#Renovicted and #Demovicted tenants gathered this morning to to address the CoV’s 236-pg Rental Incentive Report Back demanding adequate disincentives for displacement. #VanPoli
Exhibit A: The Tenant Relocation & Protection Policy, which Council relies on to mitigate displacement, is toothles:
“The TRPP doesn’t help us; the landlord just sends us a few Craigslist Ads,” - Sarah, a renovicted tenant in Mt Pleasant who lives on disability.
Exhibit B: City Staff know the TRPP isn’t working:
“We’ve been trying to get our landlord to fulfill the TRPP, and the city hasn’t been much help... now 75% of my income goes to rent” - Milo, a demovicted tenant in Hastings-Sunrise
Exhibit C: The city‘s Right of First Refusal policy does not let tenants return at their old rents, so tenants are still displaced:
“We are losing our neighbours of many years, and we are losing our neighbourhood” - Brad, renovicted tenant from Berkeley Tower in the West End
Possible solutions - look to #Burnaby
The Mayor’s Task Force on Housing recommended meaningful policies like
✅Right of First Refusal at the same rent for renovictions/demovictions
✅Rent Stabilization in temporary accommodation paid for by developer while new unit being built
“If these protections are possible in Burnaby and we had four representatives from the development community on the Task Force, why is it not being considered in Vancouver? - Murray Martin of @BC_ACORN
The City’s tenant protections and rental incentive policies continue to fail the working class and low income tenants who are being forced out of their homes and communities. It doesn’t have to be this way, but today’s staff report is a continuation of this trend.
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Evictions are violence, and it's low-income and racialized tenants who bare the brunt of this. With the @bcndp lifting the eviction ban, the Guevarras, Sarah Lindsay and The Bottle Depot on Carolina and Broadway are being evicted on the 30th of September.
The tenants will be kicked out of their homes for another @PortLiving project - they've bought up blocks of property around Fraser and Main. Lots of condos and empty storefronts here now, though there's been reports that they are owing millions of unpaid debt.
All these tenants deserve just compensation, but the developer has chosen to specifically ignore requests to negotiate with the Guevarras who are seniors and Filipino immigrants. They will be hit the hardest by this eviction and yet are the ones who are offered the least.
We were shocked by the responses that we got:
- A significant number of all respondents (63%) reported experiencing increased mental health issues
- 28% of written responses described sacrificing basic nutrition or going hungry
- Despite CERB and BC TRS, 32% reported having to borrow, use credit, or dip into savings
- 32% believed they were at risk of falling into rent debt once government ends CERB
- 69% of those in rent debt do not believe they can afford to begin paying down their debt by October
Last week we surveyed renters about being able to pay rent for May. Here are some responses:
“I emailed my landlord saying my rent is a hundred percent of my income and he said his mortgage company won't give him a break so I don't get a break."
"I did try to negotiate with my landlord but they are big corporations and won't do any rent reduction of deferral. They just told me to apply for the BC Rent Supplement."
Our Renters Toolkit and other resources on bcrentcrisis.ca will be updated to reflect info the provincial government provided yesterday. Yesterday is the first time they've actually clarified how evictions and rents are to be handled.
KEY INFO: Eviction notices issued after March 30th are considered without force. This means that they won't have to be disputed in 5 days which is good. People can prioritize health and buy the things they need.
KEY INFO: Evictions and writs of possession given prior to March 30th will still be live, meaning you would have to dispute them within regular time guidelines. However they will not be enforced until the lifting of the emergency period.
We are telling all renters:
Be Safe. Just Stay. Even if you Cannot Pay.
Share your stories. Connect with neighbors.
Learn how to safely organize your building under COVID-19. Download the Renter’s Toolkit. #BCRentCrisis#FoodbeforeRent
To survive this renters will need to start building our power.
We’ll need to take care of each other.
But we’ll also need to make our voices heard.
We will need to tell the government what we really need.
And if they don’t act then we will.
Time is running out for tenants suddenly at risk of losing their homes due to #Covid_19 job loss. Does the province really expect every single landlord to be "principled"? We don't just hope people are "principled" and not harm each other in other ways - that's what laws are for.
What "principles" are you referring to? We've created a way for at-risk tenants to self-identify, and we've gotten 238 names just since 7 AM this morning. vancouvertenantsunion.ca/bcrentcrisis