Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for their presentations.
Just to pick up on what Mr. Laporte was saying, while I think that in Quebec the situation that he highlighted there is important to note, what's also interesting is that what's happening in Quebec is also happening elsewhere.
In a previous presentation by Dr. Nemoy Lewis, of the School of Urban and Regional Planning at Toronto Metropolitan University, he testified that:
A financialized landlord is a purchasing company that is privately held—an asset manager—or a publicly traded company—[i.e.] real estate investment trusts—that acquires rental properties at scale and applies financial logic, metrics and priorities to generate returns to shareholders and investors.
In his study, he looked at a 27-year period in Toronto. He found that this sort of financialized landlord engaged in 40% of the transactions in terms of turning over properties. Real estate investment trusts accounted for 7%, a smaller percentage, which is noted. However, he went on to say:
REITs do apply the same acquisition and management practices, which...we know, undermine Canada's duty to fufill [the] housing rights for all Canadians.
What's interesting to note in his particular study is that he focused on where the acquisitions were made, and then he also did a comparative analysis in the demographics and found that this was concentrated in targeting the Black population. In his study, he found that “[f]inancialized landlords account for actually 72.86% of all those units that have been transacted in those particular geographies”. The most important point in here, and I'm now coming to it, is this:
...in terms of displacement problems and financialized landlords. We examined evictions in the city of Toronto over the last four years, between 2018 and 2021. There were approximately just under 63,000 evictions in the city of Toronto. Financialized landlords accounted for 42% of those evictions. In terms of evictions for non-payment of rent, financialized landlords filed just under 80% of those evictions.
He goes on to provide further data. It seems to me that this is not really matching up with some witnesses that say, “Hey, I'm a REIT, and we don't do any evictions”. Financialized landlords, some might say, are not engaging in these practices, yet the data from independent studies shows otherwise.
I guess my question to Mr. Laporte is this. You mentioned some of the challenges that you face in the city of Quebec, and that you are seeing evictions taking place. The bottom line is this: Should housing be treated as a commodity or should housing be treated as a basic human right, as a place where people can acquire a home, a place where they can actually feel safe and that they are able to afford?