Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. maximum rent increase dropped for 2021

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Sep, 2020 10:27 PM
  • B.C. maximum rent increase dropped for 2021

The B.C. government has capped rent increases for next year at 1.4 per cent.

Landlords had been allowed to raise rents up to a maximum of 2.6 per cent this year, although the government imposed a rent freeze until the end of this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Housing Ministry says in a statement any tenant who received a notice of a rent increase for 2020 that would have gone into effect after March 18, should continue to pay their current rent until Nov. 30.

The government says landlords can only increase rent once per year and must provide tenants with three months' notice.

The ministry released guidelines in mid-August for repayment of rents that were unpaid as people lost work because of the pandemic.

The government says the increase allows property owners to make investments and repairs, while ensuring rent increases are moderate and predictable.

MORE National ARTICLES

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence
Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a woman travelling on a Surrey bus received multiple threats of sexual violence. According to Transit Police the woman was on a bus that had just departed Newton Exchange with about 15 other passengers on July 14 around 11 pm when she received the threatening messages to her phone via AirDrop.

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record
Another record for monthly overdose deaths related to illicit drugs has been set in British Columbia, prompting the former provincial health officer to call for radical steps to reduce fatalities including access to pharmaceutical-grade heroin produced in Canada.

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment
The union representing hospitality workers across the country says it fears staff laid off because of COVID-19 may not have a job when the pandemic is over.

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment

Vancouver man charged with Ottawa incidents of Voyeurisms and Sexual Assaults

Vancouver man charged with Ottawa incidents of Voyeurisms and Sexual Assaults
On Wednesday, July 15,2020 the Ottawa Police Service Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Unit (SACA) charged a Vancouver man with 34 counts of Voyeurism and three counts of Sexual Assault involving six adult female victims known to him.

Vancouver man charged with Ottawa incidents of Voyeurisms and Sexual Assaults

Systemic issues cited in man's killing of mother

Systemic issues cited in man's killing of mother
Manitoba judge sentencing a young man for beating his own mother to death has denounced systemic issues the judge says leave Indigenous people at risk.

Systemic issues cited in man's killing of mother

PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses

PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses
Parliament's budget watchdog says parliamentarians should probe details about steep losses at Crown corporations and increased borrowing the Liberals outlined in their recent fiscal snapshot.

PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses