this post was submitted on 02 Nov 2024
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I am relieved to hear that this tennant got some money back.

There seems to be a difference in views on what housing means to people. To the landlords, it's an exchange, a source of income for losing access to space. Landlords think it's fair to evict a tennant if it means they can charge more for rent. To the tennant, it's literally where they eat, live, and sleep. Their SOL if the landlord kicks them out. The because of this, the demand-curve on a demand-supply graph is steep. This causes the sensitivities were seen in the rental market these past couple years. The supply side is also steep because of NIMBY's.

So what happens? Prices go up and quantities don't change. Current landlords are rewarded, new landlords are hardly created, and tenants are left scrambling as they move from place to place, having their entire life uprooted each time.

And then people wonder why Canada isn't having kids. LOL

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[โ€“] BCsven@lemmy.ca 8 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

While the judgement is good, getting your money is the hard part. We know somebody that was evicted alledgedly for family to move in, but on move out day a brand new tenant moved in. Court awarded renter $12000 about 5 years ago, renter has not received anything. Next step is placing a lien on property.

[โ€“] arrakark@10291998.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago

Dang. I can't help but think there was some discrimination involved there? Well I hope there's some way to get that back + interest.