June 27, 2003
Slight rent increase
for social housing tenants
Increase of 3.4 per
cent not part of anticipated rent scale change
ODILE
NELSON
Social housing rents in
Nunavik are growing by 3.4 per cent.
The Kativik Municipal Housing
Bureau sent out a notice late last month informing social housing renters of
the increase. The rise is part of the Société d'habitation du
Québec's annual rent increase for all social housing units in the province
of Quebec.
The increase was the subject
of some concern at the Kativik Regional Government's regional council meeting
held this month in Kuujjuaq. Some KRG representatives worried that elders would
not be able to afford the increase.
Watson
Fournier, head of the Kativik Municipal Housing Bureau, speaks at the June regional
government council meeting in Kuujjuaq. (PHOTO BY ODILE NELSON)
|
But Watson Fournier, general
director of the KMHB, said tenants who think they cannot afford the increase
may fight it within a month of receiving their notice.
"As any tenant renting
a residence in Quebec, they can contest the rent increase by applying to the
Régie du logement du Québec (Quebec Rental Board). The tenant
can contact their local housing office or client services at the KMHB to get
the form and co-ordinates in order to contest the increase," he said.
The increase, at most,
adds up to $13 a month.
In Nunavik, social housing
rates are determined according to the age and size of a housing unit, and whether
the occupant receives social assistance.
Before the notice, social
housing tenants, depending on whether they received social assistance and the
size of their residence, paid between $116 and $396 a month in rent.
This range will now rise
to $120 for a single-bedroom dwelling rented by someone on social assistance
to $409 a month for a six-bedroom building rented by an employed tenant.
Fournier made it clear
the 3.4 per cent is not part of the rent scale revision that the SHQ has been
pressing for since 2000.
The SHQ wants Nunavik to
adopt a rent scale that mirrors the one used in the rest of province. Social
housing tenants throughout Quebec base their rent on their individual incomes.
They pay 25 per cent of their net earnings.
But even as some social
housing tenants begin paying the increase, others came a step closer last week
to realizing their dreams of owning their own home.
According to Fournier,
the KRG and the SHQ signed the affordable housing agreement two weeks ago, and
the KMHB was scheduled to sign its complimentary agreement with the KRG sometime
at the end of June.
The housing program will
subsidize 76.5 per cent, up to a fixed maximum amount, of the construction or
purchase and renovation costs of a residence.
Watson said there are approximately
70 families interested in the program and that some of these may begin construction
this summer.
|