Edmonton Journal

CMHC looks to Airbnb to try to increase supply of affordable rental units

Agency aims to work with home-sharing firms amid shortage of apartments

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA Canada’s housing agency is looking to an unlikely ally in a bid to boost the stock of affordable rental housing: Airbnb.

The head of the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., says he believes short-term rental companies like Airbnb and Vacation Rental By Owner (VRBO) could help increase the rental supply in the country and, in turn, possibly reduce rents.

The government’s upcoming national housing strategy will have a heavy focus on increasing the supply of affordable housing options, including rental units and Airbnb alone offers the potential for tens of thousands of units.

CMHC chief executive Evan Siddall said his agency recently approached Airbnb, the largest such service in Canada, to see if there are ways to turn those short-term rentals into apartments available to locals to rent for longer terms. He cautioned that it was still early days with a lot of details yet to work out.

“I think VRBO and Airbnb should get ahead of this, because they could be giving us some social utility by helping us spawn supply,” Siddall said in a recent interview with The Canadian Press.

Lindsey Scully, a spokeswoma­n for Airbnb, said the company is speaking with potential partners about ways to “create economic opportunit­y for everyday people.”

“We take the issue of affordable housing seriously and that is why we are collaborat­ing with communitie­s and organizati­ons across Canada, sharing comprehens­ive data and detailed informatio­n about our community,” Scully said.

The supply of purpose-built rental units in the country has been on a decades-long decline as developers build more condominiu­ms than apartments.

As a result, the rental vacancy rate in 2016 was 3.7 per cent nationwide, CMHC research shows, a number that glosses over acute shortages in some cities. Vancouver, Victoria, and Kelowna, for instance, all had vacancy rates under one per cent in 2016, meaning there were limited options for renters and the conditions in place to push rents higher as demand outstrippe­d supply.

The shortage is equally acute in the secondary rental market that has sprang up over the last eight years as condominiu­m owners rent out their units to make a profit. A CMHC survey of 22 cities showed vacancy rates in these condominiu­ms ranged from a low of 0.3 per cent in Vancouver to a high of 6.8 per cent in Edmonton.

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