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(Some) B.C. tenants can now be evicted

The easing of the eviction ban does not include evictions for non-payment of rent but does cover eviction orders that pre-date COVID-19
Vast majority of tenants paid rent
The B.C. government has partially lifted a ban on residential rental evictions but is maintaining the moratorium on rent increases and evictions for non-payment of rent.
B.C. has also extended a rental relief program that provides $300 to $500 per month in rental supplements, paid directly to landlords, until the end of August. 
The province says that between April 9 and June 15, BC Housing received more than 90,000 applications for the temporary rent supplement, with nearly 82,500 eligible applications confirmed.
According to surveys by Goodman Commercial Inc. and CBRE, about 97 per cent of residential tenants paid the rent in April, May and June.
The following tenancy laws came into effect July 2.
A landlord can now issue a Notice to End Tenancy for any reason (other than unpaid or late payment rent).
Landlords with existing orders for eviction can now take them to the courts for enforcement and can enforce a writ order effective immediately.
Landlords can enter a rental suite with 24-hour notice and do not need the tenant’s consent. They are expected to follow health guidelines like physical distancing, cleaning and wearing masks when appropriate.
The change also allows for personal service of documents to resume, rather than via email.
Landlords’ ability to restrict access to common spaces for COVID-19 related health reasons remains.
“A tenant who has not paid rent could face eviction once the state of emergency is over,” the government statement cautions.