Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Housing strategy having 'limited' impact, PBO says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2021 09:50 AM
  • Housing strategy having 'limited' impact, PBO says

Parliament's budget watchdog says the government is falling short of its aim to vastly expand Canada's affordable housing stock despite a spending ramp-up in the billions.

In a report published this morning, budget officer Yves Giroux says Ottawa topped up expenditures on its national housing strategy by nearly one quarter for an average of $3.7 billion annually over the past three years.

But he says expired community housing deals with the provinces, a shift toward pricier affordable homes and program lags at the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation have "limited the impact" of the Liberal government's plan.

Since 2018 the CMHC, which oversees the bulk of the three-year-old strategy, spent less than half of the $1.2 billion allocated for two key initiatives: the National Housing Co-Investment Fund and the Rental Construction Financing Initiative.

As of last October, the Crown corporation had committed to creating 12,230 affordable housing units under the two programs, with nearly two-thirds of them capped at 72 per cent of median household income — well above the roughly half of median market rent mandated for the other one-third.

The report projects that the number of households in need of an affordable place to live will increase to about 1.8 million within five years unless more funding flows toward the problem.

In April, the federal budget promised $2.4 billion over five years, beginning with nearly $1.8 billion this fiscal year, for affordable housing and followed through on a pledge to tax foreigners who own vacant homes in Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

UN experts call for investigation into burial site

UN experts call for investigation into burial site
The United Nations' human-rights special rapporteurs are calling on Canada and the Catholic Church to conduct prompt and thorough investigations into the finding of an unmarked burial site believed to contain the remains of 215 Indigenous children at a British Columbia residential school.

UN experts call for investigation into burial site

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week
Trudeau says that accounts for nine million Pfizer doses in July and another 9.1 million expected in August. He adds that Canada has also negotiated an option for three million more Pfizer doses to be delivered in September.

Canada to get two million Pfizer doses per week

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.
The suspect driver is believed to have been impaired by drugs. The Burnaby RCMP will be recommending Motor Vehicle Act charges as well as criminal, impaired driving, drug trafficking and weapon possession charges.    

A suspected impaired driver is in custody after crashing into a school bus.

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan
Statistics Canada says the economy lost 68,000 jobs in May as lockdowns to slow the spread of COVID-19 continued. The losses marked the second consecutive month of declines after 207,000 jobs were lost in April.

Economy lost 68,000 jobs in May: StatCan

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney
Alberta Premier Jason Kenney says he and his ministers made every reasonable effort to comply with health rules during a surreptitiously photographed whiskey-drinks dinner on the patio of the infamous "Sky Palace."

'Reasonable effort' made to follow rules: Kenney

Trans Mountain told stop tree cutting on project

Trans Mountain told stop tree cutting on project
The Canada Energy Regulator has issued an order stopping tree cutting and grass mowing across the entire $12.6-billion Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project.

Trans Mountain told stop tree cutting on project