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Photographs of an apartment building at 25 St Dennis Drive in Toronto on May 1, 2017. New Ontario tenant protections came into effect on Friday that place more requirements on landlords evicting them.Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail

New tenant protections came into effect on Friday that place more requirements on landlords evicting them. When a landlord evicts a tenant to use the unit themselves or for a family member, they have to now give the tenant one month's rent as compensation.

Alternatively, the landlord could offer the tenant another acceptable rental unit. As well, the landlord is required to express intent to occupy the unit for at least a year, which the government says will discourage landlords from converting the unit into a short-term rental or immediately re-renting it at a higher rate. If landlords advertise, re-rent, demolish or convert the unit within a year, they could face a fine of up to $25,000.

The changes are part of the government's housing plan announced this spring, which included expanding rent controls to all rental units, not just those built before 1991, per the previous rule.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he told U.S. President Donald Trump that Canada is prepared to help victims of hurricane Harvey, which forced tens of thousands from their homes in Texas and Louisiana.

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