Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds unlock public properties to build homes, say 29,200 units to be built by 2029

Darpan News Desk, 07 Nov, 2023 11:28 AM
  • Feds unlock public properties to build homes, say 29,200 units to be built by 2029

As the federal government faces mounting pressure to address a national housing crisis, it announced on Tuesday that it would build more than 2,800 homes on its properties in cities across the country.

The latest announcement, which also comes as Liberals face a major dip in the polls, puts the government on track to build about 29,200 homes on public lands by 2029. 

Procurement Minister Jean-Yves Duclos also said on Tuesday the Canada Lands Corp. is setting a new target to include at least 20 per cent affordable housing across its projects.

"This will mean around 5,300 affordable homes in the next five years, which is twice as many as in the last 30 years," Duclos said at a news conference in Ottawa.

"This is a significant acceleration of providing affordable homes to Canadians but we think — and we know — there is more we can do."

Duclos said that the corporation, through agreements with developers, will be unlocking 2,800 additional units by March 2024 in Calgary, Edmonton, Ottawa and St. John's. A minimum of 300 of the units will be set aside for affordable housing.

Asked whether the federal government will sell off these properties or keep them on its books, Duclos said a mix of strategies may be used. 

Tuesday's announcement is the latest effort by the federal government to address the national housing crisis by boosting housing supply in the country. 

The federal Liberals' attempt to get ahead on the housing file comes as the government faces attacks from opposition parties over the affordability crisis. 

Conservatives have seen their support in polling surge since the summer as the party's leader, Pierre Poilievre, pins the blame for the housing crisis on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

Among Poilievre's proposed solutions to the crisis is selling off 15 per cent of federal buildings and lands for housing development. 

The NDP has also criticized the federal government for its handling of housing policy, calling for more targeted investments in affordable housing, in particular. 

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, who was present at the news conference, said this announcement "is just the beginning of a much more aggressive approach to using federal lands."

Housing experts have been calling on the federal government to leverage its real-estate portfolio to get more homes built, particularly ones that would be affordable for lower-income Canadians. 

Freeland is expected to present the fall economic statement in the coming weeks and has promised that the mini-budget would focus on housing and affordability. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Arson in Green Timbers Park

Arson in Green Timbers Park
Police in Surrey are investigating multiple fires set in Green Timbers Park early yesterday.  Officers conducted foot patrols after a citizen reported a fire and they found several other blazes. 

Arson in Green Timbers Park

Surrey Police decision coming today

Surrey Police decision coming today
The decision by Solicitor General Mike Farnworth comes amid a tug of war that saw city council vote for the Mounties despite a provincial recommendation they stay with the Surrey Police Service.

Surrey Police decision coming today

B.C. port strike back on after union rejects deal, saying four-year term is too long

B.C. port strike back on after union rejects deal, saying four-year term is too long
Rob Ashton, the president of the International Longshore Workers Union Canada, says in a statement that its caucus does not believe the deal can protect jobs "now or into the future." Ashton also says the four-year agreement is "far too long" given the uncertainties in the industry and the economy overall.  

B.C. port strike back on after union rejects deal, saying four-year term is too long

BC's police watchdog investigating after man shot by police in hospital

BC's police watchdog investigating after man shot by police in hospital
B-C's police watchdog is investigating the death of a man after he was shot by police in a hospital Wednesday. Mounties say an "interaction" between the man and officers occurred at the Fraser Canyon Hospital in Hope, resulting in one officer discharging their firearm.  

BC's police watchdog investigating after man shot by police in hospital

Canadian arrested by U.K. police at on suspicion of membership in terrorism group

Canadian arrested by U.K. police at on suspicion of membership in terrorism group
British police have arrested a Canadian man on suspicion of being a member of a terrorism group. The Metropolitan Police in London, England say counterterrorism detectives arrested a 28-year-old Canadian national at Heathrow Airport shortly after noon.

Canadian arrested by U.K. police at on suspicion of membership in terrorism group

RCMP officers' group says Mounties shouldn't be 'scapegoats' in police shortage

RCMP officers' group says Mounties shouldn't be 'scapegoats' in police shortage
The staffing vacancies were a key reason the B.C. government had recommended the City of Surrey continue its transition to an independent police force, despite the newly elected mayor's promise that the city would go back to the RCMP for its policing. 

RCMP officers' group says Mounties shouldn't be 'scapegoats' in police shortage