The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Bursting the bubble

Charlottet­own youth advisory board’s survey shows many in city area paying too much for housing

- BY DAVE STEWART

Charlottet­own’s youth retention advisory board delivered a blunt message on Thursday, saying the issue of affordable housing has reached the crisis point.

“It is time to burst the proverbial bubble that P.E.I. is an affordable place to live,’’ said Zac Murphy, a member of the board, as it delivered the findings of a survey it did earlier this year.

“It is our view that if we do not act quickly and decisively in the problem of retaining and repatriati­ng youth in P.E.I. that this issue will become increasing­ly difficult,’’ said fellow board member Alex Youland.

Affordabil­ity and accessibil­ity were the two main themes of the survey’s findings. It found that while shelter costs should be about 30 per cent of income, 56 per cent of youth who participat­ed in the survey reported spending more than 30 per cent, regardless of income, on housing.

It also found that the cost of living has increased quickly without an increase in wages in P.E.I. While the average salary in Canada is $51,000 per year, it’s $42,000 in P.E.I. and more than 58 per cent of respondent­s reported earning less than $35,000.

More than half of the survey respondent­s said they were unhappy with their current housing situation, primarily because of cost.

The survey ran from Jan. 16 to Feb. 16 and received more than 850 responses from youth in Charlottet­own, Cornwall and Stratford. The youth retention board considers youth anyone who falls between the ages of 16 and 35. The goal of the survey was to collect data that can be used to shape policy with city council and government.

Lydia Peters, another member of the youth board, said the majority of respondent­s were women, while 75 per cent reported having graduated from college or university.

Murphy said access to affordable housing is a critical issue.

“We heard from many people who were living with their parents or other family members, renting but wanting to buy a home, living in substandar­d housing or with roommates because they can’t afford to live on their own,’’ Murphy said.

According to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n (CMHC), affordabil­ity means spending no more than 30 per cent of before-tax household income on housing, but 56 per cent of respondent­s said they were spending more than that, regardless of their employment status.

The other critical issue, Youland said they found, relates to accessibil­ity. Last November, CMHC reported that P.E.I. had record low vacancy rates of less than one per cent, compared to 7.9 per cent in 2014. The board’s report suggests the influx in Airbnb rental properties has contribute­d to the housing shortage, with more than 300 Airbnb registered rentals available in the province.

Youland said that includes “zero vacancies for bachelor apartments and an overall vacancy of less than one per cent in Charlottet­own’’.

Youland said if the gap can be closed between affordabil­ity and accessibil­ity it will not only benefit the youth population in P.E.I. but all age demographi­cs in the province.

 ?? DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN ?? Members of Charlottet­own’s youth retention advisory board, Zac Murphy, left, Alex Youland and Lydia Peters, released the findings of a survey Thursday on affordable housing for youth. One of the more significan­t findings is that more than half of the...
DAVE STEWART/THE GUARDIAN Members of Charlottet­own’s youth retention advisory board, Zac Murphy, left, Alex Youland and Lydia Peters, released the findings of a survey Thursday on affordable housing for youth. One of the more significan­t findings is that more than half of the...

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