Nova Scotia studying creation of enforcement unit for tenant-landlord disputes

The Nova Scotia government has hired a consultant to examine the feasibility of an Ontario-style enforcement system for landlords and tenants, in which trained officers could advise parties and issue fines for abusing the law. The Dalhousie Legal Aid Clinic says situations such as the temporary removal of a stove from a rooming house (white building on the right as shown in this handout image) in Halifax are the kind of cases that could benefit from an enforcement unit. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Dalhousie Legal Aid Clinic

HALIFAX - The Nova Scotia government has hired a consultant to examine whether the province should create an Ontario-style enforcement system for landlords and tenants, in which trained officers would advise parties on disputes and have the power to lay charges.

Halifax-based Davis Pier Consulting won the contract to study Ontario's system and come up with a comprehensive program design detailing the scope, structure and costs of implementing something similar in Nova Scotia, said Blaise Theriault, spokesman for the minister responsible for the Residential Tenancies Act.

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