Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds look to cities to align housing policies

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2021 09:46 AM
  • Feds look to cities to align housing policies

The federal minister in charge of affordable housing says he would like municipalities to reshape local rules to more quickly build units through the government's national housing strategy.

Social Development Minister Ahmed Hussen said some cities and towns have already started to align their permitting and planning process with the federal strategy, but adds many have not.

He said it would be key to boosting the supply of housing and rental units that should ease costs fuelled by rising demand.

In an interview with The Canadian Press, Hussen said he's particularly concerned cities aren't doing enough to add units in the areas between the suburbs and downtown cores in a process known as intensification.

Hussen and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland earlier this week met with experts about the country's hot housing market, which has made it more difficult for some to buy alongside limited options for rental units.

"It's not just the federal government. There are things that the municipalities can do, there are things that the provinces can do," Hussen said.

"They can improve the permitting and planning process to better align with the national housing strategy requirements so that affordable housing is built faster. I've achieved that with a number of municipalities, but not all of them, so there is a lot of potential."

The cost of housing has risen across the country over the last year, driven by a mix of low interest rates, demand outstripping supply as Canadians working from home look for more space, and recently rising costs for materials like lumber.

April's federal budget proposed billions in new spending to boost the supply of affordable housing, seeing it as a way to bring down overall prices, and proposed a one per cent tax on vacant homes owned by foreign buyers to dampen speculation and force owners to start renting out properties.

Weeks later, the Liberals tightened the stress test for insured mortgages to match a similar move by a federal banking regulator for uninsured mortgages after the central bank warned that households were piling on too much debt.

The new rules kicked in June 1, and are expected to reduce borrowing power by about four per cent.

Speaking to a Senate committee Wednesday night, Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said there were some early signs of some cooling, adding that he expected further easing as the supply of units grew and demand slowed.

Statistics Canada reported Friday that new home prices increased 1.4 per cent in May, but that price growth in the largest markets of Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal had slowed amid third-wave lockdowns.

A report this month from Desjardins economists forecasted the housing market should stabilize over the summer as lockdowns lift, but warned of ongoing risks, including that the market could overcorrect in the coming quarters.

"We need to be thinking about and developing some contingency plans and possible things we could do, if there is more to be done," Macklem told senators on Wednesday night.

"We are starting to see some moderation in housing, and I would give it a little time before doing anything else."

The overall situation has spurred a coalition of homeless and housing advocates to launch the "Vote Housing" campaign that will target 70 key federal ridings, urging voters to pressure candidates to commit to addressing housing need and homelessness in Canada.

Alex Nelson with the Canadian Lived Experience Leadership Network will be involved, leaning on their experience of living in shelters, hotels, motels, and couchsurfing during their youth.

Nelson said the lived experience they and others bring to the campaign should have a greater impact, noting that about one-third of Canadians have experienced homelessness or know someone who has.

"We have the opportunity as people with lived experience to go out — as the voting public as rights holders — and assert that we can make or break this election, that we can bring housing into the public consciousness and make it part of the public conversation as we lead up to the election."

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins
The White House said the pair, who are in the United Kingdom for the three-day summit that gets underway Friday, will discuss the matter before the weekend, Rep. Brian Higgins told a panel discussion hosted by the Tourism Industry Association of Canada.

Trudeau, Biden to talk border at G7: Higgins

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more
The Liberals proposed a sweeping package in the April budget to ease student loan costs and expand a non-repayable grant program for tens of thousands of post-secondary students and recent graduates.

PBO: Student aid revamp may cost feds more

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew
The global Pew Research Center study released Thursday points to strikingly similar shifts in sentiment elsewhere around the world in the months since Biden took over the Oval Office.

Under Biden, Canada's opinion of U.S. soars: Pew

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet
Canada's COVID-19 infections are at the lowest level since last September, with the seven-day average of new cases sitting at 1,611 as of Wednesday.

Canada's COVID-19 infections continue to plummet

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal
The report from the House of Commons ethics committees followed months of contentious hearings and the release of thousands of pages of documents since last spring, when the government first inked the agreement with WE.

Commons committee blasts Liberals over WE deal

Liberals need help from NDP to speed net-zero bill

Liberals need help from NDP to speed net-zero bill
The net-zero legislation sets legally binding greenhouse gas emission reduction targets over the next three decades, culminating in net zero emissions no later than 2050.

Liberals need help from NDP to speed net-zero bill