{"id":16542,"date":"2025-02-24T16:36:56","date_gmt":"2025-02-24T21:36:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/acorncanada.org\/?post_type=news&p=16542"},"modified":"2025-02-24T16:36:56","modified_gmt":"2025-02-24T21:36:56","slug":"city-news-everywhere-residents-urging-kitchener-council-to-implement-bylaw-to-halt-renovictions","status":"publish","type":"news","link":"https:\/\/acorncanada.org\/news\/city-news-everywhere-residents-urging-kitchener-council-to-implement-bylaw-to-halt-renovictions\/","title":{"rendered":"City News Everywhere: Residents urging Kitchener council to implement bylaw to halt renovictions"},"content":{"rendered":"
Residents and advocates in Kitchener are pleading with city council to take action against landlords who are using renovations as an excuse to evict them from their homes in order to turn a profit.<\/p>\n
The process is known as a renoviction when a landlord evicts a tenant by claiming they will complete renovations, which range from complete overhauls to a simple paint job. The price of the unit will often increase, sometimes dramatically, when the landlord begins to search for a new tenant.<\/p>\n
A group of delegates attended a City of Kitchener council meeting on Monday to urge councillors to enact a renoviction bylaw, putting a hurdle in place to make it more difficult for bad faith landlords to evict tenants in cases of renovation.<\/p>\n
\u201cFrom Newfoundland to B.C., there\u2019s a phenomena of individuals investing in high-rise, low-rise buildings and using the scheme of renovation eviction to make people homeless,\u201d said Dr. Richard Christy of Wilfred Laurier University, who spoke in support of renoviction victims.<\/p>\n
Dorinda Kruger Allen is a tenant at 250 Fredrick St., an apartment building near downtown Kitchener. Kruger Allen noted that in late 2024, the ownership of the building she lives in changed hands, and the new owner is in the process of evicting all tenants to perform a variety of upgrades to the building, most of which are cosmetic.<\/p>\n