Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Feds to speed up housing construction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Aug, 2023 09:50 AM
  • Feds to speed up housing construction

Canada's housing minister says working people should be able to afford to live where they work as rental prices grow beyond reach of even high-income professionals. 

Sean Fraser says the federal government is looking at a number of ways to work with provinces and municipalities to speed up the construction of housing through subsidies and other incentives and drive prices down. 

He says people’s circumstances are varied, but couldn’t point to a number he thinks is reasonable for a one-bedroom apartment as the average in Vancouver was recently reported at around three-thousand dollars.

Fraser says the federal government should have never got out of the housing game in the first place, and building rental housing for people across the income spectrum is a priority as more Canadians struggle to keep a roof over their heads.

MORE National ARTICLES

Armed robbery in Kelowna

Armed robbery in Kelowna
Mounties say the male suspect brandished a handgun during the robbery then quickly fled the area before officers arrived. Officers say they are actively searching for the suspect described as wearing a blue mask, blue jacket with brown hair and a slim build, clad in a Reebok hoodie that was blue on top and black at the bottom.

Armed robbery in Kelowna

Hot weather for this weekend

Hot weather for this weekend
Nelson saw the temperature hit 38.2 Celsius yesterday, breaking a record set back in 1938. Elsewhere, temperature records were set in McKenzie, Nakusp, Richmond and Smithers. Heat warnings are in place for the Okanagan, Thompson and Boundary regions.

Hot weather for this weekend

Nanaimo man dies after crash

Nanaimo man dies after crash
Police in Nanaimo say a 24-year-old man has died of his injuries after a crash with a suspected impaired driver.  Nanaimo R-C-M-P say the crash happened around 10 p-m on Wednesday, and the other driver remains in hospital. 

Nanaimo man dies after crash

Water consumption still high despite calls for water conservation

Water consumption still high despite calls for water conservation
The regional government says reservoir levels remain normal for the season, but water consumption is trending higher than the same time last year.  It says water consumption peaked on July 5th with 1.56 billion litres used, even though it wasn't a day designated for watering lawns. 

Water consumption still high despite calls for water conservation

B.C. firefighter numbers increase to more than 2,500, with 100 Brazilians here today

B.C. firefighter numbers increase to more than 2,500, with 100 Brazilians here today
BC Wildfire Service spokesman Cliff Chapman says about 500 international firefighters are already in B.C., boosting the ranks of the more than 2,000 provincial wildfire service personnel on the front lines battling hundreds of blazes.   

B.C. firefighter numbers increase to more than 2,500, with 100 Brazilians here today

Uncertainty at B.C. ports continues as possible deal emerges in labour dispute

Uncertainty at B.C. ports continues as possible deal emerges in labour dispute
A statement on the website of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Canada Local 502 says that a tentative agreement has been reached with the BC Maritime Employers Association, and the ILWU will hold an "emergency contract caucus" today to decide if the deal will be sent to the full union membership for ratification.

Uncertainty at B.C. ports continues as possible deal emerges in labour dispute