Federal land can help with housing crunch, Freeland says
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's budget unveiled more details about a plan to turn the federal government, which is the country's largest landowner, into a provider of low-cost leases for builders and developers.
The government wants to see a new generation of Canadian homes added on federal lands, post office lots and national defence properties. It's part of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's goal to add 3.87 million new homes by 2031, essentially more than doubling the pace of average annual housing starts.
The government will also begin consultations on introducing a new tax on residentially zoned vacant land to incentivize construction. As well, it's proposing $1.1 billion over 10 years to reduce the public service's office portfolio by 50 per cent, and where applicable, prioritize student and non-market housing on those properties.
“The best way to make home prices more affordable is to increase supply — and quickly,” Freeland said in a statement accompanying Tuesday's budget. “Our renewed focus today is unlocking the door to the middle-class for millions of younger Canadians.”
Angst about rapidly worsening affordability, especially among Generation Z and millennials, prompted Trudeau's government to make housing a centrepiece of the budget. Many of the measures, including the broad strokes of the plan to build homes on public lands, have been announced in recent weeks.
The budget reveals that five federal properties will be leased to housing providers immediately to build more than 800 homes in cities including Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto. Six out of some 1,700 Canada Post properties are being assessed for housing development potential, and the government says “many more” lands owned by the postal service may be unlocked for housing.
The Department of National Defence plans to divest 14 surplus properties where housing could be built, such as armories in Amherst, Nova Scotia and Vernon, British Columbia.