Shortly after you posted it the announcement came out - they’re building 2000 homes in London Ontario from a previously announced fund that will build 100K homes across all of Canada. That’s it. CMHC says we need an additional 3.5 million units by 2030 above what we’re already estimated to build, and the best the Liberals can do is 100K?!
Earlier Wednesday, Housing Minister Sean Fraser told reporters that when his government came to office in 2015, the housing shortage overwhelmingly impacted low-income families but the situation has now “fundamentally shifted.”
Yeah, it wasn’t a priority for the Liberals until they realized that it might lose them an election and yet their best attempts are still so far short of what’s needed.
The real problem is that both the Liberals and the Conservatives have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo for housing. We need decision makers that are better aligned with actual Canadian families.
You’re conflating a few things. The fund from which those 100k homes are coming is the Housing Accelerator fund, which was introduced in the 2022 budget.
We’ll see if the liberals are able to roll out additional policies etc but this announcement is more a celebration/demonstration of an existing policy.
London sits on some pretty nice farmland. Is that really where we want to be building the houses?
If the government is going to build them, surely they can spur development in places where the land is otherwise useless? Put that idle crown land to good use.
I’m trying to compare it to the NDP or Conservative numbers to get a good comparison from when they were in federal office, and all I can see is they didn’t do nothing, so it’s a low bar. The 99 year lease deal Mr Harper signed away to a foreign country is kinda a negative bonus, so they’re looking particularly bad.
I admit this is news to me.l, though, so I don’t know what to expect. Based on your personal experience mobilizing proper concrete high density housing during a pandemic recovery, how many should they have planned instead? Be ready to show your work because I want to learn how you came to your assessment.
Shortly after you posted it the announcement came out - they’re building 2000 homes in London Ontario from a previously announced fund that will build 100K homes across all of Canada. That’s it. CMHC says we need an additional 3.5 million units by 2030 above what we’re already estimated to build, and the best the Liberals can do is 100K?!
Yeah, it wasn’t a priority for the Liberals until they realized that it might lose them an election and yet their best attempts are still so far short of what’s needed.
It’s not nothing…but it’s awfully damn close…
The real problem is that both the Liberals and the Conservatives have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo for housing. We need decision makers that are better aligned with actual Canadian families.
https://www.landlordmps.ca/data-analysis
You’re conflating a few things. The fund from which those 100k homes are coming is the Housing Accelerator fund, which was introduced in the 2022 budget.
We’ll see if the liberals are able to roll out additional policies etc but this announcement is more a celebration/demonstration of an existing policy.
London sits on some pretty nice farmland. Is that really where we want to be building the houses?
If the government is going to build them, surely they can spur development in places where the land is otherwise useless? Put that idle crown land to good use.
I’m trying to compare it to the NDP or Conservative numbers to get a good comparison from when they were in federal office, and all I can see is they didn’t do nothing, so it’s a low bar. The 99 year lease deal Mr Harper signed away to a foreign country is kinda a negative bonus, so they’re looking particularly bad.
I admit this is news to me.l, though, so I don’t know what to expect. Based on your personal experience mobilizing proper concrete high density housing during a pandemic recovery, how many should they have planned instead? Be ready to show your work because I want to learn how you came to your assessment.