Help A Group Of Great Tenants Who Are Fighting For Justice

Announcements and articles for tenants will be posted here along with helpful posts from the New Tenant Help Forum.
Message
Author
User avatar
The Tenant Justice Project
Posts: 66
Joined: December 7th, 2017, 8:49 pm

Help A Group Of Great Tenants Who Are Fighting For Justice

#1 Unread post by The Tenant Justice Project » February 23rd, 2020, 10:37 pm

Image

Donate To The 394 Dovercourt Tenant Defense Fund Now!

Donate today to help us beat eviction from our homes!!!


For the past two years, we the tenants of 394 Dovercourt Road have been fighting renoviction. To continue the fight, we need your support. We have expenses related to  our landlord's case to evict us at the Landlord and Tenant Board. We now need to hire the services of professionals to provide expert testimony at our upcoming hearing in February 2020.

Background

AIPL Canada  the building at 394 Dovercourt Road in 2017. AIPL offered tenants small sums of money to move out. When tenants declined, AIPL issued eviction notices. AIPL then applied to the Landlord and Tenant Board to evict all thirteen tenants. The Board dismissed the evictions  only for the landlord to apply to evict tenants a second time.

This is renoviction.

We’ve all heard the stories. The data backs them up. Investors buy rental properties in “up and coming” areas. They evict the sitting tenants, renovate units, and more than double the rent.

In Ontario, tenants’ “right of first refusal” is not upheld. On paper, landlords should give tenants the option to return to their unit once renovations are completed. In reality, the landlord rents the unit to a new tenant at a higher rent. The evicted tenant has no recourse to regain possession.

The Toronto Star  has documented how the tenants of 795 College Street found this out the hard way.

AIPL claims it has to alter the units at 394 Dovercourt. They say the work is so extensive that it requires tenants to move out. Tenants believe this is nothing more than a pretext to their eviction. While the wiring in the building is old, it is in good working condition. The real reason AIPL wants the tenants out is so they can raise rent on the vacant units without limit.
https://www.gofundme.com/f/f32xf-394-d ... hare-sheet

User avatar
Laura
Posts: 1444
Joined: September 18th, 2010, 8:42 pm

Re: Help A Group Of Great Tenants Who Are Fighting For Justice

#2 Unread post by Laura » February 24th, 2020, 12:14 am

Even landlords should be supporting these victims!

User avatar
Robin
Posts: 174
Joined: November 8th, 2012, 6:05 pm

Re: Help A Group Of Great Tenants Who Are Fighting For Justice

#3 Unread post by Robin » February 24th, 2020, 1:34 pm

In Ontario, tenants’ “right of first refusal” is not upheld. On paper, landlords should give tenants the option to return to their unit once renovations are completed. In reality, the landlord rents the unit to a new tenant at a higher rent. The evicted tenant has no recourse to regain possession.
This loophole must end NOW!

User avatar
Welfare PROUD
Posts: 534
Joined: April 19th, 2018, 11:02 pm

Re: Help A Group Of Great Tenants Who Are Fighting For Justice

#4 Unread post by Welfare PROUD » February 25th, 2020, 8:28 pm

We must admire and team up with the Wet’suwet’en First Nation protesters. They have shown us that talking achieves nothing only action. It is time for Tenants and the Wet’suwet’en First Nation join together to fight for social and economic justice. As the First Nation blocks rail links and lights tire fires, Tenants must learn that this action brings respect from those in power and achieves victory for all those involved.

Time for Tenant blockades of bad landlords and burning tires in front of their homes?

Post Reply

Who is online

In total there are 438 users online :: 0 registered, 0 hidden and 438 guests (based on users active over the past 999 minutes)
Most users ever online was 11001 on October 2nd, 2024, 4:39 pm

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 438 guests