Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces creation of $1.5-billion rental protection fund to help non-profits buy affordable rental apartments when they go up for sale
It's good to see some kinda/sorta/almost direct spending on affordable housing being announced:
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the creation of a $1.5-billion rental protection fund that will provide a combination of loans and grants to help non-profits buy affordable rental apartments when they go up for sale.
It's nowhere near enough, but it's better than the neoliberal tHe FrEe MaRkEt WiLl SaVe Us shoveling that both the Liberals and Conservatives have been pushing.
The article explains how the number of homes affordable to people making $30k annually is crashing across the country (but less so in Quebec).
That fund is long overdue, affordable housing groups say, because the country is losing lower-cost rental properties – to renovictions, tenant turnover and demolitions – far faster than it can build them.
“It’s a lot more attractive to cut ribbons at new buildings,” said Terry Cooke, the chief executive officer of the Hamilton Community Foundation, one of the groups involved in the lobby effort.
“We already have 2,000 units in the pipeline,” said Katie Maslechko, chief executive of the fund, which received $500-million from the province and has already provided grants to help non-profits purchase three properties this winter.
fund must work quickly, Ms. Maslechko said: there are hundreds of apartment buildings in the province, with thousands of affordable rentals, at risk of being lost because non-profits don’t have the capital to move fast enough to purchase the properties.
Average rents have risen beyond what many low-income – and even moderate income – Canadians can afford, driven in part by real estate investing, gentrification and a surge in demand from a growing population.
“We’re so fixated on adding new supply that we’re blind to existing affordable housing that is lost right before our eyes,” said Brian Doucet, the Canada Research Chair in urban change and social inclusion at the University of Waterloo.
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Would be great if there's also a fund for new starts! Affordable units may not be available everywhere, for places where it's not, denser new starts could fill the gap, especially since non profits could choose to focus more on quality/affordability/sustainability.
There are two massive policy gaps that the federal and provincial governments are failing to close:
We're a few million houses behind where we should be. Our governments should be building housing. The homes can be sold or rented, it doesn't matter. But it needs to be done below market rates.
We don't have enough people building houses. They should be offering incentives to get more people trained, funding startups that are building housing more efficiently, and bring in immigrants who can/will work construction.
Canadian taxes financialize housing by providing exemptions for profit on home sales and write-offs for mortgage payments. There should be lifetime limits to take money out of the real estate sector.
Both the federal Conservatives and Liberals are "encouraging" relaxation of gAtEkEePers by getting provinces/municipalities to remove restrictions on construction. But we can't rely on the private builders to create housing that will be affordable to most young Canadians.
How many millions are we behind? With an average occupancy of 2.5, some 4M houses would house 10M population, which is the equivalent of 20 years of population growth in Canada.