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Toronto

City council approves landlord inspection bylaw to tame 'Wild West' of a rental market

Toronto landlords will soon be forced to post inspection results at the front of their buildings after city council approved a new bylaw governing apartment buildings Wednesday.

Council votes to boost number of enforcement officers, perform citywide audit of rental buildings

Landlords will be required to pay $10.60 per unit per year as part of a new registration fee. (Dave Gilson/CBC)

Toronto landlords will soon be forced to post inspection results at the front of their buildings after city council approved a new bylawgoverningapartment buildings Wednesday.

It's something that tenants and anti-poverty advocates have fought for overthe last decade, and some of thembegan clapping as the vote was counted at city hall.

The rental market has been "like the Wild, Wild West" for tenants, ACORN spokeswoman Laurie Simpson said Wednesday night. The registration system and the posted inspections will give tenants more information when deciding where to live.

"This goes a long way to giving tenants some rights," she said.

Laurie Simpson of ACORN Canada says the new bylaw will give tenants more rights when it comes to finding a home. (CBC News)

The project would be modelled on the DineSafe program launched in 2001, which saw restaurants post signs from Toronto Public Healthindicating a pass, a conditional pass or a failing grade.

Applying that same principle to landlords had been voted downby the municipal licensing and standards committee earlier this month.

It tells prospective tenants what they're walking into before they sign on the dotted line.- Coun. Josh Matlow

But Coun. Josh Matlow decided to reintroduce the idea at council at the urging of ACORN andtenants who told him stories of urine-soaked hallways and bug-infested bathrooms.

DineSafe forced the restaurant industry to adapt, the Ward 22, St. Paul's councillorsaid Wednesday, and he argued it could do the same for the rental housing market.

"It provides transparency and accountability,"Matlowsaid. "Literally, in the shop window, it tells prospective tenants what they're walking into before they sign on the dotted line."

Within a yearof DineSafe's launch, the compliance rate jumped from 40 per cent to 78 per cent, public healthrecords show. It now sits at 90 per cent compliance.

More enforcement

The new bylaw will also require the owners of Toronto's 3,500 rental buildings to register with the city and file mandatory plans for pest control, waste management, cleaning and maintenance.

Half of the program's $5.1-million budget will be covered by a $10.60 annual fee property owners will have to pay on each of their units.Staff built in safeguards to keeplandlords from downloading that costonto their tenants, something that Coun. Steve Holyday said should be removed.

Toronto's new inspection program would require landlords to display the results of inspections, much like the Dinesafe program. (Lisa Bruni/CBC)

But only eight of his colleagues supported him when it came time to vote.

That budget also includes the hiring of 12 new staff.

Although several councillors said they felt that "good landlords" are paying fees to monitor "the bad,"Coun. Norm Kelly said he thought that responsible property owners could benefit from the inspections as well.

The landlords would get a"stamp of approval" from the city if they pass inspection, which could help attract quality tenants, he said.

Citywide audit

Enforcement officers plan to conduct an audit of every single rental housing property in the city beginning in 2017. That "baseline" will give them an idea of the biggest offenders, who will then be subject to a more thorough inspection, staff said.

Staff said the bylaw also calls for amendments in the building code so the city can levy higher fines against repeat offenders.

But the deputy mayor said he doesn't think that the bylaw will actually change the average living conditions.

"We know where the bad buildings are," Denzil Minnan-Wong said."The only thing that's going to happen is we're going to create a paper administration and the winners will be councillors who can declare this in a newsletter and the losers will be the ones who have to pay the fee, especially those in the good buildings."