After years of tenant tension, this Rosedale couple isn't getting the boot - Action News
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Toronto

After years of tenant tension, this Rosedale couple isn't getting the boot

The couple at the centre of an ongoing conflict at a Rosedale apartment building say they feel "vindicated" after the Landlord and Tenant Board dismissed the eviction order against them.

Pangs say they feel 'vindicated' after adjudicator dismisses eviction order against them

Dot and Paul Pang, a Chinese couple living at 1 Rosedale Road, say they're the targets of 'hate' because they're the only Asian tenants in the building. (Lauren Pelley/CBC News)

The couple at the heart of tenant tension at 1 Rosedale Road say they feel "vindicated" after the Landlord and Tenant Board dismissed the eviction order against them.

Dot and Paul Pang were set to be booted out ofthe apartment building in one of the city's poshest neighbourhoods following years of rising conflict. The Pangs say their fellow tenants were targeting them for being Chinese, by "trespassing" and "stalking" them. Meanwhile, other tenants in the 24-unit building claim they were the ones being harassed by the Pangs.

Following a he-said-she-said eviction hearing on June 6, the order issued this week byadjudicator Roger Rodrigues dismissed the landlord's applicationmeaning the Pangs get to stay.

Rodriguesoutlined the evidence from the Pangs and three other tenants during the hearing, noting one tenant claimed Dot Pang uttered profanities, but later admitted when pressed by the Pang's lawyer that he may have "misused" the term "profanities."

Dot Pangs' testimony, in contrast, was delivered "without any inconsistencies," he wrote in the order issued this week.

"The crux of the complaints was that my clientsspeak Chinese to each other in common areas, and that they allegedly give other tenants dirty looks," said the Pangs' lawyer, Caryma Sa'd. "And yet the landlord wentahead trying toevicton such petty and frivolous grounds."

Property manager Aubrey Hannah, speaking on behalf of both himself and landlord Les Steiner, told CBC Toronto in an email that the eviction application was made at the request of the building's tenants.

"We sincerely hope we won't have to do it again," Hannahwrote.

Pangs say they endured bullying, racism

Other tenantswho spoke to CBC Toronto say the Pangs harassed numerous people who livein the building, and alsoexpressed frustration that only three tenant complaints were allowed at the eviction hearing. At the time,the tenants' paralegal, DavidRubin, said that looking at just three complaints in a "vacuum" was problematic.

As CBC Torontopreviously reported, a 52-page report from an outside mediator fleshed out many of the issues in the building, including the Pangs "accusatory" tone with other tenants and their refusal to meet with Hannah.

It also found the Pangs"have not been victims of racial discrimination and harassment," but that the negative interactions between them and other tenants were based on misunderstandings.

The report also noted police involvement, which other tenants say was meant to ease the tension.

"In many cases, the officers at 53 Division have attempted to resolve these issues through mediation and other means," confirmed Toronto police spokesperson Meaghan Gray. "No criminal charges have been laid in relation to these occurrences."

In a statement, the Pangs stressed that they have continually told the truththat they've endured bullying, racism, and "false allegations" from their neighbours as the only Asian couple in the building.

"We are now exploring my clients' legal options to address the discrimination and harassment they have endured for years," S'adsaid.

She said this could include a human rights tribunal application or civil action against the landlordand othertenants.