Foreign owners (mostly from China) have jacked up the housing prices to the point where a half-fallen down dump will be listed for $1 million. A tax on foreign-owned properties was put in some time back, but it doesn't do much about the house-flippers and money laundering that's already happened. There are mansions sitting empty while the owners don't live in this country.Oh, you missed my awesome Friends reference, but still
It sounds as if you were renting a room in a tenement house instead of living in one of the richest cities in the hemisphere.
Some years ago a foreign university student was interviewed, whining that the new tax meant she couldn't buy a house. My answer: Most university students live in the dorms or they rent (or share) an apartment. Why is she so special that she needs a whole damn house just for herself, when Canadian families can't find decent housing in Vancouver?
(I realize this makes me sound intolerant, but I'm fed up with reading about foreign owners who are only buying property for investment or semi-legal or outright illegal reasons while having no intention to ever become citizens who live here; critical housing then sits empty while there are people who desperately need somewhere to live)
Definitely not legal by Alberta's standards. Landlord/Tenant boards should be federal, not provincial, in my view. But with affordable living space at a premium in that city, I'm not surprised that he gets away with it.I'm pretty sure that Syn's landlord isn't entirely legal.
My last few Walmart deliveries have been by Loomis. Not sure if that's standard across Canada or only in Alberta. Depending on the driver, they may insist that you fetch and carry it yourself, and don't care if you have mobility problems. Earlier this year I asked if they would at least lift it up onto my walker (we're talking heavy boxes of cat litter), and he very begrudgingly did so). The latest delivery was right to the door, no problem at all.@Valka D'Ur: Does Walmart still use Canpar for its delivery?
Amazon's been using Intelcom, and I'd love to ask them why they don't train their drivers in how to buzz apartment suites. I'm not going out to the parking lot to fetch and carry stuff. Delivery means delivery to my home. I don't live in the parking lot.