P.E.I. groups applaud proposed changes to residential tenancy legislation
'We're very excited to see that the government is including public consultation as a part of this process'
Some Island advocacy groups saythey welcomethe suggested changesin draft legislation forthe Residential Tenancy Act, which was released Thursday.
The new legislation would replace the 30-year-oldRental of Residential Properties Act, and aims to provide additional protections for Island landlords and tenants.
"Mostly we're very excited to see that the government is including public consultation as a part of this process," said Hannah Gehrels, a member of the P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing group. "We're really excited to participate."
Under the new legislation, changes have been proposed to deal with the issue of renovictions landlords evicting a tenant under the premise of conducting repairs or renovations to a unit.
Two months' notice to try to find somewhere with our low vacancy rate is almost impossible. Hannah Gehrels, P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing
With the changes, landlords would be required to provide six months' notice to tenants facing suchan eviction, up from the current 60 days. The renovations would also have to be extensive enough as to require a building permit and for the unit to be vacant.
Tenants who had to leave an apartment because of renovations would also have the right of first refusal when it goes back on the market, under the proposed legislation.
Gehrels said those changes are responding to a real need in the community.
"Hearing people who are renovictedquite regularly and only given two months' notice to try to find somewhere with our low vacancy rate is almost impossible," Gehrels said.
"It puts people in a really, really tough situation. We are glad to seesome things responding to that in these proposed changes."
Changes for people experiencing domestic violence
Another proposed change in the draft legislation would allow victims of domestic violence to exit a lease agreement early, after providing at least one month's notice.
That would bring those rules in line with other provinces.
"It's very damaging for people to havebad references in the rental community," said Danya O'Malley, executive director ofP.E.I. Family Violence Prevention Services.
"So if they have a leaseand they break it or they're worried about breaking it they may be worried about that impacting their ability to rent housing down the road."
O'Malley said the proposed changes, if put in place, will remove barriers and support people moving on from abuse. She said it can decrease the overall risk that people experience as a result of living in an unsafe situation.
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With files from Travis Kingdon