City sues owners of vacant Winnipeg buildings over years of unpaid inspection bills, fees - Action News
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Manitoba

City sues owners of vacant Winnipeg buildings over years of unpaid inspection bills, fees

The City of Winnipeg is taking the owners of several vacant buildings to court in two separate lawsuits, alleging they've failed to pay years worth of inspection bills and other fees, amounting to thousands of dollars.

City says court action only taken 'once other alternatives have been exhausted'

A sign that says
The City of Winnipeg filed two lawsuits against the owners of a number of vacant buildings this month, claiming each has racked up about $20,000 in unpaid bills. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

The City of Winnipeg is taking the owners of several vacant buildings to court in two separate lawsuits, alleging they've failed to pay years worth of inspection bills and other fees, amounting to thousands of dollars.

One claim, filedJan. 5 at the Manitoba Court of King's Bench,seeks general damages and about $20,000 in unpaid inspection bills and empty building fees from John Stepien in connection withfour vacantinner-city Winnipeg buildings he owns.

A similar claim,filed by the city on Jan. 18, seeks just over $17,000 for unpaid inspection bills and empty building fees for two vacant buildings in Winnipeg's William Whyte neighbourhood, owned byMisah Kinfemicael Daba.

None of the allegations have been tested in court. No statements of defence have yet been filed.

A city spokesperson told CBC NewsTuesday they cannotcomment on the lawsuits since the matters arebefore the courts.

However, the city generally works closely with property owners to resolve such issues and only resorts to court action "once other alternatives have been exhausted," said spokesperson Adam Campbell.

As of last Friday, 677 Winnipeg properties were subject to the city's vacant building bylaw, Campbell said.

The bylaw is intendedto ensure vacant buildings areproperly maintained andallows enforcement officers to inspect Winnipeg properties.Buildings determined to be vacant undergo yearly inspections, which the owners are then billed for.

Feces found on vacant building's walls: suit

Once a vacant building has undergone five or more annual inspections, the owner ischarged an annual empty building fee, which amounts to one per cent of the property's most recent assessed value.

The city says its enforcement officers reached their fifth annual inspection of one of Stepien's vacant properties, in Winnipeg's West Alexander neighbourhood, in 2023 and later issued an empty building fee.

During those inspections, officers say they found issues such as exterior damage,boarded-up windows and/or doors, and garbage in the building. There wasalso feces on itsinterior walls, according to the suit.

Smoke pours out of a two-storey house in the centre of the photo. Firefighters stand in the foreground wearing helmets and protective coats. Much of the photograph is highlighted in red from the emergency lights on fire trucks.
A vacant and boarded-up home on Pritchard Avenue burns for the second time in a month in a file photo from January 2023. The union representing Winnipeg firefighters says the city saw a record number of fires in vacant buildings last year. (Travis Golby/CBC)

The charges for the five inspections and the empty building fee all remain unpaid by Stepien "despite demand" from the city, according to the city's lawsuit.

Stepien'sthree other vacant properties mentioned in the suit were issued a total of 11 annual inspection feesbetween 2017 to 2023, which also have not yet been paid,the city alleges.

Record number of fires in vacant buildings

In its separate suit against Daba, who owns two buildings in Winnipeg's William Whyte neighbourhood, the city says a total of 10 inspection charges and four empty building fees issued between 2016 to 2023 remain unpaid.

Enforcement officers found severe fire damage inside both buildings through theirinspections during those years, according to that suit.

The buildings reached their fifth vacant building bylaw inspections in 2020 and 2021, and annual empty building fees were later issued to Daba, the suit says.

Daba was also issued a noncompliance inspection feeafter a 2022 inspection foundone building did not meet the city's neighbourhood liveability bylaw, which regulates the maintenance of properties, according to the suit.

CBC News reached out to Daba for comment on Tuesday but did not hear back.

Stepien could not be reached prior to publication.

The suits come after the city saw a record number of vacant building fireslast year.

Tom Bilous, president of the United Fire Fighters of Winnipeg, told CBC News last week there were 150 fires in vacant buildings in the city in 2023, far surpassing the previous record of 84 the year before.

The city adopted a bylaw in 2023 that makes property owners responsible for the costs of fighting fires in vacant buildings in order to spur them to properly secure the properties from break-ins.

Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew has also saidhe would like to exploreseizing vacant buildings from problem landlords to turn them into social housing.