Long-term tenants at Summerside hotel can stay, for now - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:03 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Long-term tenants at Summerside hotel can stay, for now

The new owners of ahotel in Summerside, P.E.I., where tenants received eviction notices at the end of August, have cancelled those orders.

Hotel owners cancel eviction notices sent out at the end of August

About 60 people being evicted from the 106-room Causeway Bay Hotel have now received notice that eviction is cancelled, for now. (Tony Davis/CBC)

The new owners of ahotel in Summerside, P.E.I., where tenants received eviction notices at the end of August, havecancelled those orders.

About 60 people were told Aug. 30 they had 30 daysto leave the 106-room Causeway Bay Hotel since new owners had taken over andwanted to renovate it, creatingfirst-class tourist accommodations, not long-term rentals.

But tenants awoke Thursday to another notice on their doors from the hotel, telling them the eviction notices had been cancelled and that the owners have asked the Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission not to enforce the evictions.

"It was a big weight off my shoulders, I was pretty happy with it," said tenant Robert Wall.

However, he said he believed that the owners would try again to evict him and other long-term tenants.

Didn't follow rules

Tenants are supposed to get at least 60 days' notice of eviction under existing P.E.I. legislation, not the 30 days they received.

Robert Wall holds up a notice from the owners of the Causeway Bay Hotel telling him and his wife their eviction at the end of September has been cancelled. Wall says he thinks the landlords will soon serve tenants another eviction notice. (Tony Davis/CBC)

The group P.E.I. Fight for Affordable Housing also pointed outthe new owners werenot acting in accordance with the provincialmoratoriumon evictions due to renovations, which will stay in place until the long-awaited new Residential Tenancy Act is brought in.Spokesperson Connor Kelly said Friday he's pleased the hotel withdrew its eviction notice, and thinks IRAC would likely havethrown it out.

"I think they're going to attempt it again with a different approach," Wall said. Kelly said he wouldn't be surprised if that's the case. He urged tenants to continue to press the hotel and make noise publicly about their plight.

Wall said he plans to stay at the hotel as long as possible while looking for other accommodations in his price range. He said the cheapest apartment he has seen is renting for $1,300 per month heated, "and that's way out of my price range. I don't know what we're going to do."

John and Carol Larkin heard through word of mouth of a room opening up at another local hotel, and immediately went for it. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Wall said he has a meeting with officials from the City of Summerside next week to discuss the situation at the hotel. There is no shelter in Summerside for people experiencing homelessness.

He said his approach to any evictionwill be "fight it till you can't fight anymore."

Cheryl MacLean, another hotel tenant,said she is also worried she will be soon served another eviction notice, and she too is continuing to search for another place to live.

Causeway Bay Hotel tenant Frank Covello says if tenants are evicted he'd like to see governments come forward with a solution to finding affordable housing. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

Hotel tenants John and CarolLarkinsaid they've found a spot at another motel, but worry the same thing will happen there, too.

"It's all we can afford. We can't the afford rents landlords are charging and they don't include heat and lights sometimes. We're on a fixed income so we have to take what we can get," Carol Larkin said.

Frank Covello, another tenant, saidrenovictions are a pattern across the country, and he encourages Islanders to lobby governments for better housing and rent subsidies. He saidincreases in rents due to skyrocketinginflation have placed affordable housing out of reach for many Islanders through no fault of their own.

"You start to see this kind of domino effect of stress that is unnecessary and paying taxes for that is kind of a kick in the pants," Covello said.

Covello, theLarkins and other tenants said they think Summerside should come together with the province to do what they are planning to do in Charlottetown and purchase mobile housing units in a central locationforIslanders experiencing homelessness.

In an email to CBC News, the owners of the hotel said it is "seeking to work with the Province, IRAC, community partners and tenants to find solutions going forward."

With files from Tony Davis