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This Is Parkdale: A Documentary on the Parkdale Rent Strike

About the film:

In the summer of 2017, in the Toronto neighbourhood of Parkdale, over 300 tenants living across 12 apartment buildings went on rent strike to protest a wave of rent increases that would have displaced members of their community. Through months of organizing and a series of escalating actions, working-class people took on the biggest corporate landlord in their neighbourhood… and won. In an age where gentrification is rapidly transforming the nature and demographics of working-class neighbourhoods in cities across the world, pushing out poorer tenants, people on fixed incomes, immigrant communities and other long-term residents, the story of the Parkdale rent strike offers an important and practical lesson on how we can organize with our neighbours to fight back.

Produced by sub.Media and Parkdale Organize.

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This Is Parkdale: a documentary on the Parkdale Rent Strike

From May to August more than 300 of our neighbours in MetCap buildings went on rent strike and won. Their rent strike forced MetCap to substantially drop the rent increases and commit to a program of rent-relief for low-income tenants. The rent strike was a turning point for Parkdale. Our neighbours showed us that when we organize we can stop landlords from pushing us out of our homes and neighbourhood.

This is Parkdale is a collaboration between Parkdale Organize and sub.Media. Look for it on Friday, November 3rd, only on https://sub.media.

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Parkdale Rent Strike Ends in Victory!

Statement of the Rent Strikers’ Negotiating Committee

Today we are pleased to announce that the Parkdale rent strike has ended in victory. The organizing of hundreds of working class people in Parkdale, including us and our neighbours, has shifted the balance of power between landlords and tenants in Parkdale in our favour.

For the past six months we have organized our neighbourhood to take on our landlord directly. We know that the laws, courts, and bureaucracies of this system do not serve our interests and throughout this fight we would not be trapped in their dead ends. We refused to play by the rules. Instead we set up independent organizations in our buildings and linked those organizations up across Parkdale. Three hundred of us in 12 buildings went on rent strike and hundreds more of our neighbours joined our actions. What’s more, our organizing has built a new power in our neighbourhood, a power which is based in our own capacities as working class people.

We have won the following concessions from our landlord:
•A substantial reduction in the above guideline rent increases at each building
•A program of additional rent relief for tenants in financial hardship
•A program of maintenance and repair work in each building

Our rent strike won because it expressed the collective strength of working class people in Parkdale. Yet we feel we have only made a beginning. We will continue to organize in our buildings. We will reach out to neighbours facing rent increases in other buildings throughout the neighbourhood. We are prepared to take up the struggles of all working class people in our neighbourhood whether around housing, education, employment, or any other area of our lives. By continuing to organize, we will become stronger and build our power in Parkdale.

We would like to thank everyone who supported us in this fight. Moreover we urge you to organize and build power in your own neighbourhoods. There is no limit on what we as working class people can accomplish when we organize together in our own interests.

An Interview with Parkdale Organize

Parkdale Organize was recently interviewed by the UK website Novara Media. Full text is below. The original publication can be found online here.

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No to Gentrification, Yes to Rent Strikes: An Interview With Toronto’s Parkdale Organize

by William Neumeister

Recent events have made it tragically clear how dangerous it can be when tenants’ concerns about their homes are ignored. In this context, it’s inspiring to take a look at Parkdale, an area in Toronto, Canada where tenants have been organising to demand repairs and fight rent increases. As part of this struggle, several hundred tenants have been on rent strike since the start of May.

William Neumeister talked to a member of Parkdale Organize to learn more about their progress for Novara Media.

WN: Could you give a quick introduction to the group? How did you form, and what were your main activities before the rent strike?

Parkdale Organize is a group of working class renters in the Parkdale neighbourhood of Toronto. In 2013 a large real estate firm called Akelius bought up four mid-rise apartment buildings in the neighbourhood. Parkdale Organize formed out of the successful struggles waged by committees of tenants at those buildings against rent hikes, harassment, and disrepair.

Veterans of the fights against Akelius soon joined with neighbours in other buildings to win a number of battles against their landlords, a major local employer, and to provide a learning space for school kids and their parents. The past three years of concerted neighbourhood organizing, coupled with a housing market in which rents have soared, have culminated in the ongoing rent strike in the MetCap buildings in Parkdale.

WN: What’s happened in the rent strike so far? How did it start? What are the main issues, and how did tenants organise for it?

In February, residents of a MetCap building in Parkdale organized a rent strike leading up to the Tribunal hearing that would have approved a large rent increase. By turning out at the Tribunal in numbers they were able to have the hearing postponed. They then linked up with Parkdale Organize to reach out to neighbours living in the other MetCap buildings.

March saw the formation of committees of residents at five more MetCap buildings in Parkdale. The committees held meetings in their building lobbies and reached out to their neighbours door to door. Neighbourhood meetings between buildings were held in the basement of the local library. An occupation of the atrium at MetCap’s head office ended in a spontaneous mass meeting where the decision to go out on a neighbourhood-wide rent strike was taken.

In April residents hung banners from their windows and balconies declaring “May 1 Rent Strike”, then successfully resisted the landlord’s reprisals. On April 30 rent strikers marched through the streets of Parkdale to announce their strike. On May 1 two hundred tenants in six buildings began a rent strike to demand the immediate withdrawal of MetCap’s applications for rent increases above the Ontario rent guideline (totalling nearly 15% over three years) and completion of all necessary repairs.

Since May 1 rent strikers have won improvements in building conditions. They have protested MetCap’s corporate investors, crashed the Ontario landlord association’s annual meeting, occupied the MetCap operations offices, protested at the personal estate of a MetCap co-owner, and occupied and shut down proceedings at the Ontario Landlord and Tenant Board to stop the approval of a rent increase. On June 1 more than 100 more tenants joined the rent strike, expanding the strike to six more MetCap buildings in Parkdale.

WN: Can you tell us a bit about Parkdale? Do you think there’s anything specific to the area, or to MetCap buildings, that made the rent strike possible, or do you think the most important conditions are ones that are common to tenants everywhere?

Parkdale is one of the last remaining working class neighbourhoods near downtown Toronto. The neighbourhood is characterized by its high density of rental housing; a full 90% of residents are renters, the majority in privately-owned mid-rise apartment buildings. Parkdale is the Toronto neighbourhood where residents spend the highest proportion of their incomes on housing, at nearly 50% on average. It is a heavily racialized neighbourhood and home to many new immigrants including the largest population of Tibetan refugees outside of India and Nepal.

Gentrification and displacement of working class residents is not new to Parkdale. Hundreds of people and families have already been pushed out of their homes by predatory landlords hiking rents, neglecting repairs, and harassing and abusing residents. Parkdale is under massive pressure from the housing market and state and legal systems which facilitate the process of displacement. In Ontario there is no rent control on vacant units. This creates a financial incentive for landlords to push out long term tenants in order to hike rents. The Tribunal rubber stamps landlords’ applications for rent increases above the guideline.

The ongoing rent strike is the organized response of hundreds of neighbourhood residents in defence of their homes and neighbourhood. The high density of rental housing makes the apartment buildings the appropriate bases of a neighbourhood-wide working class organization. Neighbourhood organizing by tenants over the past three years has convinced dozens of Parkdale residents for the need to build such an organization and a victory for the rent strikers will activate hundreds more.

WN: Is there any advice you would give to other tenants elsewhere about how to start getting organised?

Neighbourhood or territorial-based organizing must be based in local conditions. In Parkdale landlords are pushing residents out of their buildings in a densely populated neighbourhood where the majority of rental housing is privately owned and in the increasingly concentrated control of a few large companies. MetCap is the largest single landlord in Parkdale with 19 buildings and more than 1200 rental units.

In this context the basis for organizing is at the building level. Residents form organizations at their buildings which carry out the strategies they decide. From there residents link up between buildings to increase their numbers and co-ordinate their actions. In a multi-national, multi-racial, and multi-lingual urban district such as Parkdale residents must deliberately organize across these lines and come to common strategies based on shared interests.

WN: Is there anything that people outside Parkdale can do to help the rent strike succeed?

The Alberta Investment Management Corporation (AIMCo) is MetCap’s main investor and co-owns 14 buildings in Parkdale, AIMCo manages unionized government workers pensions in the province of Alberta. Write to AIMCo in support of the rent strikers using the web form here.

Donate to the Parkdale rent strike Defence Fund to ensure rent strikers are covered against punitive fees they will likely be charged by the Tribunal for withholding rent.

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Negotiations with MetCap Have Begun – Rent Strike Continues July 1

On June 21 fourteen tenants representing rent strikers from six buildings sat down across the table from eight high ranking AIMCo and MetCap executives to put forward the demands of the Parkdale rent strike. Rent strikers secured an agreement from MetCap to stop all evictions as long as negotiations are ongoing. Negotiations resume next week.

Meanwhile, the organizing in the buildings which has brought us to these unprecedented negotiations continues. AIMCo and MetCap are under no legal obligation to deal with the rent strikers as an organized group. It is the sheer force of the tenants’ organizing which has brought men representing billions of dollars of real estate investments to the table.

The Parkdale rent strikers are calling on their neighbours in every MetCap building in Parkdale to withhold their rent on July 1 to keep the pressure on AIMCo and MetCap.

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Parkdale Rent Strikers Demand Repairs for Neighbours

Today rent strikers delivered a letter to Darren Shaw, MetCap property manager, to demand that the necessary repairs be completed in their neighbour’s unit. Rather than deal with his tenants Darren chose to run away. When tenants followed him down Tyndall Avenue asking when they could expect the work to be completed he refused to comment and called the police.

Bozena and Stanislav are long time residents of 91 Jameson. For months their bedroom has been unliveable. Every time it rains the room floods through the window and exterior wall. The interior wall is cracked and severely water damaged. The couple has to sleep in their living room. On top of this their apartment door is damaged and does not lock. Making matters worse only one elevator in the building functions at all and it often will not stop on the eighth floor where the couple lives. Stanislav is quite elderly and ill and cannot manage the stairs to reach the elevator on the seventh floor.

While MetCap continues to claim publicly that there are no disrepair issues in their buildings, tenants like Bozena and Stanislav have been left in unlivable conditions. Today Parkdale rent strikers made it clear to MetCap that we will not accept this.

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Parkdale Rent Strikers Occupy Landlord Tenant Board To Stop Above Guideline Rent Increase At 87 Jameson

Today nearly 100 rent strikers and supporters occupied the Landlord and Tenant Board to protest the scheduled above guideline rent increase hearing on AIMCO and MetCap’s application against tenants at 87 Jameson. The occupation was successful and ensured the Board could not approve the increase today.

Rent strikers understand the Board is set up to approve landlords’ applications for rent increases above the guideline, increases which which push working class tenants out of their homes. They will continue to to push their demand that AIMCo and MetCap fully withdraw their rent increase application and resist any ruling of the Board which approves the increase.

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Rent strikers protest at home of Guy Alberga

Today Parkdale rent strikers took their fight to MetCap’s front door, to the home of Guy Alberga, co-owner of four MetCap buildings including 87 Jameson. With tenants at 87 Jameson being dragged in front of the Landlord and Tenant Board on Wednesday on their landlord’s application to raise their rent by nearly 15% over three years, rent strikers demanded Alberga withdraw the application immediately. Rent strikers spoke out and flyered Alberga’s neighbours to expose him as a slumlord who uses rent increases to push working class tenants out of their homes so as to maximize his personal profit-making. Alberga himself refused to show his face to the people whose rent cheques pay for his Forest Hill estate.

The protest ended with rent strikers declaring they would return to Parkdale to continue organizing their neighbours for Wednesday’s confrontation with MetCap and the Landlord and Tenant Board.

City News coverage here:
http://www.citynews.ca/video/2017/06/03/video-parkdale-rent-strikers-take-protest-to-owners-front-door/

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Parkdale Rent Strike Campaign

Tenants in multiple MetCap buildings have been organizing for the last few months to fight rent increases and get repairs done in their units. MetCap has spent this time trying to ignore those tenants. It hasn’t been easy for MetCap to ignore the organizing going on in Parkdale and come May 1st it will be impossible.

At the end of March, tenants from across the neighbourhood showed up at MetCap’s head office downtown to demand that MetCap withdraw the rent increases and do the repairs in people’s units. MetCap hid in their offices for hours while our neighbours made the message loud and clear that tenants in Parkdale will no longer be ignored. MetCap refused to meet with their tenants. MetCap refused to take people’s repair requests. MetCap just hid in their offices and hoped Parkdale would leave them alone. In the lobby of the MetCap office tenants from Parkdale held a meeting and talked about what they should do to get MetCap to pay attention.

At a meeting back in Parkdale tenants decided what they would do: Metcap tenants in Parkdale would organize for a rent strike. MetCap only cares about money. We’ll see how much they care about losing a whole bunch of money. A large, well-organized rent strike sends a message to MetCap that Parkdale won’t be ignored or pushed around anymore. Playing nice with MetCap hasn’t worked; MetCap doesn’t play nice. The more people that join the rent strike, the louder the message will be. This isn’t just about a few repairs or a few rent increases. This about Parkdale coming together and saying enough is enough. We won’t be priced out of our neighbourhood. We won’t be mistreated by money-grubbing landlords. We will fight back. We will support each other. We will defend Parkdale.

For weeks now MetCap tenants have been knocking on doors, handing out flyers, talking in their lobbies, and meeting to plan for this rent strike. If you live in a MetCap building and care about the future of this neighbourhood you should join the rent strike. You should do that organizing too. Come together with your neighbours and make the decisions that really matter for this neighbourhood. Are you going to let MetCap keep pushing your neighbours out of Parkdale? No? Good, let’s get organized.

Join the rent strike.

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Tyndall Avenue Tenants Push Back

By a member of the 99 Tyndall building committee

On October 13th, my neighbours and I at 99 Tyndall Avenue were facing unwelcome intrusions of our homes by our landlord, Akelius, under the guise of so-called “inspections for cleanliness.” Significantly enough, those of us being targeted by Akelius are longer- term tenants with desirable two bedroom units and/or desirable views of the lake. Clearly, Akelius was up to their usual tricks of intimidation and harassment attempting to lay the tracks down for subsequently evict- ing us longer-term tenants and jacking the rent on our units for a tidy pro t. Those of us being targeted could very well find ourselves forced out of our homes and looking at un- affordable rents elsewhere in the neighbourhood.

Fortunately, our neighbours at 99 Tyndall as well as other nearby buildings chose to come to our aid, organizing a rally to meet the Akelius people face to face in the lobby of 99 Tyndall as they came to do their so-called “cleanliness inspections.” The Akelius people were very much surprised by the large turn- out of concerned tenants from 99 Tyndall and other Parkdale properties. They realized that intimidation and harassment would no longer be tolerated by rent paying tenants. Neighbours would help neighbours. The community was visible and had to be reckoned with.

As a direct result of our organizing and coming together for mutual protection, the Akelius minions reluctantly agreed to provide in writing what exactly they meant by “cleanliness” before any such invasive inspections would occur and that Akelius would pay to remedy any deciencies found. More importantly, Akelius agreed not to use these inspections as grounds for eviction.

Wisely enough, these important promises from Akelius were recorded by those present using cameras and cell phones. Akelius realized that they could not simply ignore Parkdale tenants and that they would be held accountable for the promises that they made that day in the light of social media.

Our action on October 13 was possible because of our organizing over the past two years since Akelius bought our building. If you live in a building in Parkdale, and you’re reading this, consider talking to your neighbours about getting organized and forming a building committee. Get in touch with Parkdale: Organize! if you need some help getting started.