PMT
Senior Member
A second OMB pre-hearing is scheduled for June 15, 2018.
The final report for the rental housing demolition application was before North York Community Council today. The staff recommendations were adopted.
The deal requires:
- 100% replacement of the 279 rental units, which must remain rental for at least 20 years. Of these 165 are secured as affordable rents, and 114 as mid-range rents.
- Tenants will receive a Tenant Relocation and Assistance Plan.
- Tenants will have access to all amenities on the same terms and conditions as new residents.
- Each rental replacement unit will include laundry ensuite at no extra cost.
- Each rental replacement unit will include air conditioning at no extra cost.
- Some other conditions
That's not at all correct. The rental replacement units are secured in the new development. You can't replace demolished rental units with existing stock.There are 416 rental units in the current 10 low-rise buildings of 325 Bogert - half of them rented in bulk to TCHC.
- On the day Redevelopment Proposal is Officially Submitted - those renters of record are Protected Renters,... Meaning, they have a right to return after construction to similar sized rental unit (same number of bedroom, bathroom) at their previous rent - adjusted within guidelines for inflation. Sounds like a great deal for long time tenants paying low rent negotiated 15-20 years ago.
- Here, this sleaze-ball owner Sam Grosz is only redeveloping 7 of the 10 low-rise apartment building so that he can move the 137 tenants that want to stay/return into the 3 remaining old apartment building,... thus, no new units for these Protected Renters
- Here's the math,... 416 (total rental units now) - 137 (stay/return moved to 3 remaining old apartment buildings) = 279 Rental Units that must be built into new development,... going to new tenants at "Affordable rent" that's basically $1,300-$1,800 today (which is likely much more than a current long time tenant is likely paying)
I believe the units must all be replaced in the new development, but individual tenants can be relocated to an acceptable unit in an alternative building and thereby not have the right to return to the new building.That's not at all correct. The rental replacement units are secured in the new development. You can't replace demolished rental units with existing stock.
They have the right of first refusal to return to a new unit in the new building. If they choose to return to a different unit or not return at all, that is their choice. But they 100% have the right to only accept a similar unit in the new building. It's drafted into every single agreement that the City will mandate between the tenants and the developer. This whole process is monitored extremely closely by the City.I believe the units must all be replaced in the new development, but individual tenants can be relocated to an acceptable unit in an alternative building and thereby not have the right to return to the new building.