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After biggest rent hike in decades, Quebec changing method to calculate it

After biggest rent hike in decades, Quebec changing method to calculate it

CBC16-04-2025

As tenants across Quebec prepare to get hit with a substantial rent increase, the provincial government is making changes to the way those rent hikes will be calculated.
The changes to the calculation method were outlined Wednesday in Quebec's Official Gazette (page 2368).
They come just a few months after Quebec's rental tribunal, known in French as the Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL), recommended an average rent increase for 2025 of 5.9 per cent for tenants living in homes were heat is not included.
That's Quebec's largest year-to-year jump in at least three decades, according to TAL figures dating back to 1988.
That recommendation is still in effect for this year and the new calculation method will be used as of 2026. Had the new method been used for this year, the TAL's average recommended rent increase would've been 4.5 per cent, according to a spokesperson for Quebec's housing minister.
Each year, the TAL releases a set of calculations landlords can use before sending a notice of rent increase to a tenant.
WATCH | This is what renters can expect in 2025:
Here's how much rent could go up in Quebec in 2025
3 months ago
Duration 2:51
Tenants living in homes where heat is not included could see their rent increase 5.9 per cent in 2025. That's based on calculations Quebec's rental board releases each year, which landlords can use before sending a rent increase notice to a tenant.
Simpler and more predictable, minister says
In an interview with Radio-Canada's Première heure, Quebec Housing Minister France-Élaine Duranceau said the old calculation was based on 13 variables. The new one will be based on four, she said.
Under the new calculation, the TAL should take into the account:
The average consumer price index in Quebec for the reference year and the three years preceding it.
Variations in municipal taxes.
Variations in school taxes.
Variations in insurance costs.
"I'm expecting that there will be a better understanding from the tenant's perspective and the landlord's perspective, so less distrust," she said. "The less distrust there is, the less conflict there will be and we'll reduce the number of cases that end up at the tribunal."
But a Quebec group advocating for tenants' rights says the reform is a "missed opportunity to curb the housing crisis and abusive property speculation."
In a news release, the Regroupement de comités logement et associations de locataires du Québec (RCLALQ) argued that the new calculation method "in no way" responds to tenants' demands for real rent control in the province.
"It opens the door wide for landlords to increase their profits on the backs of tenants, with rent increases now based on the average rise in the cost of living as well as the cost of major renovations," read the statement.
"In this way, Duranceau has standardized rent increases based not on the actual costs of managing a building, but on the potential market value of the property, to the greater benefit of landlords."
The group encourages people to join a national demonstration for the right to housing held in Drummondville, Que., on Tenants' Day, April 24.
Increases over past decade
Although the new method would've led to a smaller increase for tenants in 2025, that's not necessarily going to be the case every year.
According to the minister's spokesperson, the TAL increases between 2014 and 2024 totalled 23.7 per cent. With the new calculation, that increase would've been 23.3 per cent.
"We could therefore say that over the long haul, the increases would've been the same," spokesperson Justine Vézina wrote in a statement provided to CBC News in French.
"Since the variations would be more stable since the [consumer price] index would take into consideration an average of three years, there are in fact years where the increase would've been higher and others where it would've been lower."
With the 5.9 per cent rent increase recommended by the TAL in 2025, someone who pays $1,400 in rent will see it go up to $1,482. Had it been 4.5. per cent with this new method, the rent would've gone up to $1,463.

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From bear traps to camped-out soldiers, security measures in place for G7 in Kananaskis
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Article content Starting Sunday, seven of the most powerful people in the world will be at the G7 Summit in Kananaskis, Alta., where they will discuss economic instability and security issues, including Russia's war on Ukraine. Article content Unsurprisingly, to bring the most powerful people in the world together, even at the best of times — and this is not the best of times — necessitates a massive security operation, with coordination across multiple Canadian agencies. Article content Article content Article content '(Security) is both massive and essential,' said John Kirton, the director of the G7 Research Project at the University of Toronto. Article content Article content While Canadians are perhaps unlikely to have wildly strong views about French President Emmanuel Macron or Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, U.S. President Donald Trump has angered millions of Canadians with his aggressive rhetoric. Prime Minister Mark Carney has also angered many by inviting Saudia Arabia's Mohammed bin Salman and India's Narendra Modi. Article content Already, unspecified security concerns have led to at least one ceremonial casualty: Calgary's White Hatter ceremony. Traditionally, the ceremony welcomes delegates to Alberta's largest city, and they're handed a white Smithbilt cowboy hat to celebrate Calgary's frontier spirit. Article content In 2002, when the G8 Summit was also held in Kananaskis, leaders were given the ceremonial hats. U.S. president George W. Bush put it on his head, but Jacques Chirac, the late French president, reportedly turned up his nose at the gift and Russian President Vladimir Putin — not yet the international pariah he is today — examined the hat without putting it on his head. This time, however, there will be no ceremony. Article content Article content 'We have to respect that security considerations today are very different from the last time we hosted the summit in 2002 … there's been a lot of nostalgia about what we were able to do in 2002,' said Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek earlier this week. Article content Article content In 2002, a bear also died after falling from a tree as security officials were trying to scare it away from delegates. This year's security team has a bear trap, should a curious bear get too close to the humans in the region. Article content The meeting, last held in Canada in Charlevoix, Quebec, in 2018, will happen against the backdrop of a global economic reorientation. Under Trump, the United States has initiated an international tariff war, breaking down decades of movement towards free trade. Meanwhile, Russia's invasion of Ukraine continues — Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been invited to the conference — and Israel's war on Hamas continues to destabilize the Middle East.

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