Quebec aims to reduce wait times for rental board hearings, force co-property owners to save for repairs - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 04:34 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Quebec aims to reduce wait times for rental board hearings, force co-property owners to save for repairs

Quebec's Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Andre Laforest says Bill 16, tabled Wednesday, is the biggest reform in the history of Quebecs rental board, the Rgie du Logement. But critics say more must be done to protect vulnerable tenants.

Critics of Bill 16, tabled Wednesday, say proposed changes don't do enough to protect vulnerable tenants

Bill 16 is sponsored by Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Andre Laforest, who says it is the biggest reform in the history of Quebec's rental board, which will become the Quebec administrative housing tribunal. (Radio-Canada)

The Quebec government has tabled draft legislation which Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Andre Laforestcalls the biggest reform in the history of Quebec's rental board, the Rgie du Logement.

Bill 16 will replace the rental board with a new administrative housing tribunal with more staff and broader powers, with the aim of reducing the average delay for a rental dispute hearing from 16 months to two.

The bill provides for the hiring of 30 new information officers, as well as more support staff.

"We are giving special clerks more power," Laforest said Wednesday. "They will be able to judge the reasons for non-payment of rent, for example, or non-payment of electricity."

'Tenants are really poorly protected': social housingadvocate

Tenants' rights groups say the housing bill is too technical, geared toward lawyers rather than the tenants who are actually affected by the long waits to have their cases heard.

"This bill is clearly not enough to make the rental board a better tribunal, so the access to justice won't be better with this bill," saidMaxime Roy-Allard, spokesperson for the Regroupement des comits logement et associations de locataires du Qubec (RCLALQ).

Maxime Roy-Allard is the spokesperson for the Regroupement des comits logement et associations de locataires du Qubec (RCLALQ), a tenants' rights group. (Radio-Canada)

Roy-Allard says Bill 16 vulnerable tenants needbetter protection againstbeing evicted.

"It's very easy for landlords to kick out tenants," said Roy-Allard, who says that the situation in Montreal is at a breaking pointbecause the rental vacancy rate is just 1.9 per cent right now, and rents are going up.

"When there's a lack of housing, there is more discrimination, and tenants suffer from greaterinjustice," Roy-Allard told Radio-Canada. "We need a functioning tribunal one that tenants can make use of."

Building inspectors

The housing bill includes provisions for mandatory training for building inspectors, who do not require any permit or training to operate right now.

Laforest says it's important to "standardize practices to protect buyers."

It also gives more powers to municipalities in cases where, for example, a private seniors residence is threatened with closure: in such cases, the municipality could seize the building in order to keep it operating.

Co-property reno funds

Many co-owned properties in Quebec are older buildings, in need of extensive renovation. But there is no obligation in existing laws to compel the co-owners of undivided condiminiums to contribute to a pool to pay for major repairs and renovations.

Bill 16 would change that, making co-owners keep track of building maintenance and set aside funds monthly for future repairs.

Laforest estimates that change will cost each co-owner of a shared property an average ofabout $5.50 per month.

With files from Valeria Cori-Manocchio and Radio-Canada