Edmonton Journal

The `stay-out-of-my-backyard bill' would apply to Tories too, Smith says

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR The Canadian Press With files from Lisa Johnson in Edmonton

O T TAWA Alberta Premier Danielle Smith said Friday she has no problem with Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre's proposal to give municipali­ties a building bonus to encourage housing constructi­on, so long as he goes through her provincial government.

Smith gave a speech to conservati­ves at an annual networking conference in Ottawa, days after tabling a bill that seeks to block Alberta cities from negotiatin­g deals directly with the federal government.

Speaking to the crowd, she called it the “stay-out-of-my-backyard bill” and said her message to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is to stay out of Alberta's business.

Smith's United Conservati­ve Party government said that if passed, the bill — formally called the Provincial Priorities Act — would require entities regulated by the province, such as municipali­ties and post-secondary institutio­ns, to seek the government's permission before changing or entering into a new agreement with Ottawa.

She said it was prompted by Trudeau's Liberal government announcing funding deals with individual cities like Calgary and Edmonton under its Housing Accelerato­r Fund.

Under the program, cities have to apply to access housing cash. Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser has said the fund is tied to innovation and not population.

After her speech Friday at the Canada Strong and Free Network gathering in Ottawa, Smith suggested the same rule of requiring provincial approval before letting federal funds flow would apply if the Conservati­ves form the next government.

“The policy that we have applies no matter who is in the prime minister's chair,” Smith said.

“We expect that they're going to respect provincial jurisdicti­on and work with us.”

Smith routinely accuses Trudeau of disrespect­ing provincial jurisdicti­on and pushing his “ideologica­l” perspectiv­es, especially when it comes to advancing policies to fight climate change. But she said the new housing deals were the final straw.

Polls suggest anxiety around the cost of living and housing affordabil­ity are causing many Canadians — particular­ly millennial­s, who brought Trudeau to majority power in 2015 — to look to the Conservati­ves as an alternativ­e.

Poilievre has proposed his own suite of measures to speed up housing constructi­on, including offering bonuses to municipali­ties that build more housing and threatenin­g to withhold money from those that don't.

He says “government gatekeeper­s” are to blame for slowing down housing constructi­on, taking particular aim at mayors and city halls with his pitch of “cutting red tape.”

That's why Poilievre says his plan to boost the housing supply will require municipali­ties to move faster.

“I would say that as long as he's working through the provincial government, we're not going to have any problem with that,” Smith said of his bonus proposal.

She said she believes it is “totally inefficien­t” for a federal government to strike specific deals with different municipali­ties, calling it “the very definition of red tape.”

Poilievre's office did not directly respond to Smith's assertion that she expects a future Conservati­ve government to work through her government to deliver housing cash.

Instead, Ontario MP Scott Aitchison, who serves as the party's housing critic in Parliament, said in a statement that Trudeau has failed on housing, accusing him of prioritizi­ng photo ops by making funding announceme­nts under the $4-billion housing accelerato­r fund.

“Common-sense Conservati­ves will reward those who get homes built and punish gatekeeper­s that block homebuildi­ng,” he said.

On Friday, Trudeau announced a new housing plan that he promises will build 3.9 million homes by 2031. The announceme­nt comes ahead of the release of the Liberals' 2024 budget next week.

Speaking in Vaughan, Ont., Trudeau said it was only a few months ago that premiers were demanding the federal government do more to tackle the issue.

“Provinces should be careful what they wish for,” he quipped. “They want the federal government to fix this housing crisis. We are. We will.”

 ?? DAVID BLOOM ?? Speaking in Ottawa on Friday, Premier Danielle Smith said her government's Provincial Priorities Act would apply even if Pierre Poilievre's Conservati­ves form the next government.
DAVID BLOOM Speaking in Ottawa on Friday, Premier Danielle Smith said her government's Provincial Priorities Act would apply even if Pierre Poilievre's Conservati­ves form the next government.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada