B.C. supportive housing bill targets problem tenants. Critics fear it may worsen woes
VANCOUVER — Housing researcher Alina McKay knows there are “tensions” in British Columbia’s supportive housing buildings, as tenants face disruptive violence flowing from poverty and other issues that beleaguer a sector aimed at keeping vulnerable people off the streets.
The B.C. government is moving to ease those tensions through changes to residential tenancy law to make supportive housing buildings safer for tenants, health-care workers, contractors and staff.
But McKay is among a growing chorus of opposition to the legislation known as Bill 11, which she and others fear will drive up evictions, increase homelessness and push problems onto the streets.
McKay, a housing researcher at the University of British Columbia’s law school, fears the changes to the Residential Tenancy Act will contribute to the very problems they aim to solve.











