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New Brunswick

Moncton tenants face mid-winter move after rent hikes of almost 50%

Tenants in two Moncton apartmentcomplexes are facing rent and utility increases approaching 50 per cent as of March 1, the latest New Brunswick renters to be financially jolted by the sale of their buildings and a change in their landlord.

Renters in 2 buildings get notice of increases one day after properties are sold to new landlord

Stephanie Killam with the notice she and her mother received notifying them of a $250 increase in their rent and an end of free utilities. The rent increase will not show up until CMHC's rental survey next year and the new utilities charge will not be counted as an increase at all. (Pierre Fournier/Radio-Canada file photo)

Tenants in twoMoncton apartmentcomplexes are facing rent and utility increases of almost 50 per cent, the latest New Brunswick renters to be financially jolted by the sale of their building to new owners.

"It's stressful," said Stephanie Killam, who shares a two-bedroom apartment with her mother in one of the two recently sold complexes, a 12-unit building at 427 High St.

"We're forced to move because we can't afford the increase."

Killam said her mother is on a fixed income and thetwo have called the apartment home for the past five years.

The day after the building was sold on Nov. 30, they were given three months notice that their rent will increase $250 per month, from $700 to $950, on March 1 and that utilities will no longer be included in that payment.

A tenant in the second High Street building, which was sold on the same day to the same new owner, received an identicalnotice.

The Killams' notice said rent would be increasing from its current amount of $700 per month all-inclusive to $950 plus utilities. (Pierre Fournier/Radio-Canada)

That tenantsaid NB Power has quoted an estimate of $90 per month for equalized billing for a renter taking over their own power bill.

That would make Killam's total increase $340 per month, or 48.6 per cent.

"They're just putting it up to whatever they want," said Killam, who lost her job in June and is now collectingEmploymentInsurance.

Killam thinks there should be a cap on how much rent can be increased by.

She said $250 a month, plus utilities, is "not feasible"for most people.

"We don't make that kind of income," she said.

Peter Jongeneelen, who has friends living in the apartment building at 265 High St., says they are struggling to figure out if they can afford to stay there and where they will go if they can't. (Pierre Fournier/Radio-Canada)

Tenants struggling to make ends meet

Three blocks south, there are similar concerns.

PeterJongeneelen has friends living in the 12-unit building at 265 High St., and said theyare struggling to figure out if they can afford to stay there and where they will goif they can't.

"Nobody can handle that kind of anincrease. It's hard for people in this neighbourhoodto even make ends meet," Jongeneelen said.

Everyone understands that "landlords need to make money," he said, but there should be reasonable limits on rent increases.

"Putting it up 50 per cent, that's not good."

A current tenant of 265 High St., whom CBC News has agreed not to identify, said many in the building are being forced out by the increase.

"It's just not fair to raise it that much in that short of time," the tenant said.

"There are people that have been there for over five years and they're all thinking of moving because they simply can't afford it anymore. They were barely making ends meet at what the rent isnow."

Service New Brunswick Minister Mary Wilson Wilson confirmed Thursday she'll introduce a bill next week to put the rent cap in effect. (CBC News file photo)

According to property records, the apartment buildings were purchased for $720,000 eachon Nov. 30 by a Dieppe company called Johnsky Holdings Ltd.

Kyle Johnson is listed as company president.A Kyle Johnson is also listed as one of the two founders of K Squared Property Management in Moncton, the company that delivered the rent increase notices at both buildings.

Johnson could not be reached for an interview with the CBC. A reply to a text requesting comment was responded to with a brief message:"Not interested in commenting. Please don't contact me again. Have a great day."

An email to the province's communications department requesting comment on the High Street rent increases was not responded to.

Three weeks ago, Service New Brunswick Minister Mary Wilson addressed the issue of steep rent increases, saying they are rare and not something the government needs to regulate.

Wilson made the comments following two double-digit rent hike incidents one inMoncton in October where rent increased 62 per cent after the sale of a building on Steadman Street, and another in Lincoln in Novemberin which tenants of a recently sold building got notices of 50 per cent rent hikes.

"This is a very unfortunate isolated situation," Wilson said of the 50 per cent increases in Lincoln. "Landlords are not jacking up rents all over the province."

Aditya Rao is with the New Brunswick Coalition for Tenants Rights and says renters in New Brunswick need protection from sudden and excessive rent increases. (Skype)

Renewed call for rent-hike rules

But Aditya Rao with the New Brunswick Coalition for Tenants Rights said the latest increases in Moncton show earlier cases are not isolated.

"Even if it were just two cases, I don't think that's a reason to wash our hands of the issue," he said.

Rao renewed calls for the province to put rules in place to protect tenants from large rent hikes in the future

"The vast majority of landlords, it would cost them absolutely nothing because the vast majority of landlords are not trying to gouge the system," he said.

Stephanie Killam said she and her mother see no other option but to leave the building sometime during the winter.

"It's not something I like to do. I don't like change, but we have no choice," said Killam.