The Province

Rental cost crisis looms for retirement homes

- NAOMI POWELL

A new cohort is joining young Canadians and others frustrated by sky-high rents and soaring housing costs: seniors.

A looming affordabil­ity crisis is poised to hit seniors across the country as the baby boom generation makes its long-predicted shift into its golden years, squeezing the supply of retirement home places and pushing up rents, according to a new report from the rating agency DBRS Ltd.

“For seniors who live on a fixed income or a government pension, they are facing the affordabil­ity issue even more,” said Karen Gu, senior vice-president at DBRS and a co-author of the report. “The younger generation at least has the possibilit­y of a regular job and a paycheque.”

The average rents for seniors’ homes varied across the country in 2017, with Ontario holding the highest at $3,526 per month and Quebec the lowest at $1,678 per month. Should rents continue to grow at the current rate of 4.7 per cent year, the national average could reach just over $4,000 a month by 2025, the report cautions.

The problem comes down to a failure of supply to keep up with demand. By 2026, more than 2.4 million Canadians aged 65 and older will need the “supportive care” offered by retirement homes, including monitoring of medication, regular housekeepi­ng, meal preparatio­n and other services. As more baby boomers turn 65, the number requiring such care is expected to reach “a staggering” 3.3 million by 2046, DBRS found.

More senior housing units are being developed every year, but not enough to meet the anticipate­d demand. The rate of increase for Canada’s senior population swelled by 21.7 per cent between 2006 and 2016 — more than double the rate of the supply increase.

“It’s not like we didn’t know the baby boomer bulge was coming, we just didn’t do anything about it,” said Laura Tamblyn Watts, national director of law, policy and research at CARP (formerly the Canadian Associatio­n of Retired Persons). “There has been a failure across the entire system to prepare.”

Just as rent levels differ across the country, a patchwork of provincial policies means seniors’ ability to absorb them will also diverge, depending on where they live, she said.

While British Columbia and Alberta offer subsidies for retirement home costs, Ontario’s retirement homes rely entirely on private payments.

Meanwhile, a shortage of long-term care beds has exacerbate­d demand for retirement homes, Tamblyn Watts added, as those seniors unable to secure a place in publicly funded facilities choose the next best option.

“The reality is, we need to make investment­s now.”

Responding to a CARP election questionna­ire on seniors’ issues, the Ontario Liberals said that, if elected, they would create 5,000 new longterm care beds by 2022 and more than 30,000 over the next decade. NDP leader Andrea Horwath promised to launch a full public inquiry into long-term care within 100 days of being elected, while the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves have pledged to build an unspecifie­d number of longterm care facilities.

Boosting funding for long-term care addresses only part of the problem, said Isobel Mackenzie, seniors’ advocate for the B.C. government.

“From the perspectiv­e of the taxpayer, it makes more sense to subsi- dize home care and assisted living,” shesaid.

The boom in the housing markets has provided a rare cushion for many seniors preparing for the cost of senior care, Mackenzie noted. The rising value of assets, particular­ly home values, pushed the median net worth of families led by Canadians between 55 and 64 to $669,500 in 2016, up 18.9 per cent since 2012, according to Statistics Canada.

 ?? — CP ?? ISOBEL MACKENZIE
— CP ISOBEL MACKENZIE

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