Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

FCM Sends 'Urgent Message' To Political Parties On Social Housing For Seniors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Oct, 2015 11:42 AM
  • FCM Sends 'Urgent Message' To Political Parties On Social Housing For Seniors
OTTAWA — The Federation of Canadian Municipalities is sending an urgent message to federal political parties to address housing for seniors in this fall's election campaign as Canada approaches "a perfect storm."
 
In findings released Monday, the FCM documented slumping incomes among seniors, rising rent costs and an increasingly aging population that it said will have a devastating financial impact if the issue is not addressed now.
 
Just last month, Statistics Canada released new population figures showing Canada's seniors population has edged out the number of children under 15.
 
The number of seniors is expected to double to more than 10.4 million over the next 25 years, the federal agency predicts.
 
Edmonton, for example, expects its population aged over 80 to increase 266% between 2006 and 2041.
 
"It is a very urgent message that any government should properly plan for the future," said FCM president Raymond Louie.
 
"In the next 20 years, we will have a significant problem if we don't start addressing it today."
 
Louie said it makes economic sense to invest in supporting seniors.
 
"The parties, all of them, need to pay more attention into an investment in housing," he said. 
 
The FCM report indicates Canada's aging population is changing the face of communities across the country and close to 700,000 households led by seniors face a challenge with housing affordability.
 
"A combination of modest incomes and high living costs mean that almost one in four senior-led households are spending 30 per cent more of their income on shelter," the report states.
 
The findings also detail how significant groups of seniors remain economically vulnerable.
 
"Seniors who live alone experience poverty at nearly twice the rate of other seniors," it said.
 
The FCM says part of the solution is to provide housing options for seniors by building and expanding existing programs to confront issues such as the growing number of seniors on social housing wait lists.
 
It also recommends supporting and growing municipal, provincial and federal programs that enable seniors to renovate their housing to accommodate changing needs.
 
The FCM found housing affordability is particularly an issue in Canada's largest cities, where there is a higher concentration of poor households led by seniors.
 
Louie said municipalities simply do not have the capacity to manage a ballooning problem.
 
"When people have no place to live, we end up having many more social problems," he said.
 
Louie said the FCM's report highlights how the situation will deteriorate further without intervention by the federal government.
 
Federal funding provided through the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation to the tune of $1.6 billion a year will no longer be in place if funding agreements are allowed to expire, he added.
 
"That's why the FCM has been pushing as hard as we can to highlight how important it is that we continue to have housing funding made available, let alone expanding it which is what we would like to see happen," he said.
 
"We know that the situation is getting worse, housing affordability in general is becoming more and more challenging."

MORE National ARTICLES

Boa Constrictor Missing For A Month In Fredericton Has Been Found

Boa Constrictor Missing For A Month In Fredericton Has Been Found
A boa constrictor named Venus that went missing in a residential neighbourhood in Fredericton more than a month ago has been found.

Boa Constrictor Missing For A Month In Fredericton Has Been Found

Alberta's Notley tries to clarify her feelings about Mulcair's climate plan

Alberta's Notley tries to clarify her feelings about Mulcair's climate plan
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she "strongly supports" the federal NDP's plan to combat climate change, except for a cap-and-trade system that could potentially move money out of her province.

Alberta's Notley tries to clarify her feelings about Mulcair's climate plan

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment
The most extensive damage appears to be on the top floor of a newer three or four storey building not far from the Gateway SkyTrain station (on King George Boulevard at 108 Street.)

Residents Plucked From Balconies As Fire Races Through Large Surrey Apartment

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed
"'Dad, I have something to tell you — I'm pregnant,'" Glen Wilson testified Tuesday, recalling the text he received from CJ Fowler

Stepdad Says Kamloops Teen Texted She Was Pregnant Hours Before She Was Killed

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School
Mounties are looking for a man who allegedly groped a female student and then exposed himself outside a high school

Richmond Police Search For Suspect After Sex Assault Outside R.C. Palmer Secondary School

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon
Const. Jocelyn Noseworthy says someone broke into the drive-thru automated teller kiosk at the Interior Savings Credit Union last Thursday night.

Police Search For Safe-Cracking Crook After Hefty ATM Haul In Vernon