Lethbridge Herald

Ottawa to launch $6B infrastruc­ture fund to help build homes - with strings attached

- Nojoud Al Mallees

The upcoming federal budget will include a $6-billion infrastruc­ture fund that would require provinces and territorie­s to adopt certain housing policies in order to access the money, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday.

Trudeau was in Dartmouth, N.S., alongside Housing Minister Sean Fraser as part of the government’s pre-budget tour, which aims to drum up attention and win back support for the Liberals on cost-of-living issues.

“Building more homes faster — this is how we’ll address the shortage of housing options for Canadians, and this is how we’ll make it fairer for younger generation­s who feel like they’re falling behind because housing costs are too high,” Trudeau said.

The federal government plans to make $1 billion directly available to cities for urgent infrastruc­ture needs, with that money flowing in the 2024-25 fiscal year.

The other $5 billion would be allocated to agreements with provinces and territorie­s meant to support long-term priorities. That funding would flow over a longer period of time, with those details hammered out during negotiatio­ns.

Municipali­ties have been aggressive­ly urging the federal government to commit more dollars toward infrastruc­ture, noting their communitie­s cannot significan­tly ramp up homebuildi­ng to match population growth without things like water supply and roads.

While Tuesday’s announceme­nt appears to respond to that plea, the federal government is also using the infrastruc­ture fund to push provinces and territorie­s to co-operate on the Liberal government’s housing agenda.

To access funding, provinces and territorie­s would have to agree to a set of conditions, including the adoption of the recently announced renters’ bill of rights, which would create a national standard lease agreement and require landlords to disclose previous rent prices.

The federal government is also demanding that provinces and territorie­s freeze developmen­t charges for three years and require municipali­ties to broadly allow the constructi­on of fourplexes.

Finally, it wants provinces and territorie­s to adopt upcoming changes to the national building code as well as automatica­lly approve the constructi­on of homes that follow designs taken from the Liberal government’s upcoming housing design catalogue.

The deadline to secure a deal will be Jan. 1, 2025, for provinces and April 1, 2025, for territorie­s.

If a province or territory doesn’t secure a deal by those deadlines, their funding will be transferre­d to the municipal stream of the infrastruc­ture fund, the government said.

The announceme­nt is being met with pushback from some premiers who are displeased with the federal government’s decision to place conditions on provinces and territorie­s.

Last week, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said his government would not introduce legislatio­n to automatica­lly legalize fourplexes across the province, arguing that such a move would lead to pushback from some residents.

Following Tuesday’s announceme­nt, a spokeswoma­n for Ontario Housing Minister Paul Calandra said the provincial government will wait for more details from the federal government and is open to collaborat­ion.

“However, we know that local municipali­ties know their communitie­s best and don’t believe in forcing them to build where it doesn’t make sense,” said Justine Teplycky.

Saskatchew­an blasted Tuesday’s announceme­nt as another attempt by the federal government to wade into provincial jurisdicti­on.

A spokesman for the provincial government said “while multidwell­ing housing may be a high priority in major urban centres like Toronto and Vancouver, it is not a high priority in most Saskatchew­an communitie­s.”

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs said he hadn’t read the details yet but called the threat to redirect funding directly to municipali­ties if provinces don’t agree to the conditions “a bit unfortunat­e.”

Meanwhile, British Columbia Premier David Eby welcomed the federal government’s decision to attach strings to the funding.

“If provinces don’t step up ... the money should come to the provinces who are doing the work,” Eby said.

Skyrocketi­ng shelter costs have ratcheted up the pressure on all levels of government to do more on housing.

The Liberal federal government, in particular, has faced the brunt of the blame for housing unaffordab­ility, to the benefit of federal Conservati­ves who are riding high in public opinion polls.

In a statement, Conservati­ve housing critic Scott Aitchison panned Tuesday’s announceme­nt as another “photo-op” that won’t get the homes Canadians need built.

“Canadians can’t live in Liberal photo-ops or announceme­nts. Common sense Conservati­ves will fire the gatekeeper­s and remove the bureaucrac­y to build the homes Canadians can afford,” Aitchison said.

Ahead of the federal budget, which is set to be presented on April 16, Trudeau has promised that one of its major focuses will be on expanding housing supply.

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. estimated in September that the country needs to build 5.8 million homes by 2030 to restore affordabil­ity.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt noted the upcoming budget will also add $400 million to the existing housing accelerato­r fund.

The first $4-billion phase of the fund saw Ottawa striking deals with cities and offering money in exchange for changes to municipal bylaws and regulation­s that are supposed to boost homebuildi­ng.

The Liberal government also said that future public-transit funding will require municipali­ties to meet certain criteria.

Requiremen­ts would include eliminatin­g all mandatory minimum parking requiremen­ts and allowing high-density housing within 800 metres of a high-frequency transit line.

Municipali­ties would also have to approve high-density housing within 800 metres of post-secondary institutio­ns.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, centre, is flanked by Minister of Housing, Infrastruc­ture and Communitie­s Sean Fraser, left, and mayor of Halifax Mike Savage while making a housing announceme­nt on Tuesday in Dartmouth, N.S.
CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, centre, is flanked by Minister of Housing, Infrastruc­ture and Communitie­s Sean Fraser, left, and mayor of Halifax Mike Savage while making a housing announceme­nt on Tuesday in Dartmouth, N.S.
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