Hollyburn threatens 32 more evictions at Emerald Terrace

Hollyburn threatens 32 more evictions

GAY VILLAGE / ‘We have to stick together and fight it, otherwise these guys are going to win’: tenant

Natasha Barsotti / Vancouver / Thursday, May 20, 2010

Hollyburn is threatening another 32 longstanding tenants with eviction from their West End building to accommodate more than $2 million worth of “extensive improvements.”

"It's not fair that a lot of seniors in this building that have paid their rent on time, now all of a sudden are faced with this horrible stress," says 18-year Emerald Terrace tenant Ron Menini, who got an eviction notice on May 19. (Natasha Barsotti photo)

The latest eviction notices arrived on May 19, just two weeks after landlord Hollyburn Properties Limited told fellow Emerald Terrace residents Andrew Simmons and Lynn Stevens that they are being evicted from their suites to make room for two on-site managers.

In this latest move, Hollyburn issued two sets of letters to tenants: eviction notices to those who’ve lived at Emerald Terrace for a long time, and not-to-worry notices to those who’ve moved in recently and pay higher rents.

Hollyburn told the latter group of tenants they wouldn’t have to vacate Emerald Terrace since their suites were previously refurbished, and they will “not be drastically affected by the planned upgrades.”

However, tenants served eviction notices will have to vacate their suites by August 31.

Both letters offer to make the “affected residents’ transition as smooth as possible” and offer to transfer them to “any vacant Hollyburn residence in the West End renting within their budget.”

Both letters describe upcoming changes to the building’s flooring, plumbing and electrical systems as “extensive” and say they cannot by law “be performed while the suite is occupied.”

They also mention balcony improvements and “cosmetic retro-fits” to in-suite flooring, fixtures, cabinets and appliances.

According to the Residential Tenancy Act (RTA), you cannot evict people for cosmetic renovations, West-End MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert told a media conference outside the Nelson St building on May 20. “It’s not legal.”

Attempts to reach Hollyburn before posting this story were unsuccessful.

Chandra Herbert says Hollyburn has had “a record of trying this kind of thing.” He points to another West End building it owns, the Bay Towers on Harwood St, whose tenants fought Hollyburn’s attempts to evict them all the way to the BC Supreme Court, and won.

In 2007, the BC Court of Appeal also sided with 120 Richmond Gardens tenants in their fight with landlord Amacon Property Management Services.  Two out of three judges ruled that tenants cannot be thrown out to make way for renovations unless vacant possession is proven necessary.

“Yet here we are again,” Chandra Herbert says.

Long-term residents are being forced out of Emerald Terrace so that rents can be “massively” increased, he alleges.

Despite the Bay Towers and Richmond Garden court victories, he says, the RTA’s loopholes have yet to be plugged to prevent landlords from pursuing the eviction-by-renovation strategy.

He says it’s time to tighten up the legislation, and introduce the renters’ right of first refusal as Ontario has done.

Several of the 32 affected Emerald Terrace tenants – mostly seniors – say they’re going to fight Hollyburn’s move to evict them.

“You really feel like you want to get up and get out of there fast,” says Mary Milligan, who’s been an Emerald Terrace resident for almost four years. Last year, Hollyburn attempted to turf her and several other tenants in the building for owning pets. The tenants sought arbitration and won.

“We have to stick together and fight it, otherwise these guys are going to win and I don’t want to see them win,” Milligan says.

“It reminds me of exactly what we lived through,” says Janine Fuller, who still lives in the Bay Towers three years after she and partner Julie Stines took on Hollyburn.

Fuller notes the Bay Towers was “totally re-plumbed” while tenants remained in their suites.

“It’s not fair that a lot of seniors in this building that have paid their rent on time, now all of a sudden are faced with this horrible stress,” says Ron Menini, an 18-year resident at Emerald Terrace, also received an eviction notice.

“Watching this community change, the demographics change, is heartbreaking,” says Sharon Isaak of Renters at Risk, who came out in support of the Emerald Terrace residents.

“The West End is so diverse with the seniors, with the gay community, with young people – and that’s what makes it great,” she says.

Evicting entire buildings for profit is not a sustainable business practice, Isaak adds.

Like Chandra Herbert, Isaak wants RTA legislation strengthened to protect tenants from “this kind of behaviour.”

“When you buy and sell buildings, you buy and sell people,” she says.

“You can’t just be throwing people out on the streets repeatedly over and over, especially when the courts have said, ‘No, this practice is not okay, and you need to review this.’”

Hollyburn responds to Lynne Stevens ‘renoviction’

Eighty-two-year-old Lynne Stevens is one of the latest and most prominent victims of “renoviction,” a trend which sees renters getting evicted on the pretense of major renovations.

Stevens is being evicted from her suite in Emerald Terrace, one of nearly two dozen West End properties near Downtown Vancouver owned by Hollyburn Properties.

“I thought maybe they had a heart,” Stevens told CTV News. “But they don’t have a heart or soul. It’s all about money.”

Flowers and cards of support for Lynne Stevens in her eviction fight are coming from all over B.C. But Stevens has a bigger fight on her hands, one with ovarian cancer.

Tenants-rights group Renters at Risk said that Stevens and other evictees are the victim of “community clear-cutting” and the West End is prime turf.

“The practice is to buy the building, do the renovations, evict the tenants, move on, raise the rents, in some cases double the rents,” Sharon Isaak of Renters at Risk told CTV News.

In a phone interview with CTV News, Hollyburn property manager Allan Wasel talked about the company’s policies and its plans for Lynne Stevens.

When asked about increased rents Wasel said, “We’re consistently putting money into the infrastructure of our buildings and that’s the only way to replenish the rental stock is by reinvesting in your buildings.”

As for Lynne Stevens, Wasel said, “We are currently negotiating with her son and very optimistic that we will be able come to a very agreeable settlement with her.”

Wasel then said they are working on a few options for Stevens, none of which include letting her stay in her current apartment, where she has lived for 41 years.

“This is dreadful what has happened to the West End,” said Stevens.

With a report from CTV British Columbia’s Peter Grainger


Hollyburn vs gay man, round two

Hollyburn vs gay man, round two: After winning last year, Simmons gets new eviction notice

By Shauna Lewis / X-Tra West/ Vancouver / Monday, May 10, 2010

A gay man and an elderly woman with ovarian cancer are the latest targets in a wave of evictions still affecting Vancouver’s West End.

The tenants have filed for arbitration against Hollyburn Properties but say they’re concerned about the area’s diversity and history if these evictions continue.

“Young gay people gravitate toward the West End because they see it as their community,” says recently evicted Emerald Terrace resident Andrew Simmons.

Simmons, who is gay and has lived at 2045 Nelson St for eight years, says he has been given notice to vacate his apartment because the landlords want to rent it to an on-site manager.

Simmons alleges there are at least seven other vacant suites that can be used for that purpose.

This is the second time Simmons has been targeted for eviction. Last year, Hollyburn attempted to turf him and several other tenants in the building for owning pets. The tenants sought arbitration and won.

Simmons is not surprised he is being targeted again.

“I’m being targeted because I was the ringleader fighting the pet eviction last time,” he alleges.

Simmons says he and his neighbours recently received word that Hollyburn was planning to renovate their building.

When he sought more information, he says Hollyburn was not forthcoming. So he filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau on April 29.

He received his eviction notice later that day.

“It looks like retaliation,” Simmons says.

“This is ruining our lives,” says 82-year-old Lynn Stevens. “I just got the eviction notice and I’ve just been in shock.”

Stevens was told she must leave her home of 41 years because Hollyburn plans to rent her apartment to a building manager as well.

That’s just an excuse, she alleges. “Really [the eviction] is because I’m paying the lowest rent.”

Stevens says she was presented with a notice to evict April 27 and now has until the end of June to leave her home.

“It makes absolutely no sense to evict someone for the use of their suite when there are suites available,” says Christine Ackerman of the West End Renters Association. “It’s a pure and simple money grab.”

Hollyburn’s website is currently advertising one-bedroom suites for $1,200 and two bedrooms for $2,200.

Xtra‘s calls to Hollyburn were not returned prior to pres time.

But Hollyburn’s general manager, Allan Wasel, told the Vancouver Sun it was “purely a business decision.”

“It made the most sense to put our new resident manager and resident managers in training in the suites that rent for the lowest price,” he said.

According to the Sun, Wasel also said the tenants had requested “on-site management support” and that other units were unavailable because they’re being upgraded.

NDP MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert says the latest evictions solidify the need for Liberal legislative reform.

“This [newest fight] ensures that we continue the fight for change in the Residential Tenancy Act,” says Chandra Herbert, who represents Vancouver-West End.

He says he plans to look at legislation to see if there are private members’ bills that could counteract evicting a tenant from a specific suite when there are other available suites in the building.

The West End is in jeopardy if the laws remain unbalanced, he adds.

“It’s the people that make it [the West End] so great, and it’s the history – specifically a queer history – which continues to make it such a fabulous place for the GLBT community to live,” he says. “So we want to keep it that way.”

The Residential Tenancy Branch has scheduled an arbitration hearing for the Emerald Terrace tenants on June 23.

Elderly West End tenant evicted, blames rent grab

By: ctvbc.ca    see  video here

Date: Friday May. 7, 2010 6:36 PM PT

An elderly tenant who has been renting a West End suite with Hollyburn Properties for 41 years is being told to move out.

The company says it needs 82-year-old Lynn Stevens’ apartment at Emerald Terrace on Nelson Street and one other unit as caretaker suites.

Stevens was given the option of moving into another suite, but at a higher rent.

“It was a horrendous shock,” Stevens told CTV News. “I’m completely devastated, completely stressed out.”

Stevens wouldn’t reveal how much she pays in rent for her one-bedroom apartment, but suites in the building currently start at about $1,350 a month.

“Because she’s a long-term resident, they haven’t been able to bump up the rent like [they can] when there’s vacancies,” Stevens’ son Brian Schramm said.

Emerald Terrace is the same rental building where Hollyburn threatened to evict 10 cat owners in 2009.

Those tenants took their case to the province’s residential tenancy board and won.

NDP MLA Spencer Herbert said he’s called on the BC Liberals to better balance the rights of renters and landlords so renters don’t end up on the street because property managers want a rent grab.

CTV News tried contacting Hollyburn Properties for comment but received no response.

Hollyburn Properties evicts 82 year old widow with cancer from home of 41 years

82 yr old Lynn Stevens is threatened with eviction by Hollyburn Properties – owners of Emerald Terrace Apartments in the West End of Vancouver, BC. Lynn has lived in this building for 41 years. She is being evicted so a caretaker can move in even though there are 7 vacancies in the building.

See more on this story here:

www.seafieldapartments.com

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