Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Wildfire Damage Expected To Take Fort McMurray Home Building To Record Level

The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2016 12:09 PM
    CALGARY — Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation is predicting a house-building boom in wildfire-ravaged Fort McMurray, Alta., later this year and continuing into 2017.
     
    The national agency says if all the homes destroyed by the fire in May were rebuilt in one year, along with the usual number of new homes, it would result in about 2,500 housing starts — greater than the previous record of 2,200 starts in 2007.
     
    However, it stated in a report it's unlikely all the homes can be rebuilt this year because of the extensive cleanup that must take place first.
     
    CMHC said an economic downturn linked to low oil prices had dropped home construction to a near 20-year low before the fire erupted in early May. Only 74 combined single- and multi-family units started construction in 2015, the lowest level since 1997. The pace in 2016 was equally weak at only 13 starts.
     
    Additionally, CMHC noted that only 155 sales of existing homes took place in the first quarter of 2016, continuing a declining trend that began in 2014. The average home price fell to $504,000, compared with an average of about $609,000 two years ago.
     
    In its report, the agency forecasts housing prices will halt their declines but didn't make a price prediction. It said it's unclear how many listed homes for resale will return to the market after repairs are made, noting many listings expired because the owners had been evacuated. Prices will be supported, however, as some displaced residents opt to purchase existing homes, driving up demand.
     
    Rental vacancy rates that hit 29 per cent in October are expected to decline rapidly, helping stabilize rents which had been falling, CMHC said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal
    MONTREAL — Visa is accusing Walmart of using consumers as pawns in its battle over merchant fees by threatening to ban the popular credit card from its Canadian stores.

    Visa Accuses Walmart Of Using Consumers As Pawns To Strike Cost-Saving Deal

    Retiree Spending Drops Off After 70, So No Need To Index Pensions: Study

    Retiree Spending Drops Off After 70, So No Need To Index Pensions: Study
    The report by the C.D. Howe Institute think tank also argues that tying up the extra funds in pension contributions is an inefficient use of scarce financial resources for Canadians.

    Retiree Spending Drops Off After 70, So No Need To Index Pensions: Study

    Bill To Create Spy Oversight Committee Introduced In House Of Commons

    OTTAWA — A nine-member, multi-party committee of parliamentarians would oversee federal intelligence activities under a long-anticipated bill tabled Thursday.

    Bill To Create Spy Oversight Committee Introduced In House Of Commons

    Murder Trial Of Parents In Diabetic Teen Death Adjourned Until Fall

    Murder Trial Of Parents In Diabetic Teen Death Adjourned Until Fall
    CALGARY — A Calgary judge has ruled key testimony from British Columbia in the death of a starved diabetic teen 13 years ago will be admitted as evidence.

    Murder Trial Of Parents In Diabetic Teen Death Adjourned Until Fall

    Internet History Of Harper PMO Deleted From Google Web Searches At Govt Request

    Internet History Of Harper PMO Deleted From Google Web Searches At Govt Request
    The Privy Council Office requests for deletion from Google began last Nov. 4, the day the Trudeau government took office and continued into January.

    Internet History Of Harper PMO Deleted From Google Web Searches At Govt Request

    Fishy Business: Tensions Between Old, New Hill Security Spill Onto Social Media

    It's the latest manifestation of tensions between the historic House of Commons security force and the RCMP, who were merged into one unit after the 2014 attack on Parliament Hill.

    Fishy Business: Tensions Between Old, New Hill Security Spill Onto Social Media