Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Not Ottawa's job to build houses, Freeland says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Apr, 2022 04:30 PM
  • Not Ottawa's job to build houses, Freeland says

VANCOUVER - Canada's finance minister says it’s not the federal government’s job to build all the houses Canadians need, but it will try to remove roadblocks with a $4-billion fund earmarked to help boost housing construction announced in the budget.

Chrystia Freeland told the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade on Wednesday that some of the funding will be used to work with provinces, territories and local governments to determine what’s stopping more homes from being built and create the right incentives.

Freeland says there are many technical challenges across the country, including an example she found “enraging” when she first learned of it.

She says many municipalities have systems that don’t allow them to issue permits as quickly as they’d like because they are using paper rather than digital approvals.

Freeland says that type of example isn’t a billion-dollar problem, it’s just ensuring that the right people have the right resources and incentives.

The so-called accelerator fund in the budget is part of $14 billion in new spending on housing that includes a first-time homebuyers tax credit and money for affordable housing.

Freeland says a national effort needs to be made from local governments on up.

“This is not going to be fixed by one budget in one year. This is a long-term challenge. And we're going to have to keep on investing in it year after year after year.”

More homes will need to be built as the economy gains strength and more immigrants move here, she says.

“So, I don't want people to sort of come away from this thinking, OK, they're going to fix housing this year. It's done,” she says. “We're going to have to think about it every year and that's OK.”

MORE National ARTICLES

$40B child welfare settlement largest ever: feds

$40B child welfare settlement largest ever: feds
Ottawa has officially announced it has reached agreements in principle with First Nations partners to compensate children harmed by its underfunding of child welfare. Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller says at $40 billion, the settlement marks the largest in Canadian history.

$40B child welfare settlement largest ever: feds

B.C. property assessments rise province wide

B.C. property assessments rise province wide
Data posted on the BC Assessment website shows market value as of July 1, 2021, increased over 40 per cent in the communities of Hope, Port Alberni, Lake Cowichan and other rural areas, while Vancouver was up seven per cent.

B.C. property assessments rise province wide

Charges laid against Abbotsford and Calgary residents after a series of robberies

Charges laid against Abbotsford and Calgary residents after a series of robberies
Charges have been laid against a 22-year-old Abbotsford resident and a 21-year-old Calgary resident after a joint investigation into a robbery series that occurred in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford. Between October 2, 2021 and October 11, 2021, three robberies in three different jurisdictions occurred.

Charges laid against Abbotsford and Calgary residents after a series of robberies

Charge laid in New Year's Eve death of B.C. woman

Charge laid in New Year's Eve death of B.C. woman
RCMP on Vancouver Island say a 27-year-old man has been charged with one count of second-degree murder following a slaying in Langford, B.C. An unnamed woman was found dead in a home during a wellness check on Dec. 31.

Charge laid in New Year's Eve death of B.C. woman

CEOs paid at second-highest level during pandemic

CEOs paid at second-highest level during pandemic
In 2020, as many Canadians had hours cut or lost their jobs completely during repeated lockdowns and forced closures, the highest-paid 100 CEOs at publicly traded companies earned an average of $10.9 million. That was down from the record high of $11.8 million in 2018, but an increase of $95,000 compared with 2019.

CEOs paid at second-highest level during pandemic

Trudeau gets COVID-19 booster shot in Ottawa

Trudeau gets COVID-19 booster shot in Ottawa
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has joined the ranks of Canadians who are rolling up their sleeves for COVID-19 booster shots. Trudeau received his third shot at an Ottawa pharmacy this morning.

Trudeau gets COVID-19 booster shot in Ottawa