
With moving day days away, Montreal calls on tenants without housing to seek help
With moving day only five days away, the City of Montreal is urging tenants who have yet to find a suitable apartment to contact 311 for access to resources and assistance.
According to city spokesperson Philippe Sabourin, around 270 families are currently being assisted by the city through the Office municipal d'habitation de Montréal's (OMHM).
Sabourin added that the situation is comparable to last year, although the numbers are slightly higher, as the housing vacancy rate in Montreal remains low.
'There is a housing crisis. The city took steps to help residents by doubling the budget,' Sabourin said during a press conference on Thursday.
According to data from the Société d'habitation du Québec (SHQ), approximately 1,990 people across the province are currently receiving assistance from about 40 housing organizations.
The spokesperson emphasized that the budget has increased from $1.5 million to $3.5 million over the last six years.
'What we are asking is for people who haven't found an apartment to contact us by calling 311. There is support for people in search for an apartment. There is temporary housing. We offer storage. We can assist people until their situation stabilizes,' he explained.
Sabourin said he was confident that there are enough resources and funding to help all Montrealers in need.
'No one will be without a roof come July 1,' the spokesperson said.
A recent Statistics Canada report shows that rent has increased by nearly 71 per cent since 2019, primarily affecting families and lower-income residents.
The average asking rent for a two-bedroom apartment was $1,930 in the first quarter of 2025, up from $1,130 six years ago.
'Searching for an apartment is very difficult. The market is very tight. So If you can stay in your apartment you should stay,' Sabourin said.
However, Catherine Lussie, a coordinator with the Montreal-based housing advocate group FRAPRU (Front d'action populaire en réaménagement urbain), said the situation had worsened.
She said that, as of Thursday, 283 households were being supported by the OMHM.
'It's definitely more then last year. Last year at the same time there were 268 household in the same situation. So, we see a little increase even though the vacancy rate has actually increased,' Lussie said in an interview.
Moreover, she said the Statistics Canada data comes as no surprise, given the lack of measures implemented since the start of the housing crisis in 2018.
'Nothing has been done to prevent rent increases that we are seeing right now,' she said.
The coordinator said she is worried about the situation as July 1 approaches, adding that some tenants will have to make difficult choices, such as temporarily staying with family, sleeping in their cars, or renting an apartment they cannot afford.
'You'll see after that. They need support from food banks because they are at the limit of what they can pay, Lussie continued.
'Also, what we see more is how long it takes after July 1 to find housing. So the numbers keep increasing after July 1 of tenants needing those services. For some it might takes weeks or even months to find a place that they can call a home.'
With files from Matt Grillo and The Canadian Press

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
3 minutes ago
- CTV News
Newfoundlanders who fled cod moratorium are returning — and creating a housing crunch
Mike Tiller, the mayor of New-Wes-Valley, N.L., is shown as he talks about housing on Thursday June 26, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sarah Smellie NEW-WES-VALLEY — The affordable housing complex Mike Tiller is hoping for is unlike anything else in his community. The sleek, modular buildings with sloping roofs and wide windows pose a sharp contrast to the brightly-coloured clapboard houses dotting the shores in New-Wes-Valley, a small fishing community along the northern end of Newfoundland's Bonavista Bay. But the homes would solve a problem Tiller never thought he'd face as mayor of the rural Newfoundland town: people are moving there, rather than moving away. And they need somewhere to live. 'It's a huge change,' Tiller said in a recent interview, shaking his head outside the town hall. 'You can't have people coming here looking for homes and not have anything for them to live in or you're never going to grow your town ... And we can't afford any more major decreases in population.' That's why the town paid about $140,000 for Biosis, a Danish architecture firm with experience building on rocky landscapes, to design a 17-unit affordable housing complex that will sit on oceanfront land. N.L. housing complex The 17-unit housing complex, seen in this artist's rendering handout image, was designed by Danish firm Biosis for the rural Newfoundland community of New-Wes-Valley. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Biosis (HO/The Canadian Press) The municipality purchased the land, making use of a federal grant. The town is also ready to foot the bill for road and sewer connections. Council will publish a request for proposals from interested developers in the coming days, Tiller said. 'The need is there, the desire is there,' he said. 'We just need somebody to listen.' Rural communities across Newfoundland and Labrador have been slowly emptying out since 1992, when the federal government brought the lucrative northern cod fishery to a halt as the fish stocks collapsed. The move resulted in one of the largest mass layoffs in Canadian history: businesses closed, jobs dried up and young people began to move away, leaving behind their aging parents and grandparents. The demographics in New-Wes-Valley are typical in rural Newfoundland: the town is home to some 2,050 people, more than a third of whom are 65 or older, according to the latest census. The average age there is 52. But things are shifting. People are moving to New-Wes-Valley, many of whom are coming back home after working in St. John's or other provinces. As a result, the increased demand is driving up housing prices and property taxes. Ten years ago, homes in New-Wes-Valley regularly sold for $30,000, said Cheryl Smith, a town councillor and real estate agent. Now they can sell for more than $100,000. That's a lot for many locals, but still attractive for people in other parts of Canada, Smith said. Seniors on fixed incomes who want to move into smaller homes have few options. They can't afford the new housing costs, nor can they afford the municipal tax hikes, Tiller said. Some have moved away to Gander, N.L., a much larger centre with more housing options. He wants them to be able to stay. Sarah Norris left New-Wes-Valley for Alberta on Christmas Day in 2010, about two years after graduating high school — it was a cheap flight, she explained in a recent interview. She moved back home in March 2022, wanting a fresh start. She now owns and operates the Salt & Sail café and tavern, where diners in bright booths look out over low-sloping rocks leading into the ocean. The biggest change she sees in her community since she returned is the number of young families. 'Our kindergarten class this year needed two teachers because it was so large, I think it was 24 students. That is huge for our area,' she said. 'I think people are just really thirsty for peace, honestly, just tranquility. And that's what you'll get here.' Norris said she knows people in their 90s who are still living in large saltbox-style homes where they raised their families. There's just nowhere else for them to live, she said. 'They're, like, 95 and they just move their beds downstairs,' Norris said. If they could find a smaller place, they could sell their bigger house to a young family like hers, she added. About 40 minutes south of New-Wes-valley, the same scenario is playing out in Centreville-Wareham-Trinity with one major difference: the town already has affordable housing. And it's full. Mayor Ivan Pickett walked down a road lined with modern-looking duplexes that rent for about $650 a month. Some had basketball nets and bikes in the front yard. A handful were built about a decade ago, when the town got some funding to build affordable homes. The majority were built later, by a private developer, Pickett said. The town needs about 20 more. 'At least,' the mayor said. '20 units would be gobbled up pretty quickly.' Tiller doesn't believe New-Wes-Valley's population is going to stop declining -- there still aren't enough young people to balance the number of older residents. But he hopes to keep the population higher than 2,000 for as long as he can -- and he believes the affordable housing complex will help. 'We want to keep our seniors here. We also want to attract newcomers to the area,' Tiller said. 'We are doing whatever we can to give people options so that they don't leave our town.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 31, 2025. By Sarah Smellie


CTV News
3 minutes ago
- CTV News
Class action lawsuit alleging smart fobs made cars easy to steal gets judge's green light
A class action lawsuit that alleges car manufacturers are responsible for vehicle theft due to security flaws with smart keys has been approved by the Quebec Superior Court. A judge authorized the class action on Wednesday. The lawsuit covers Quebec residents who were victims of car theft due to smart fobs within three years from the date the civil action was filed, on April 30, 2024. Several manufacturers are named as defendants, including Toyota Canada, Honda Canada, Hyundai Canada, and Nissan Canada. In an interview last year, the plaintiff's lawyer, Jean Rheaume, explained that the smart key technology allows thieves to easily hack the signal sent by the device to gain access to the vehicle. 'I've seen a video where it can be done in 30 seconds,' he told CTV News. The Bouchard Avocats law firm is seeking compensatory damages. More information about the lawsuit is available on the firm's website.


CTV News
3 minutes ago
- CTV News
Canada spared from 50% copper tariff as U.S. targets China, expert says
Michael Dobner, National Leader of Economics & Policy Practice at PwC Canada, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss the impact of tariffs on Canadian commodities.