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Home » St. Catharines » ‘It’s one AGI after one other,’ say tenants dealing with hire surge
St. Catharines

‘It’s one AGI after one other,’ say tenants dealing with hire surge

January 16, 20258 Mins Read
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‘It’s one AGI after another,’ say tenants facing rent surge

Patrick and Jadzia Hartleib, tenants of 292 Oakdale Ave. in St. Catharines, fear they may end up homeless after recent above guideline rent increases eat further into their limited budget.

Julie Jocsak St. Catharines Standard
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Residents of a St. Catharines condo constructing are fearful after receiving a number of notices about impending above guideline hire will increase — whereas the property proprietor states will increase are inside provincial pointers.

The 112-unit constructing at 292 Oakdale Ave. is owned by Starlight Investments and managed by MetCap Dwelling and is hire managed, that means rents are restricted to annual will increase as landlords can solely apply for above guideline hire will increase (AGI) to cowl prices for essential renovations to the constructing, which don’t embrace beauty enhancements equivalent to portray, concrete patch work and different floor stage enhancements.

At the very least three AGIs have been levied in opposition to the constructing’s tenants over the previous 5 years, growing rents above the annual pointers set out by the Ontario authorities for 2024 set at 2.5 per cent.

The AGIs have been filed between 2019 and 2024, with two just lately being resolved via the Landlord and Tenant Board tribunal (LTB), with hire will increase totalling 4.5 per cent with one other slated for about 3.6 per cent, which might be mixed with the provincial improve of two.5 per cent. If permitted by the tribunal, these mixed hikes can be near a ten per cent complete.

The Normal acquired the latest excellent AGI paperwork at the moment earlier than the LTB which states capital enhancements to the constructing value virtually $650,000, however some may very well be thought of beauty together with masonry and concrete repairs, and cleansing and coating of exterior constructing elements.

Starlight investments is certainly one of practically two dozen company landlords, often known as actual property funding trusts (REIT), and is certainly one of Canada’s largest landlords with over 54,000 residential models. Starlight has filed greater than 33 per cent of present AGIs earlier than the board as one of many largest REITs in Ontario, based on knowledge launched by the LTB for 2022.

“It’s one AGI after another, and for me, I’m a single 60-year-old lady living by myself and working full-time at Tim Hortons (for minimum wage),” stated Darlene Grace, a 292 Oakdale Ave. tenant.

Grace pays about $1,080 a month for her two-bedroom condo, the place she has lived for greater than seven years.

She at the moment struggles to make ends meet, and since receiving the latest AGIs, worries about her future within the constructing when the following AGI comes.

“That’s why I’m so terrified because I’m homeless if I lose this place,” she stated.

“The odds of me finding even a basement apartment for what I make now is impossible and that’s the scary thing, I’m 60 and all by myself.”

In a last-ditch effort, Grace stated she realized of a Residential Hire Help Program supplied by Starlight Investments, which she utilized for. She didn’t get a solution, and as an alternative acquired an eviction discover.

“I got an N4 for it because what they’re doing is they’re issuing N4s for nonpayment of rent because they’re taking the AGIs, and it gets consumed into your rent,” she stated.

“So even though my rent is up to date, I’m waiting to hear from them whether they’re going to give me a partial credit, a full credit or no credit at all.”

Different tenants equivalent to Patrick Hartleib and his spouse Jadzia, Ontario Incapacity Assist Program recipients who run the 292 Oakdale Ave. tenant affiliation, concern they too may very well be dwelling in a tent subsequent yr if hire will increase additional.

“We get no support from ODSP for the rent increases, there’s nothing,” Hartleib stated.

“I can’t afford to pack up and move again, I’m starting to realize I’m no spring chicken.”

The 45-year-old and his spouse pay greater than $1,550 per 30 days in hire and obtain virtually $1,900 from ODSP from which they must pay hire, meals and web every month.

“It’s (rent) going up $40 each year, that’s $80 every two years, so in a few years, there’s a couple hundred dollars added to the rent we can’t afford,” he stated.

Hartleib stated many throughout the tenant affiliation are scared concerning continued AGI will increase which might see many on mounted incomes doubtlessly homeless.

“They don’t trust the company anymore, some people have already moved out … and we see people move in not having a clue what they’re moving into,” he stated.

“That’s scary as well because it’s like, they’re the new blood they’re not going to make it here.”

In an e mail, Penny Colomvakos, Starlight Investments vice-president, residential operations, stated the corporate is “actively investing” in its properties “to ensure they remain a place to call home.”

“As one of Canada’s most active developers of purpose-built rental housing we are committed to increasing the supply of safe and attainable housing,” she stated.

“In Canada, we have a development pipeline positioned to deliver over 28,000 new rental suites over the next 10 years.”

In the identical e mail, Starlight Investments touted it’s effectively throughout the guidelines outlined by the “governing bodies both provincially and by the Landlord Tenant Board,” to be submitting the AGIs.

“These regulated rental increases are of provincial jurisdiction and a part of Ontario’s broader provincial rental housing policy, to maintain and extend the life of the rental housing infrastructure,” learn the e-mail.

“An AGI is an essential tool for preserving our aging rental stock.”

The character of AGIs and commodification of housing places tenants on the biggest threat in the course of the landlord/tenant transaction, stated Leilani Farha, former UN Particular Rapporteur on the Proper to Housing and International director of The Shift, a housing-based non-profit out of Ottawa.

“A successful AGI puts tenants between a rock and a hard place and it’s the most serious place, because housing is so fundamental to human life and to survival and well-being,” she stated.

Former United Nations Particular Rapporteur on the Proper to Ample Housing, Leilani Farha.

Eric Piermont Getty Photos file picture

“It’s not just any old rock and a hard place. It’s a life-threatening rock and a hard place.”

For Farha, the legal guidelines in Ontario and Canada are little greater than a paper tiger, one thing that seems to be threatening, however is ineffectual, particularly relating to defending tenants from REITs submitting AGIs.

“We have in place a bunch of laws and policies which mostly benefit landlords and fail to protect tenants and tenants’ rights to a dignified life and to live in security and in a habitable place,” she stated.

“Certainly, the way in which housing policy laws and regulations have been designed privilege financial actors and the commodification of housing over the enjoyment of housing as a human right, there’s little doubt about that.”

Farha stated REITs, company landlords and monetary actors, are banking on the actual fact many tenants have no idea their rights, the method concerning how AGIs are filed and what tenants can do to guard themselves.

“There’s no transparency, no monitoring and no accountability with respect to corporate landlords or any landlords, the only accountability is the landlord tenant tribunal, but that’s an 11th hour accountability mechanism,” she stated.

“There’s no requirement landlords show their hand ever or show how they’re making business decisions even when those business decisions are going to have a huge impact on the enjoyment of the right to housing for tenants.”

Tenant advocate L.D. Blake, who has been concerned in a number of AGIs as a tenant at 165 Ontario St. in St. Catharines, stated there’s a loophole landlords use in the course of the AGI course of to make sure they get most return on funding for renovations.

“First, the landlord has every opportunity on earth to collect evidence for his presentation in a tribunal. Second, the actual work performed in renovations destroys the evidence the tenants need in a tribunal to mount a defence,” he stated. Third, “the regulations prevent landlords from filing or announcing AGIs before receiving payment information, so the resulting delay in tenant involvement in the process leaves them defenceless in the courtroom.”

This has troubling implications for a way REITs and company landlords use AGIs, as Farha stated AGI use is “baked into how properties are marketed, sold” and property values are tied to AGIs, which is set via a exact course of.

“There’s a mathematical formula if you increase rents by a certain percentage, you end up with an exponential increase in the value of your property,” she stated.

“Landlords will say, ‘well, I’m only increasing rent by $25 a month per tenant for 100 units, but the impact is their property increases in value exponentially.”

She stated when evaluating value versus worth, most tenants are keen to pay will increase for higher dwelling areas, however many occasions they by no means see wanted enhancements of their models.

“That’s not what’s happening here, they’re finding out the lobby was refurbished, and they were never asked if they wanted the lobby refurbished. They are suddenly being charged $20 a month more in rent and for people on a fixed income that is a lot of money,” she stated.



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