Iveson stays on as chair of Big City Mayors caucus
New funding for affordable housing, climate change top collective wish list
Mayor Don Iveson was reappointed as chairman of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities’ Big City Mayors caucus Thursday.
This is Iveson’s second time as chairman, extending his term to 2020.
“I am honoured by the re-appointment and will lead Canada’s mayors in strengthening the partnership we have with the provincial and federal governments, reinforcing that city-building is nation-building,” Iveson said in a news release.
“Our collective efforts have resulted in breakthroughs on housing and infrastructure and, most importantly, a recognition from the federal government that cities play a critical role in the national landscape.”
The mayors caucus is gearing up for the October 2019 federal election by making a wish list topped with funding for affordable housing, climate change and new revenue tools.
Iveson said “strategic discussions” are underway at the annual conference in Halifax that will shape the top priorities for mayors ahead of the next election.
Despite major commitments from Ottawa on a number of key issues, he said municipalities are still waiting for results — particularly on affordable housing.
“On paper we’ve made huge progress with the national housing strategy but none of us have actually seen any dollars flow yet from that strategy into our communities,” Iveson said, noting that decades of underfunding has created an acute backlog of social housing.
Although the federal government has “stemmed the bleeding ” in recent years by reversing cuts, Iveson called the lack of new funding for affordable housing in the last federal budget a “lost opportunity.”
“The housing crisis, particularly in our largest cities, continues to be a sore spot,” he said.
“We haven’t been adding to the social housing inventory in this country for really 20 years in any substantial way so that backlog is real.”
Both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer are scheduled to speak to the Halifax conference Friday. Trudeau and Minister of Infrastructure and Communities, Amarjeet Sohi, will also meet with municipal leaders attending the conference.
The mayors of Canada’s largest municipalities are also looking to tap into new revenue sources beyond property taxes, such as in Quebec, where Premier Philippe Couillard has promised municipalities a portion of the province’s sales tax if the Liberals are re-elected this fall.
Iveson said there isn’t one solution that would work across the country. Alberta, for example, doesn’t have a provincial sales tax but could consider a broader revenue-sharing system.
He said the idea is to give municipalities a revenue stream that is tied to economic growth as an incentive to encourage local investment.
“The solutions may look different across the country from province to province and ultimately from the federal government,” Iveson said.
“But it should give municipalities predictability and some certainty and be immune from redirection or political interference.”
Meanwhile, climate change is also increasingly a key issue for local governments, and Iveson said Ottawa has yet to assist cities with mitigation costs.
“Achieving our nation’s goals in the pan-Canadian framework on climate change can only happen with implementation in our cities that’s successful,” he said.
“The green dollars have to flow to us and we need to be able to implement mitigation programs that will actually reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
The mayors also expressed concern with the lack of funding tied to cannabis legalization.
“None of us are looking to make money on this,” Iveson said. “We simply want to have our costs covered and that hasn’t happened.”