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    HomeSocietyLETTER: Who Protects Tenants When Landlords Ignore the Rules?

    LETTER: Who Protects Tenants When Landlords Ignore the Rules?

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    Dear Editor,

    I am writing to express my deep concern over the treatment of tenants by some landlords and to ask an important question: Who protects tenants when the very people providing housing choose to ignore basic standards of fairness, professionalism, and respect?

    I recently witnessed a situation that left me disturbed, not only because of how a young tenant was treated, but because of the apparent disregard for due process and personal privacy.

    A young woman renting a room in a shared house was informed that her rent would be increasing substantially. Shortly thereafter, she was told that she needed to leave the property. However, instead of being served the required 30-day notice, she was given only two weeks to vacate. There was no formal written notice provided, despite the seriousness of asking someone to leave their home.

    How is a tenant expected to find suitable accommodation, gather moving expenses, and reorganize their life within just two weeks? Why should a tenant be expected to comply with a process that appears to disregard the very protections put in place by law?

    The law exists to protect both landlords and tenants. A landlord has every right to recover possession of their property through the proper legal process, but tenants also have rights. One of those rights is adequate notice. A 30-day notice period is not a suggestion; it is intended to provide tenants with a fair opportunity to secure alternative housing and avoid unnecessary hardship. In this case, that protection was not afforded.

    Even more troubling was what happened next.

    The landlord took it upon herself to record and share video footage of the tenant’s bedroom and personal living space in a public group chat designated for advertising houses and apartments for rent or sale. Why would anyone believe it is acceptable to expose a tenant’s private living quarters to hundreds of strangers online? What gives a landlord the right to publicly display someone’s personal belongings, bedroom, and private space without their consent?

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