Tenants group demands action as high rents persist despite rising vacancies
Vacancy rates in Waterloo Region are growing, but low-income earners may still have trouble finding a place to live.
According to the Fall 2024 Rental Market Report from the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC,) the vacancy rate in Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo has reached its highest level since 1993.
The report said the vacancy rate in the purpose-built rental market has hit 3.6 per cent.
It was also noted that the average annual rent increase for a two-bedroom unit has slowed down to 4.2 per cent, settling at $1,766. The report cites strong rental expansion in Kitchener Central, Waterloo and Cambridge as one of the reasons for slower rental increases.
However, they said lower-income renters are still facing challenges with the rent for newer two-bedroom units averaging $2,356. The report lists the vacancy rate for affordable units at below one per cent for low-income earners.
An affordable unit is defined as housing that costs 30 per cent or less of a renter’s income.
Waterloo Region Acorn, a tenants right advocacy group, is calling on Kitchener and local municipalities to put in renoviction bylaws to help renters stay in their homes.
“The best, most effective, cost effective, safest, most dignified way to preserve tenant rights and to preserve people's homes is to keep them in their existing affordable homes,” said Jacquie Wells, the interim chair of Waterloo Region Acorn.
Wells says renters cannot afford to wait for the market to react.
“The free market will not take care of this problem. We've seen this go on for years and years and every type of market intervention they've tried to do has not fixed the problem, has not fixed the affordability problem. It's only gotten worse,” said Wells.
She says other cities like Toronto, Hamilton and London already have bylaws in place, and it’s time for cities in the Waterloo Region to follow.
“It's making the landlord apply for a renovation license, it’s making sure that they have professionals confirm that the tenant needs to be out of the unit in order for the renovations to be completed,” added Wells.
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