'I'm grateful': Tenant facing $300 hike welcomes rent cap
CBC
Gwen Wain received notice of a 40 per cent increase in her rent earlier this month, and is relieved to hear the New Brunswick government is adopting rules that will reduce that to a maximum of 3.8 per cent, at least for this year.
"I'm grateful," Wain said Tuesday. "It's big news. I wasn't expecting any help for renters."
In an about-face Tuesday, Finance Minister Ernie Steeves announced in his budget speech that the province was dropping its opposition to capping rents, and for the next year will limit increases charged to tenants to 3.8 per cent.
"Market conditions remain difficult for renters," Steeves said in announcing the rent cap.
"Despite record levels of multi-unit construction and a growing supply of rental units, the vacancy rate continues to fall, and rents continue to climb."
Wain has lived in the same Saint John apartment building on Pitt Street for the last four years, and was worried when it recently sold to a new landlord.
She said she "burst into tears" when she was given formal notice her rent would be jumping $300 in September, from $750 to $1,050 per month, not including heat or utilities.
With the government's announcement, the most Wain can now be charged is an extra $28.50 per month. She is hoping there won't be any loopholes in that restriction that would allow her, or her neighbours, to be pushed out for renovations or other manufactured reasons.
In his speech, Steeves did say new rules will include a ban on the ability of landlords to "terminate a tenancy without cause."
"I feel that we're moving in the right direction," said Wain.
"It does give me a reprieve as long as there is not a way around this. I very much want to believe that run-of-the-mill working people might be receiving some real protection."
Housing in New Brunswick has become a contentious issue in recent months. A surprising surge in population growth has outpaced the construction of new housing units and caused shortages in places to live.
Last week, Statistics Canada reported New Brunswick added an estimated 12,946 people in 2021, the most in 46 years.
That influx lowered vacancy rates for New Brunswick apartments from 3.1 per cent to 1.7 per cent, according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, which was the steepest decline in Canada last year.