City council votes to give $3M to land trust to keep Kensington Market building as affordable housing - Action News
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Toronto

City council votes to give $3M to land trust to keep Kensington Market building as affordable housing

City council passed a motion on Thursday to give $3 million to a land trust to help it buy a building in Kensington Market so the property can be maintained as affordable housing.

City council passed motion on Thursday

City council voted Thursday to approve a motion to give The Kensington Market Community Land Trust, a non-profit organization, $3 million to acquire, renovate and operate a building at 54-56 Kensington Ave. as affordable housing for the next 99 years. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Toronto city council passed a motion on Thursday to give $3 million to a land trust to help it buy a building in Kensington Market ina bid tomaintain the property asaffordable housing.

The Kensington Market Community Land Trust, a non-profit organization, hadsaid it woulduse the money to acquire, renovate and operate the building at 54-56 Kensington Ave. as affordable housing for the next 99 years. The building has 12 residential units, 10 of which are occupied,and five retail units.

Dominique Russell, co-chair of the land trust,said the organization wants to ensure the building's tenants can live without fear of eviction.

"We are trying to buy this building in order to assure in perpetuity that it is affordable, that the tenants get to stay and that the land will be in community hands," Russell said.

Tenants saidthey received eviction notices on Jan. 1, 2019 that gave them three months to vacate the building. New owners had just acquired the propertyand had plans to redevelop it. The land trust was able to help the tenants get legal advice and fight the eviction.

"We organized immediately to support those tenants," Russell said."It's very scary to get an eviction like that."

Dominique Russell, co-chair of the Kensington Market Community Land Trust, says the group wants to ensure that the building remains in community hands. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Now, the developers are selling the building, and the residents wantedthe city to ensure they would not face eviction again.

Greg Herrington, a tenant who has resided at 54 Kensington Ave.for the past 13 years, said he has lived under the threat of eviction for two years.

"This is our neighbourhood.We live here.This is KensingtonMarket," he said. "To not know where you're going to live from year to year, especially in a city like this, where there's no available housing, it's very concerning."

Herrington's rent is far below market value, at $715 a month,and he said he worries he would have no choice but to leave the city if he lost his apartment. He calls it a mini-bachelor.

Before the motion was approved Thursday, Herrington had said the city's decision to give the money to the land trust "would mean the landlord can't sell it to somebody who would just try to do the same thing the moment they get here, try to throw the people out."

Greg Herrington fears he will have to leave to the city if he is forced out of the building. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Affordable housing a 'critical need,' motion says

Coun. Mike Layton, who represents Ward 11, University-Rosedale, said the land trust turned to the city for help two years ago. He moved the motion, seconded by Coun. Joe Cressy.

"They contacted us and said,'Look, we found this property that has gone up for sale, and we would like support in maintaining it as affordable housing,'" Layton said.

The motion reads in part: "In Toronto's current real estate market, affordable multi-unit rental buildings are rapidly being converted into expensive rentals, or demolished to make way for new condominium development. There is a critical need to permanently protect the affordability of existing rental housing across the city, and partnerships with the non-profit housing sector provide a viable pathway towards doing so."

According to Layton, the $3 million will come from what are calledSection 37 funds with money provided by the various developments in Ward 11. The funds will be subject to the land trust successfully acquiring the property by no later than May 31, 2021.

According to the motion, the property is currently on the market,the land trusthas signed a conditional Agreement of Purchase and Sale with the owners and the land trustexpects the deal will closeby May 26, 2021.

With files from Greg Ross