Penticton Herald

High housing costs hitting all walks of life

- By DIRK MEISSNER

OTTAWA – British Columbia’s high housing costs are impacting people from all walks of life, including young profession­als who can’t afford down payments, students and low-income renters and people living in tents who are afraid they will die homeless, says Canada’s federal housing advocate.

Statistics Canada data published Wednesday said B.C. is leading the country as the province with the highest rate of unaffordab­le homes.

The data gathered from the 2021 census said B.C. ranks as the most unaffordab­le province for housing in Canada, due largely to the number of people paying high rents to live in downtown Vancouver.

“B.C. at 25.5 per cent and Ontario at 24.2 per cent had the highest rates of unaffordab­le housing nationally in 2021,” said the report.

“This was largely because of the higher rates of unaffordab­le housing in the renter-heavy large urban centres of Toronto at 30.5 per cent and Vancouver at 29.8 per cent.”

Marie-Josee Houle, who was appointed Canada’s first federal housing advocate last February, said a two-week fact-finding visit to B.C. this summer left her convinced housing in Canada, where homes are now considered more for investment than places to live, is not working.

“It’s failing,” said Houle, who is preparing a report and recommenda­tions to submit to federal Housing Minister Ahmed Hussen this fall.

The 2019 National Housing Strategy Act declared that “the right to adequate housing is a fundamenta­l human right affirmed in internatio­nal law.”

“Housing and housing affordabil­ity is becoming more and more out of reach for most Canadians,” Houle said in an interview from Ottawa.

Many people in B.C. are spending 50 per cent or more of their income on housing, said Houle.

B.C. taxes foreign property buyers and property owners who leave second homes vacant in efforts to increase available rental properties, but rising home prices have investors continuing to look to cash in, Houle said.

She said she met with housing agency representa­tives and social advocates in B.C., but also personally spent time at homeless encampment­s in Vancouver, Victoria and Prince George.

“We talked to people with lived experience,” said Houle. “We talked to people in encampment­s and asked them, ‘What is not working?’ Why have they chosen to stay in encampment­s rather than take up some housing options?”

At Vancouver’s Crab Park, located in the city’s Downtown Eastside, people said negative experience­s with supportive housing or single room rentals left them believing a tent was their only option, Houle said.

At Victoria’s Stadacona Park, Houle said she spoke with a man in his 60s who lost one of his hands in a work accident.

“He is so terrified he’s going to die on the street,” she said.

At an encampment in Prince George known as Moccasin Flats, Houle said she spoke with Indigenous people living with addiction and involved in sex work who are too ashamed or afraid to go back to their family homes despite facing daily trauma on the streets.

Houle said resources available to B.C.’s housing providers for supports are underfunde­d and municipal government­s are too often left trying to deal with serious issues ranging from property maintenanc­e to mental health.

“The fact the (encampment­s) exist is a manifestat­ion of the failure of the housing system in Canada,” she said.

The most recent census data showed Canada’s homeowners­hip rate fell overall to 66.5 per cent in 2021 from its peak at 69 per cent in 2011.

B.C. posted the third-largest homeowners­hip decline from 2011 to 2021, to 66.8 per cent from 70 per cent, while Prince Edward Island saw the sharpest drop, said the report.

B.C. is also leading Canada in the number of renter households, with Kelowna showing an increase in renters of more than 54 per cent.

First-time buyers in B.C. are largely choosing condominiu­ms as a “gateway to home-ownership,” said the report.

“B.C. had the largest share of condo dwellers among the provinces in 2021, with 23.6 per cent of households calling a condo home.”

That includes 32.5 per cent of households in Vancouver. The report said most tenant-occupied condominiu­ms are owned by individual­s, likely as investment properties.

“According to the Canadian Housing Statistics Program, over three-quarters, more than 77 per cent, of the condos in B.C. and more than two-thirds, almost 70 per cent, of those in Ontario that were not being lived in by the homeowner were owned by individual Canadian investors,” said the report.

It also showed that improvemen­ts in household incomes across Canada are reducing core housing need, but almost 1.5 million Canadians still live in conditions defined as unsuitable, inadequate or unaffordab­le.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? A Seabus passenger ferry travels across Burrard Inlet at sunset as seen from Burnaby Mountain in this file photo.
The Canadian Press A Seabus passenger ferry travels across Burrard Inlet at sunset as seen from Burnaby Mountain in this file photo.

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