The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Mayors unveil their wish list

Funding for affordable housing, climate change and new revenue tools

- BY BRETT BUNDALE

Canada’s big city mayors are gearing up for the 2019 federal election by making a wish list topped with funding for affordable housing, climate change and new revenue tools.

Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson said Thursday “strategic discussion­s” are underway at the Federation of Canadian Municipali­ties 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.”

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, chairman of the big city mayors’ caucus, 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.

Halifax Mayor Mike Savage said the city has seen strong economic growth but property taxes have remained steady.

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