Seniors need legal help fighting rent increases, says Green MLA - Action News
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PEI

Seniors need legal help fighting rent increases, says Green MLA

Prince Edward Island is one of the only jurisdictions in Canada that has rent controls but that doesn't mean landlords can't raise rents above the allowable rates.

'Its literally hundreds of pages and it is written in legalese,' says Lynne Lund

Some tenants at properties in Summerside owned by Greenway Realty are facing rent increases. (Google Maps)

Prince Edward Island is one of the only jurisdictions in Canada that has rent controls but that doesn't mean landlords can't raise rents above the maximum allowable annual increase.

Green MLA Lynne Lund says she's hearing from many constituents that their landlords are applying to the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission (IRAC)forpermission toincrease rents well beyond that cap, which the commission has set at one per cent for 2022.

"I have to tell you, it's very distressing," she said in an interview. "This is in no way a fair process for people."

In her district of Summerside-Wilmot, Lund has heard recentlyfrom the tenants of87 senior-friendly units who received notices saying their landlord was applyingfor a rental increase above the allowable yearly maximum. That amounts to more than 100 tenants and some of them are facing a rental increase of around23 per cent, Lund said.

On Thursday in the legislature, Lund said she had learned that some residents are facing increases of 40-50 per cent or higher.

The renterswill be given documents listing reasons the landlord feels their rent needs to increase so much five days prior to the hearing before IRAC, Lund said.

"It's literally hundreds of pages and it is written in legalese," she said. "Seniors in my district have the onus on them to refute the various things their landlord says [about why] the rent needs to go up. Anything that they themselves do not refute, the assumption is that they agree with it."

'This is a major gap for people who cannot afford legal support to help them,' says Green MLA Lynne Lund. (Tony Davis/CBC)

Lund believes there is a lack of access to justice at play here. Going through long and complicateddocuments such as this would be difficult for most people, but those who have reached out to her are seniors on fixed incomes who can't afford to hire lawyerstofightthe increases by attending the IRAC hearings.

"This is a huge problem and it's one I have been raising in the legislature since the last sitting," she said. "This is a major gap for people who cannot afford legal support to help them, and I have been asking government to fund legal aid to allow tenancy disputes to be within the scope of things that legal aid could help somebody with."

Rent hearings in front of the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission are 'set up so that you don't need a lawyer,' says Minister of Justice and Public Safety Bloyce Thompson. (CBC News/Kirk Pennell)

However, Justice Minister Bloyce Thompson said his legal aid officials have to concentrateon other issues.

"Their focus and expertise is on the criminal and family law," he said. "They help the most vulnerable Islanders right now, low-income Islanders. We want to stay focused on that."

Thompson saidIRAC deals with rent disputes "in a quasi-judicial manner that is set up so that you don't need a lawyer."

However, he agrees more support is needed for tenantstaking on a corporate landlord whether that is through IRAC or through the Department of Housing andSocial Development.

Hearings set for March 14

Some hearings over rent increases for the three strips of row houses in Summerside owned by Greenway Realty are set for March 14, according to IRAC's website.

A portion of a notice Greenway sent to a tenant. (Submitted by Lynne Lund)

"Rental hearings are private matters, but rental appeals are public," IRAC officials said in an email.

The email did not address the specific situation Lund was raising, but did give some statistics.

"In 2021, the Rental Office issued 81 orders related to rent increases greater than the allowable amount; 67 orders approved increases involving 153 units; 14 orders denied increases involving 38 units."

CBC News called GreenwayRealty and did not get a response.

The act is structured really strangely around rental increases. Connor Kelly

But a copy of one of the notices given to residentsclaims operating costs andproperty tax and insurance increases as reasons to raiserent. The notice from Greenwayalso states capital expenditures at its Summerside properties as a reason for the increases, including $53,000 in paving, replacement of geothermal heat pumps at $17,000 and landscaping at $17,000.

"The market rent for this unit is $1,470. We need to put a solution in place to resolve the shortage in revenues," the notice reads.

However, Greenway has offered that tenant a discount for the first year of $204, meaning for the first year the rent would go from $1,166 to $1,266, and gradually approach market value over the next four years.

'Really complicated' process

Connor Kelly from the P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housingagrees with the Official Opposition. He said renters can fight on their own, but allowing them access to lawyers would make the process much easier.

Renters on the Island are scared to speak out to the media, says Connor Kelly with P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing. (Tony Davis/CBC)

"The process for fighting any kind of rental issue is really complicated," Kelly said. "The act is structured really strangely around rental increases, [saying] the landlord should expect 'a reasonable return on capital investment'but reasonable is not defined, so reasonable for who?"

CBC News has attempted to contact tenants about the increase, without success.

Renters on the Island are scared to speak out to the media, Kelly said; they are worried their landlords might see them as complainersand that would make the situation worse.