Yes. Statistics Canada surveyed tenants in 2021. They found that 7% of tenants had been evicted at some point in their lifetimes. Now, assuming that the average tenancy experience is 10 years—for many people, it's 20 or 30 or 40 years—that means seven-tenths of 1% of tenants are evicted each year. In other words, it's seven out of a thousand tenants.
StatsCan went on to ask the reason for the eviction, and only 10% of all evictions were for demolition, conversion or major renovations. That means that, in any year, less than one out of a thousand tenants are evicted for those reasons. Deducting demolitions that are needed for intensification or new transit lines, we can estimate that only one out of 2,000 tenants are evicted for renovations. The vast bulk of evictions occur in the secondary market, for the sale of a property or the owner's own use, and then we have conflict with the landlord or other tenants and we have arrears of rent. It is a tiny fraction of a small number of evictions that flow from renovations.
There's another table in our submission that addresses that, with older statistics from the Wellesley Institute, an anti-poverty group. It's on page 7 in the submission.