Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Task Force Says Base B.C. Rent Hikes On Inflation, Same As In Manitoba, Ontario

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2018 12:36 PM
    VANCOUVER — A task force examining the heated issue of annual rent increases that are permitted in British Columbia has recommended the hikes be reduced and tied only to inflation.
     
     
    Task force chairman and NDP member of the legislature Spencer Chandra Herbert says the province should scrap the current model of calculating rent increases which allows landlords an annual hike of two per cent plus the inflation rate.
     
    The recommendations also call on the government to require landlords to apply for additional rent increases if they can prove maintenance and other costs can't be covered by the inflation-based increase alone.
     
     
    Chandra Herbert says the recommendations are based on a model that is successfully used in Ontario and Manitoba.
     
     
    He says rent increases are an issue across the province, with tenants concerned about affordability and landlords saying they need extra money to improve their rental homes.
     
     
    The recommendations follow months of public consultations in various communities and are the first from a full report to be forwarded to the government this fall.
     
     
    "We believe this strikes the balance between the need for affordability for renters and the need to maintain properties," says Chandra Herbert. "People were clear to us: they understand costs do go up but they also need to be able to afford them."
     
     
    Chandra Herbert says further recommendations in the full report are expected to include manufactured home parks and problem tenants and landlords.
     
     
    He says consultations revealed some people were struggling with rental increases while living in homes without hydro and one landlord's unit had incurred $700,000 in damage.
     
     
    The Housing Ministry says the task force recommends more work be done with landlord and tenant groups to determine the criteria for reviewing landlord applications for increases above the inflation rate.
     
     
    It says a decision will be made on the early recommendations before Oct. 1.
     
     
    Premier John Horgan and Housing Minister Selina Robinson appointed the task force in April, and it consists of two New Democrat members of the legislature and one from the Green party.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident
    Drivers and riders are advised to expect significant delays and use other routes until the bridge reopens

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ
    The ace Singer and renowned actor Sufi King Satinder Sartaaj speaks to DARPAN Magazine host Mandeep Patrola-Rai about his upcoming concert in Vancouver and sings a tune from his latest ALBUM Seasons of Sartaaj.

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ

    Extremely Privilege Justin Trudeau Sets The Standards For Others, But Doesn't Follow Them Himself

     "If I knew that you were a reporter of a national newspaper, I wouldn't have been so forward." Sounds like sexual harassment.

    Extremely Privilege Justin Trudeau Sets The Standards For Others, But Doesn't Follow Them Himself

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra
    India's star tennis player, Manika Batra's life has changed forever after she defeated world number four, Feng Tianwei as well as Zhou Yihan, in the finals of the Commonwealth Games this year. 

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020
    The federal department says they will make seatbelts mandatory on medium and large highway buses starting Sept. 1, 2020.

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020

    Justin Trudeau Insists Canada Spending Enough On Defence, As Trump Declares Victory At NATO

    At a news conference wrapping up the two-day NATO summit in Brussels, Trudeau was pressed to provide more details about the U.S. president's sudden insistence that allies have agreed to spend more — and to do it more quickly.

    Justin Trudeau Insists Canada Spending Enough On Defence, As Trump Declares Victory At NATO