Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds, mayors don't want to 'slow things down' after premiers criticize housing deals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2023 04:00 PM
  • Feds, mayors don't want to 'slow things down' after premiers criticize housing deals

The mayor of Halifax, which recently secured a deal with Ottawa to fast-track the building of thousands of new homes, says he was caught off guard by recent complaints from premiers over being left out of funding agreements between the federal government and cities.

Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser, who has been travelling across Canada to highlight such agreements made directly with cities, says he was also surprised by the backlash — but is not planning to back down.

The mayor of Winnipeg, which still hoping for its own request to be approved, says he is more focused on getting the money quickly, rather than which level of government pays the bills.

The latest irritant in the relationship between Ottawa and the premiers came to a head on Monday. After their meeting in Halifax, provincial and territorial leaders released a communiqué that called for federal funding "that flows exclusively through provinces and territories" to address housing needs and support long-term capital planning.

It comes after the federal government has signed agreements with cities such as Halifax, Calgary, Hamilton as part of the Housing Accelerator Fund program that began rolling out this summer.

But the federal government and several mayors are doubling down on the need to get funds flowing to cities as quickly as possible. 

The Liberals have been encouraging municipalities to submit applications that would change municipal bylaws and regulations to promote densification, such as eliminating building height restrictions or parking standards, and reducing red tape.

On Wednesday, Fraser said he had not previously heard any complaints from the provinces about the program.

"There's been no premier — and most of them do have my phone number — there's been no provincial counterpart at a ministerial level who has raised a single concern," Fraser said after a speech at the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness conference in Halifax.

"In fact, the only ones that I have engaged with have indicated that they're quite happy to see the federal government make investments in housing in provinces."

The Liberals promised the $4-billion fund during the 2021 election campaign. The money was allocated to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. in the 2022 federal budget, with the goal of adding at least 100,000 new homes across the country over five years.

But the first deal, with London, Ont., was not announced until this September. It happened as the Liberals were holding a caucus retreat in that city, focused on how to address a national housing crisis ahead of their return to Parliament after a summer of rising support for the Conservatives.

So far, the federal government has touted the program as a success, estimating that the deals signed with seven cities so far will get more than 146,000 homes built over the next 10 years.

But Canada's premiers maintain that they've been cut out of the process, and as a result they are threatening to enact legislation that would see them deal directly with Ottawa in brokering such deals.

The model they point to is a $900-million housing agreement Quebec reached last month on behalf of its towns and cities.

"You can't have the federal government coming into a certain town or certain city and dumping funding and not even discussing it with the province. That's unacceptable. We call it jurisdictional creep," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on Monday. 

"Obviously, they don't want to work collaboratively when they do that. We do want to work collaboratively."

The premiers have argued that they want to be involved to make sure that funding is equitable for communities and meets the needs of their provinces.

Fraser said that if provinces want to have more of a say in housing, they have the tools to offer the same kinds of incentives. 

"But I'm not going to put the brakes on a program that's actually showing the results right now. There is no time to waste in a crisis situation," he said Wednesday.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joined Quebec Premier François Legault to officially announce that $900-million agreement — and the decision by the province to match it.

Trudeau echoed Fraser's previous comments by encouraging provinces to follow Quebec's lead. 

"When we put forward $900 million as Quebec's share of the housing accelerator, the province of Quebec said 'OK, we're going to step up and double it.' There's not another province that has offered to do that," Trudeau said in Longueil, Que.

"We welcome them to come and do more with us."

Halifax Mayor Mike Savage, who is also the chair of the Big City Mayors' Caucus at the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, said he had not previously heard any concerns from the Nova Scotia government on the Housing Accelerator Fund.

He also noted the provincial government was supportive of the city's application for funding.

"It's a little bit new and out of the blue to me. I just think it's time that we all stopped fighting about jurisdiction and actually started solving the problem," Savage said in an interview on Wednesday.

"We don't want to slow things down. And we don't think that it's fair to say that there's no role for the federal government in directly supporting municipal governments," he said.

"In the same way that the provinces want to collaborate with the federal government, we want to collaborate with provincial governments. It's just been easier, frankly, to collaborate with the feds."

Last month, the federal government and Halifax reached an agreement to give the city $79 million toward housing, an investment that is supposed to help build 9,000 new homes.

In addition to the seven cities the federal government has reached agreements with, hundreds more municipalities have submitted applications.

Guelph Mayor Cam Guthrie, who is hoping his city will secure a deal with the federal government, said he was also caught off-guard by the premiers this week. He called on them to work collaboratively with Ottawa. 

"It really is a head-scratcher for me that in a housing crisis, you would have different levels of government sort of at odds with each other about how funding could flow to exactly where it needs to flow to, which happens to be municipalities where housing is built," Guthrie said. 

"Instead of trying to potentially put up roadblocks or to delay the type of funding that's needed in this crisis," he said, he would encourage the provinces to divert that same energy into "seeing how you could partner with the federal government on even more funding that could come to unlock more housing."

In Winnipeg, Mayor Scott Gillingham is trying to secure an agreement with the federal government after the city put in an application for $192 million.

"I appreciate (that) traditionally, funding from the federal government flows through the provincial governments. But there have been incidences in the past where the federal government has given money directly to cities," Gillingham said in an interview.

"My priority and my concern is getting the funds drawn down into Winnipeg in the easiest, quickest way possible to put it to use."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Medication could have been confused with Halloween treats in Colwood, B.C.: Police

Medication could have been confused with Halloween treats in Colwood, B.C.: Police
Police in a community west of Victoria are urging parents to check their children's Halloween candy carefully for medication that might have been mistakenly handed out to trick-or-treaters. West Shore RCMP say they received a call from a senior living in Colwood, near the intersection of Bette Drive and Charlotte Drive.

Medication could have been confused with Halloween treats in Colwood, B.C.: Police

B.C. pair accused of neglect in death of North Okanagan youngster in 2020

B.C. pair accused of neglect in death of North Okanagan youngster in 2020
Two North Okanagan residents have been ordered to appear in a Vernon, B.C., courtroom in January as they face charges of neglect that led to the death of a child nearly four years ago. RCMP Cpl. James Grandy says police were called to the Lumby area east of Vernon on April 4, 2020, after paramedics located a critically ill boy.  

B.C. pair accused of neglect in death of North Okanagan youngster in 2020

2 men shot outside South Vancouver nightclub

2 men shot outside South Vancouver nightclub
Police say they're investigating after two men were shot at outside Gallery nightclub in south Vancouver early Sunday morning. They say officers responded to reports of gunfire and found a 44-year-old man with a gunshot wound to his arm, while the other man wasn't injured.  

2 men shot outside South Vancouver nightclub

Body found in a Kelowna park

Body found in a Kelowna park
R-C-M-P in Kelowna say a man's body has been found in a park on the city's north side. A statement from the detachment says the body was found this morning in Sutherland Bay Park and it appears the victim may have been there through the night.  

Body found in a Kelowna park

Deadly crash in Kitsilano

Deadly crash in Kitsilano
Vancouver police hope witnesses will have information or dashcam video that could assist the investigation of a deadly crash in the city's Kitsilano neighbourhood. Police say a 53-year-old pedestrian died last Wednesday -- almost a week after she was hit when two cars collided (at the intersection of 4th Avenue and Balsam Street) and slid onto the sidewalk where she and a second pedestrian were standing.  

Deadly crash in Kitsilano

B.C. man pleads guilty to second-degree murder of Ashley Simpson in 2016

B.C. man pleads guilty to second-degree murder of Ashley Simpson in 2016
A 21-day murder trial that was supposed to begin Monday in British Columbia Supreme Court in Salmon Arm ended almost immediately as Derek Favell entered a guilty plea. The Shuswap-area resident, who is in his early 40s, was charged with the 2016 slaying of his former girlfriend Ashley Simpson.

B.C. man pleads guilty to second-degree murder of Ashley Simpson in 2016