The Welland Tribune

Trudeau’s housing strategy has pros, but how will we pay for it?

- LORNE GUNTER

There are some facets of the federal Liberal government’s national housing strategy, released in Toronto on Wednesday, that make a lot of sense.

No, seriously. I am not currently in the Postmedia concussion protocol as I write this.

Much of the housing strategy is the kind of feelgood gobbledygo­ok we have come to expect from the Trudeau government. For instance, there is a promise to declare housing a “fundamenta­l right” and cut homelessne­ss in half.

And Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s pledge to apply “gender- based analysis” to solving the lack of affordable housing means what, exactly? Contractor­s who receive government housing contracts will need to equip their carpenters with pink hammers?

Still, there truly are a few good ideas. The Canada Housing Benefit( CHB), for instance, might just help tens of thousands of low- income families find affordable housing ( or keep housing they are already living in) without creating ghettos or further distorting already overheated housing markets. It won’t help 300,000 families as Trudeau predicts. Government programs are never as efficient or beneficial as politician­s would like us to believe. And the benefit will end up costing more than the projected $ 1 billion per year.

But the benefit gets away from the typical move by government­s looking to help families, which is to spend billions having cheap units built. This tends to corral low- income families into pre- set neighbourh­oods where there may or may not be jobs and good schools.

Under the typical social housing model, the availabili­ty of housing determines where lowincome families live, rather than the availabili­ty of opportunit­ies.

Soon cycles of unemployme­nt, substance abuse, crime and violence, family break- up, school failure and poverty begin to repeat themselves.

The $ 2,500 annual subsidy of the Canada Housing Benefit would act kind of like a voucher with the money following the tenant rather than the other way around. That should make it easier for lower- income Canadians to move to where they can get back on their feet. At the same time, it won’t encourage the constructi­on of large- scale, low- income housing blocks ( another Liberal promise will do that).

The benefit will be applied unfairly, of course, because government­s will be only half- good at choosing who receives it. Many who get it won’t deserve it and many who deserve it won’t get it. But even at that, it should work better than the regular social- housing system where contractor­s are paid truckloads of tax dollars to build human warehouses and bureaucrat­s get to decide who is lucky enough to live there.

But I have one question for the Liberals: Just where are you planning to get the money for this?

The Liberals are not getting away from the typical social- housing ambitions entirely. They intend to build 100,000 social- housing units and renovate 300,000 more.

And in a move that is cynical even by Liberal standards, the best parts of the overall strategy – including the housing benefit – are being held hostage by the outcome of the next election. The benefit doesn’t kick in unless Canadians re- elect the Trudeau government in 2019.

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