Another Montreal borough bans short-term rentals to help protect tenants - Action News
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Montreal

Another Montreal borough bans short-term rentals to help protect tenants

MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve is the latest Montreal borough to ban new commercial touristic accommodations on its territory, but one tenants' rights association says people will continue to flout the rules if the provincial government doesn't enforce them properly.

MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve is latest borough to ban new commercial touristic accommodations

A man wearing sunglasses stands on the sidewalk at an intersection.
A new bylaw in the MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve borough comes too late for Jean-Franois Raymond, who was handed an eviction notice last year so that his landlord could convert his apartment building into short-term rental units for tourists. (Louis-Marie Philidor/CBC)

MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuveis the latest Montreal borough to impose a ban on short-term rentals as the cityfaces mounting pressure to crack down on illegalAirbnbsfollowing a deadly fire that killed seven people.

On Monday, the borough voted to forbidany new commercial touristic accommodation on its territory in order to help protect tenants and the city's rental stock.

The mayor says the bylaw doesn't apply to owners with existing permits or people renting out their primary residence.

"It is still possible for someone in their main residence to use Airbnb,say, when they go on holidays," saidPierre Lessard-Blais, the borough mayor forMercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve. "Howeversome anonymous company cannot buy many buildings and kick people out of their apartments for Airbnb use."

Despite needing to pass further readings and be officially adopted byborough council, the bylaw took effect Monday.

The move does nothing to help Jean-Franois Raymond, a longtime resident in the borough who was handed an eviction notice in December of last year.His landlord plans toconvert his apartment building into short-term rental units for tourists a move that can't be undone by this new bylaw.

"I feel very bad because Ihave to leave all my neighbours, I have to leave the place that I livein for 24 years," said Raymond.

"I feel like I'ma garbage bag because they threw me away just for making an Airbnb and putting more money in their pocket."

Raymond protested the eviction alongside other building tenants and tenant advocacy groups. Their situation made headlines and drew attention from lawmakers such as Quebec's housing minister.

Lessard-Blaissays Raymond's predicamentwas a driving force behindthe ban on short-term rentals in the borough.

"It's terrible, it's unfortunate, but it was legal. It was not moral, but it was legal," he said.

"[Raymond] managed to make things move."

'Major loopholes'

Cities like Montreal have rules outlining where short-termrentals are allowed. Some of the city's boroughs,includingLachine, Saint-Laurent, Verdun and, now, MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve, have banned them where possible.

Lessard-Blaissays the new bylaw in his borough makes it simple for inspectors to fine rule-breakers.

"There's no zoning laws or exemptions or anything: if it's in the borough, if you don't have acquired rights and it's not your main residence You shouldn't have an Airbnb."

A man stands outside and speaks into a microphone.
Pierre Lessard-Blais, mayor of MercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve, says the bylaw was imposed immediately after the vote to ensure people didn't rush to skirt it. (Kate McKenna/CBC)

But those rules haven't deterred illegal operatorsin the past.

As of March 22,morethan 90 per cent of short-term rental units in the city listed on Airbnb were not authorized, according to an independent watchdog called Inside Airbnb.

Airbnb pledged last month to disable non-compliant listings and add a mandatory registration field to force hosts to register their certification number.

But as of last week, different advertisers in Montreal offered dozens of homes bearingbogus licence numbers,such as 29 homes with the certification number "123456" in different areas of the city.

"There are major loopholes," said Cdric Dussault, a co-spokesperson forthe coalition of housing committees and tenants' associations of Quebec (RCLALQ).

A residential street with trees and dwellings.
The Mercier-Hochelaga-Maisonneuve passed a bylaw that would limit short-term rentals to primary residences only. (Louis-Marie Philidor/CBC)

Dussault saysthere is"no verification whatsoever" to authenticate whether a dwelling is in fact an operator'sprimary residence and there are no safeguards to preventthe use offake licence numbers.

Dussault saysshort-term rental bans, such as the one introducedinMercierHochelaga-Maisonneuve, are a good plan in theory, but they can only work if they are properly controlled by the provincial government which he says is the only government that will be able to enforce the bylaw.

"We're looking for the provincial government to make sure that what it said it would do, it will really do," he said.

"Regulation could beput on paper, but if it's not applied,it has no effect."