Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Put 'Right To Housing,' Anti-Poverty Laws Into Omnibus Budget Bill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Apr, 2019 08:05 PM

    OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are using their omnibus budget bill to legislate a "right to housing" and the requirements on future government to not drop the concept.


    The budget bill sets into law rules around the Liberals' 10-year national housing strategy, valued at more than $40 billion, and creates two new oversight bodies meant to make sure the spending reduces homelessness.


    A national housing council is to advise the government on the effects of the strategy and a new housing advocate is to report annually on systemic issues preventing Canadians from finding affordable and safe places to live.


    Reports would also be required every three years on how well the strategy is meeting national goals and furthering "the progressive realization of the right to adequate housing."


    In each case, the minister in charge of the strategy would have to "reply and act" on the reports, said Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, "which will ensure there is sufficient pressure on the federal government to meet the legislated right to housing."


    Duclos is to discuss the right to housing at an event Thursday morning.


    Characterizing housing as a human right is meant to provide recourse, usually through tribunals, to anyone wrongfully denied a home for reasons such as ethnicity, religion, or gender identity, and put pressure on the federal government to help make the right a reality.


    "The federal government has admitted to having an obligation when it comes to protecting the most vulnerable of Canadians," Duclos said in an interview Wednesday. "There will always need to be a continuing conversation (and) that's exactly what the bill says — the national housing strategy will need to evolve, but I think we've made major steps in very little time."


    The Liberals had been looking into setting the right to housing into law since early in their mandate, when they met with housing advocates about ways to pump more money into affordable housing.


    But as time wore on, those same advocates became concerned about whether the government would have the time needed to pass a law before the next election.


    Putting the housing strategy law into the budget bill is tacit acknowledgment that time was running short. Inside the budget bill, it is assured passage by the summer.


    Also in the budget bill is the government's poverty-reduction law, which was part of a separate bill introduced in early November that hasn't been debated since the end of that month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Ferry Crew Plucks Boater From Sinking Vessel Off Vancouver Island

    B.C. ferry crew members helped save a life Monday evening as they rescued a man from his storm-tossed, sinking pleasure boat.

    B.C. Ferry Crew Plucks Boater From Sinking Vessel Off Vancouver Island

    Chrystia Freeland Says Corners Could Not Be Cut With U.S. Arrest Request Of Huawei Exec

    Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says cutting corners to avoid arresting a Chinese executive at the request of the Americans simply was not an option to avoid a difficult political situation.

    Chrystia Freeland Says Corners Could Not Be Cut With U.S. Arrest Request Of Huawei Exec

    'Are We Going To Play?' Alberta Boy With Rare Illness No Big Deal For Classmates

    ONOWAY, Alta. — Four-year-old Porter Stanley has some new pals at preschool.

    'Are We Going To Play?' Alberta Boy With Rare Illness No Big Deal For Classmates

    Canada's Robust Credit Rating Should Calm Unease About Federal Deficits: Trudeau

    Canada's Robust Credit Rating Should Calm Unease About Federal Deficits: Trudeau
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recommends any Canadians worried about his government's deficits to look at the country's strong standing with international credit-rating agencies for reassurance.

    Canada's Robust Credit Rating Should Calm Unease About Federal Deficits: Trudeau

    Those Who Resisted Legal Pot Now 'Caught Flat Footed' On Supply, Says Trudeau

    Those Who Resisted Legal Pot Now 'Caught Flat Footed' On Supply, Says Trudeau
    The shortages have been most pronounced in Ontario, forcing that province to limit the number of licenced pot dispensaries that will be opened in the spring.    

    Those Who Resisted Legal Pot Now 'Caught Flat Footed' On Supply, Says Trudeau

    Justin Trudeau Rules Out Snap Election Call, National Ballot Slated For Oct. 21

    Justin Trudeau Rules Out Snap Election Call, National Ballot Slated For Oct. 21
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says there will be no early election call.

    Justin Trudeau Rules Out Snap Election Call, National Ballot Slated For Oct. 21