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Tenant advocate decries ruling that let B.C. landlord hike rent 27% after rates rose

VANCOUVER - Lawyer Rob Patterson says the phones at B.C.‘s Tenant Resource and Advisory Centre never stop ringing — but he worries a decision allowing a landlord to impose a 27 per cent rent increase will fuel even more demand for its services.

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Tenant advocate decries 'troubling' ruling that let landlord hike rent by 27 per cent

Minister of Housing Ravi Kahlon speaks during an announcement about digital homebuilding permits at the British Columbia Institute of Technology’s carpentry building, in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday, May 27, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck


VANCOUVER - Lawyer Rob Patterson says the phones at B.C.‘s Tenant Resource and Advisory Centre never stop ringing — but he worries a decision allowing a landlord to impose a 27 per cent rent increase will fuel even more demand for its services.

Patterson, a legal advocate with the centre, said a regulation allowing landlords to apply to British Columbia’s Residential Tenancy Branch for such rent increases, above an annual limit set by the province, should be struck from the books.

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