Not going to defend the LTB too hard, because they've really screwed up what should have been a good alternative to the old method of using the Ontario Superior Court for evictions, which was prohibitively expensive and cumbersome, but the article is dated Nov 8/22 & states that from now until the end of this year, they're going to concentrate on AGIs over hearings for unpaid rent. The likely reason for this is that, if they did the reverse, there would probably be a flood of orders signed in late November/early December, which would then culminate in evictions around the xmas/new year's period. I'm not saying that's a bad thing; if tenants owe & refuse to pay, it's the remedy available to landlords. But our entire civil legal system (of which this is a part) shuts down at a point in December because of the holidays, and there's a loosely defined premise that people shouldn't lose their homes around xmas.
Now personally, I don't give a shit about xmas, but many people still do, and I suspect that a return to normalcy is being put off to the new year for this reason. I also find that the reasoning that it benefits corporate landlords is somewhat specious; after all, an independent landlord is free to apply for an AGI providing they've got the documents to back it up. This decision mainly benefits tenants who owe money, giving them an additional period before having to deal with the consequences of that. If the LTB decided to expedite the backlog of hearings, the headline in the article would be "LTB to allow christmas evictions", or something similar. This is obviously the lesser of two evils, and a continuation of the system that favours the tenants' rights.