Skip to content

Opinion: Lazy Burnaby landlords prefer eviction over paperwork

When the federal government announced rent assistance for commercial tenants, many business owners cheered. Not all of them are still cheering. That’s because some landlords are too lazy to take advantage of the offer, including those in Burnaby.
closed

When the federal government announced rent assistance for commercial tenants, many business owners cheered.

Not all of them are still cheering.

That’s because some landlords are too lazy to take advantage of the offer, including those in Burnaby. I’ve been contacted by four different business owners who say their landlords are refusing to apply for the funding, which has these owners on the verge of collapse as they struggle to reopen.

The good news is that small businesses in B.C. that have suffered significant revenue losses during the COVID-19 pandemic will be protected from eviction effective June 1.

The provincial government announced on Monday new measures to protect small businesses that are eligible for federal commercial rent assistance, but are unable to access that assistance because their landlords won't apply to the program.

Yes, they won’t apply.

"There are certainly some tenants who their landlords have been very clear that they don’t want to bother, they don’t want to take the time to apply for the federal program, and that then hurts the tenant, because the tenant doesn’t have the opportunity to be able to have that relief to help them," said James. “I expect that it will, I hope, make a difference in encouraging those landlords to apply now that they won’t be able to evict those tenants.”

Imagine that. The province has to step in because these terrible landlords would rather evict people than fill out some paperwork.

Under an emergency act order, commercial landlords will be restricted from evicting tenants who have lost at least 70% of their revenue, and are thus eligible for Ottawa's Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance (CECRA) program, which can only be applied to by landlords.

The order will also ban rent repayment lawsuits and the re-possession of goods and property. The order will last as long as Canada's CECRA program is available. CECRA opened for applications last week and is currently available until the end of the month.

“This fills a gap in the federal program," said James, who added that the provincial government has heard many stories of landlords who have applied to the CECRA program, or who are working with their tenants to defer rent or offer rent relief.

- With files from Hayley Woodin, Business in Vancouver