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Rent bank being set up to help renters in need on the mid Island

Nanaimo-region B.C. Rent Bank, also serving Parksville, Qualicum and Lantzville, starts in January
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B.C. Rent Bank is setting up five new rent banks and one of them will serve people in the Parksville-Qualicum Beach area.

B.C. Rent Bank, a Vancity Community Foundation project funded by the B.C. government, provides small interest-free loans to renters when their ability to pay rent is compromised due to emergencies or other circumstances, noted a press release from B.C. Rent Bank.

The Nanaimo-region centre will also serve Parksville, Qualicum Beach and Lantzville and will start up in January.

John McCormick, co-executive director of the John Howard Society in Nanaimo, said in the release that the opening of a rent bank in the region is “truly significant and needed” and said it’s the result of a co-ordinated community effort with the City of Nanaimo and stakeholders.

“The pandemic has exacerbated the already unprecedented levels of precariously housed community members,” McCormick said. “That, combined with rental stock in historic low supply, means that the creation of the Nanaimo rent bank is enthusiastically supported as a valuable option to help low- to moderate income renters to remain housed.”

Melissa Giles, B.C. Rent Bank project lead, said in the release faster implementation of new rent bank locations was a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. She thanked partners including local governments and said B.C. Rent Bank recognizes “the heavy lifting that our non-profit partners are doing to ensure that greater housing stability is accessible to low- to moderate income renters and their families within their communities.”

The release noted that in addition to providing loans, rent banks advocate on behalf of renters, mediate landlord-tenant discussions and provide referrals to other social agencies and government programs.

David Eby, B.C.’s minister responsible for housing, said at the end of September, rent banks helped 800 individuals and families maintain rental housing, and offered other forms of support to another 5,000.

“Rent banks are an important tool that British Columbians on low and moderate incomes can use to keep a roof over their heads during these uncertain times,” Eby said in the release.

READ ALSO: City of Nanaimo aligning affordable housing and homelessness strategies

READ ALSO: B.C. woman refuses to pay overdue rent based on income raised collecting empty cans



editor@nanaimobulletin.com

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