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Changes to provincial legislation will supercede a long-awaited proposal for a municipal renoviction bylaw, according to a report to Ottawa city councillors.
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But members of the city’s planning and housing committee say they want to at least be able to see what the draft bylaw looks like.
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Renoviction is the illegal practice of evicting tenants under the pretense of renovating a rental unit unit, only to put that unit back on the market at a much higher rent. In January 2025, Ottawa council asked city staff to look into the possibility of crafting a renoviction bylaw like those in other Ontario cities, including Hamilton, Toronto and London.
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The review process was to take more than a year, with a draft bylaw scheduled to be in front of the planning and housing committee on May 20.
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But that was postponed while staff examined amendments to Ontario’s Landlord and Tenant Act through Bill 97 and Bill 60.
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The amendments, which take effect in July and September, strengthen tenant protections and enhance requirements for evictions due to renovations and repairs. The amendments “substantially address the policy objectives that were intended to be achieved through a municipal by-law,” the city staff report said.
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Meanwhile, residential tenancy regulation remains a matter of provincial jurisdiction and a municipal licensing regime “may introduce overlapping regulatory requires and administrative complexity,” it added.
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But members of the the planning and housing committee argued the review took more than a year and they had not been able to see the draft bylaw yet.
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“My incredible frustration today is that people keep referring to a draft by-law that no one has seen,” said Somerset Coun. Ariel Troster, who presented the motion for a bylaw review in January 2025.
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“I am not here to debate the merits of a renoviction bylaw,” she said. “I’m here just to get it back on the table for us to actually have that conversation. I’ve never seen a case in my four years on council where we have directed staff to do something and they’ve come back and said: ‘Actually, we don’t think we need to do it.'”
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There was nothing in the original motion that gave staff the ability or the authority to withhold the report and the bylaw from council, Troster contended. Those would might be affected were consulted, they responded in good faith and they expected to see what the bylaw proposed, she said.
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“Council voted 19 to four to direct them to do the work. Then they did the work, and they sent out a memo saying, ‘Actually, we don’t want to show it to you.’ That is what the conversation is about today. Release the bylaw. Put it on the table for democratic debate.”
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Residents who had received N13 eviction notices to end their tenancies spoke to the committee about the stress and uncertainty they faced when they were got those notices.
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Andre Robert said that, in his case, the renovations were to originally include minor work such as changing the flooring and light fixtures and installing exhaust fans, but that was changed to include more major renovations. An electricians’ report said the units needed to be empty because all of the wiring needed to be pulled out of the wall, he said.
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