord perspective, because of the very reasons that led IRACto make this decision," he said of the allowable rent increases for 2023.

'I think it's necessary from a landlord perspective,' says Chris LeClair, senior policy adviser with the Residential Rental Association of P.E.I. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

He said IRAC is responding to the P.E.I.'s inflation rate, which was 10.9 per cent year over year in August, driving up many different costs for the province's rental owners, more than 7,000 of whom operate only one or two rental units.

We need to be careful in looking to the private sector, in looking to owners and operators, to subsidize a period of hyperinflation.Chris LeClair

"These are Island families. These are small businesses," he said. "I think we need to be careful in looking to the private sector, in looking to owners and operators,to subsidize a period of hyperinflation."

He said what's really needed is an affordable housing strategy for Prince Edward Island, adding thathis association has repeatedly told the governmentit will "come to the table" in talks to createone.

Legislature's job to create policy, says IRAC

Asked for comment on the minister's reaction to the rent hike, IRACsent an emailed statement sayingit's the commission's job to setallowable rent increases in accordance with and as directed by the Island's current residential rental legislation.

"The commission does not have the power to create or implement public policy," the statement read.

"That power and responsibility of policy development and implementation of legislation rests solely with the Government of Prince Edward Island."

Islanders are still waiting for a new Residential Tenancy Act, which could have the potential to change how rent increases are handled.

A proposed act has been in the works since 2019, with the government saying itwill provide more protection forIsland landlords and tenants alike.

At the moment, P.E.I.'s rental industry falls under the provisions of the30-year-old Rental of Residential Properties Act.