My Old Apartment

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It didn't even occur to this landlord to fix the problems.
03/13/2026

It didn't even occur to this landlord to fix the problems.

From the NB Media Co-op:The issue came up during a recent documentary film screening and panel discussion on solutions t...
02/13/2026

From the NB Media Co-op:
The issue came up during a recent documentary film screening and panel discussion on solutions to the affordable housing crisis. The event brought together dozens of people at the Moncton Public Library.

It was the New Brunswick launch of a documentary titled “Thinking Beyond the Market: A Film about Genuinely Affordable Housing,” by Brian Doucet, a planning professor the University of Waterloo.

The film looks at examples from across the country, including Prince Edward Island, where a two per cent rent cap is tied to the unit, not to the renter.

That means that, unlike in New Brunswick landlords on the Island aren’t allowed to jack up the rent when the unit is vacant, a policy sometimes called “vacancy control.” In his film, Doucet calls it the “best system in the country.”

There’s at least one problem with the P.E.I. system: without some kind of public registry in place, tenants don’t know what the legal rent should be unless they ask a previous tenant, which is often impossible.

In 2021, P.E.I. resident Darcie Lanthier launched a crowdsourced rent registry (myoldapartment.org) so that people could check it out for themselves. Lanthier, who established that system as a volunteer in her spare time, commented on the importance of having a rental registry in an interview with Doucet, the filmmaker.

“That’s where the evidence is,” Lanthier said. “We had fantastic rules, but no enforcement.”

Lanthier was part of a panel discussion at the Moncton event, alongside three New Brunswick-based housing researchers: Matthew Hayes, Julia Woodhall-Melnik and Tobin LeBlanc Haley. (LeBlanc Haley is a member of the NB Media Co-op board of directors.)

During that discussion, Woodhall-Melnik recalled how the three of them had pushed for vacancy control in New Brunswick during legislative hearings in December 2024. “We were told it can’t be done because there’s no way to track it,” said Woodhall-Melnik.

She described Lanthier’s efforts as a source of inspiration. “Yes, we need policy change and we need our policymakers onside with us, but this just shows you that someone who cares and grassroots movements can really make a difference and move the needle,” she said.

“So my big question for the province of New Brunswick would be, if Darcie can create a rent registry off the side of her desk while having a full-time job and no funding, why can’t you?”

The NB Media Co-op requested an interview with Housing Minister David Hickey to ask if the province is considering the P.E.I. model of rent control.

A spokesperson provided a statement that didn’t respond directly to that question but noted that a review of the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) is currently underway.

That process involves “meeting with stakeholders, community partners, landlords and tenants across the province,” according to the statement, which was attributed to Hickey.

“Our goal is to gather their thoughts and concerns and to use that feedback to modernize the legislation, which hasn’t been done in many years.”

Hickey added, in part, that “we need more data, and part of the work we will be doing to update the RTA will be to add additional information collection and monitoring to the process.”

The screening and panel discussion in Moncton was organized by the Riverview riding association of the New Brunswick Green Party.

The NB Update is a collaboration between the NB Media Co-op and CHCO TV.

This reporting has been made possible in part by the Government of Canada, via the Local Journalism Initiative.
https://youtu.be/4aECyZj5ZqU?si=bkV1gCDwjBWTBF8V

In this edition of the NB Update, we look at stronger rent control measures that advocates say are needed in New Brunswick. The issue came up during a recent...

In August 2025, we shared that tenants across Browns Court in Charlottetown were being offered cash and free rent in exc...
01/28/2026

In August 2025, we shared that tenants across Browns Court in Charlottetown were being offered cash and free rent in exchange for ending their tenancy agreement so the landlord could conduct renovations.

Ending tenancies this way does not follow existing eviction procedure for renovations under PEI’s Residential Tenancy Act.

Through years of engaging with the tenant community, we’ve seen the pattern between renovictions and rent increases, some of which are non-compliant with PEI’s rent control.

There are over 150 units in the Browns Court neighborhood. Right now, 18 of those units are on the MOA registry.

Help tenants have public access to the history of rent prices! If you currently live or have ever rented in the Browns Court neighborhood, add it to the registry: http://registry.myoldapartment.org/

PEI’s Residential Tenancy Act requires that:

• All tenancy agreements be in writing and on the proper form. This is called a Form 1 Standard Form of Tenancy Agreement.
• On page 2 of Form 1, there is a section where the landlord is required to disclose the amount of rent that was charged to the most recent previous tenant.
• If your tenancy agreement is not on a Form 1, you can file a Form 2(A) with the Rental Office to request that your landlord provide the tenancy agreement on the proper form.

Contact PEI's Rental Office at 902-368-7878 or [email protected] if:
You would like to verify the history of any approved rent increases for the unit you are living in.
You would like to file an application to dispute an illegal rent increase.

Here is what the MOA registry has to date for the Browns Court neighborhood. These rent prices are for the whole unit:

-> 1B Browns Court was $2,545 in 2023
-> 3F Browns Court was $875 in 2004
-> 5H Browns Court was $1,095 in 2017
-> 8C Browns Court was $1,195 in 2025
-> 8H Browns Court was $1,111 in 2018
-> 8H Browns Court was $1,245 in 2025
-> 9E Browns Court was $1,140 in 2019
-> 16 Browns Court Apt #101 was $725 in 2016
-> 16 Browns Court Apt #103 was $875 in 2015
-> 16 Browns Court Apt #303 was $2,240.25 in 2025
-> 17 Browns Court Apt #5 was $1,017 in 2024
-> 17 Browns Court Apt #6 was $900 in 2019
-> 17 Browns Court Apt #18 was $850 in 2015
-> 18 Browns Court Apt #202 was $2,240 in 2025
-> 20 Browns Court Apt #104 was $950 in 2018
-> 20 Browns Court Apt #303 was $875 in 2015
-> 505B University Avenue was $1,250 in 2019
-> 509B University Avenue was $1,170 in 2014
-> 521B University Avenue was $1,050 in 2013

This film has shown in Ottawa and Halifax and will show next Sunday in Moncton.  We'll get it to PEI very soon!
01/05/2026

This film has shown in Ottawa and Halifax and will show next Sunday in Moncton. We'll get it to PEI very soon!

That’s so sweet!
12/16/2025

That’s so sweet!

Not all heroes wear capes!

The worst Housing Minister ever, is taking another kick at tenants. Let's remind him that tenants outnumber landlords 10...
10/29/2025

The worst Housing Minister ever, is taking another kick at tenants. Let's remind him that tenants outnumber landlords 10-1.
- Thursday October 30, 2025: 7:00pm to 9:00pm @ Credit Union Place, 511 Notre Dame Street, Summerside
- Tuesday November 4, 2025: 6:00pm to 8:00pm @ Charlottetown Library Learning Centre, 100-97 Queen Street, Charlottetown

*NEW* Version 1.1 of the Residential Tenancy Modernization Act (PDF) VIEW SLIDE PRESENTATION GIVE FEEDBACK: Online Feedback Form BACK TO MAIN SITE HISTORY SCHEDULED – November 4, 2025: 6:00pm to 8:00pm @ Charlottetown Library Learning Centre, 100-97 Queen Street, Charlottetown SCHEDULED – Octobe...

09/15/2025

Kyle Cotton, for the Eastern Graphic:
Darcie Lanthier had the courage to do what most Islanders were thinking at the public meeting run by Brad Trivers at the library in Charlottetown, as he was discussing his proposed changes to the PEI Residential Tenancy Act.

The middle finger heard across the Island, directed at Trivers, came after his arguments for mostly giving landlords more power when PEI is constantly at or near the bottom in the country when it comes to vacancy rates. In fact, according to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, PEI’s vacancy rate was at 0.9 as of October of last year, which ranks as the lowest in Canada.

His plan involves things like introducing a new way to increase rent higher than what is currently allowed year after year, bringing down the amount of time landlords need to give tenants to leave after being evicted, and bringing rent costs up to “fair market value” once a tenant has left.

First of all, most landlords are not victims in any sense of the word, yet that is the picture that is being painted.

In 2025, there aren’t many landlords complaining that they can’t find a tenant, yet there are hundreds, maybe thousands of hopeful renters being ousted by ridiculous price gouging as supply and demand rises for housing.

If a landlord isn’t making money from a rental property then sell it. Hundreds of thousands of dollars will be in the bank account. Problem solved.

Landlords hold all the power and while yes, tenants from hell do exist, for every bad tenant there are 100 good ones who are just trying to have an affordable roof over their heads.

It’s clear Trivers is out of touch with Islanders. It’s not like he’s living in a big metropolis, this is PEI. He sees just how much Islanders are struggling each and every day when it comes to housing. Especially since he was housing minister.

Despite that, he wants to make it easier for landlords to control their tenants.

Kyle Cotton

Blunt but true!
09/10/2025

Blunt but true!

Brad Trivers is holding a Public Consultation tonight on a Private Member's Bill designed by Landlords to increase their...
09/03/2025

Brad Trivers is holding a Public Consultation tonight on a Private Member's Bill designed by Landlords to increase their profits.

Illegal rent increases are part of the problem.
08/27/2025

Illegal rent increases are part of the problem.

Address

℅ VRC 81 Prince Street
Charlottetown, PE
C1A4R3

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