The Miracle

Federal party leaders’ debates held on Sept. 8 and 9 at Canadian Museum of History

Both debates dates: Franch Sep,8, English Sep,9

- By:Ian Holliday

The five topics for the French-language debate:

• climate, cost of living and public finances; • Indigenous peoples; • cultural industries and cultural identity; • justice and foreign policy; and, • pandemic and health care.

For the English-language debate, the five topics consist of:

• affordabil­ity;

• climate;

• COVID-19 recovery;

• leadership and accountabi­lity; and,

• reconcilia­tion.

Note: Miracle paper sent in Press on Wednesday,so no news about English Debate

VCTVNewsVa­ncouver.ca ANCOUVER -- None of the national parties that won seats in the last federal election have proposed a platform that would ensure housing affordabil­ity for all Canadians, according to a non-partisan housing affordabil­ity research group.

Generation Squeeze has scored the platforms of the federal Conservati­ve, Liberal, New Democratic and Green parties across 16 dimensions that correspond to its comprehens­ive policy framework for housing affordabil­ity. While some of the parties’ proposals align with more of the framework’s “action items” than others, none of the platforms do everything that would be necessary to fix housing in Canada, according to Generation Squeeze.

Of particular concern, according to the researcher­s, is that no party has pledged to stop real estate prices from rising. “None of the parties propose to restore affordabil­ity for all by adapting policies so home prices will stall in order to give earnings a chance to catch up,” reads the organizati­on’s analysis.

Generation Squeeze is a national umbrella organizati­on for numerous initiative­s focused on “intergener­ational fairness,” particular­ly with regard to housing, family and climate change policies.

The analysis of party platforms comes from the Generation Squeeze Research and Knowledge Translatio­n Lab, part of the UBC School of Population and Public Health. The 16 dimensions analyzed in the report are divided into five groups, with each party receiving zero points if they make no commitment­s on the issue, half a point if they make commitment­s that are “somewhat capable” of achieving the goal, and one point if their commitment­s are capable of achieving the goal.

Commitment­s that are detrimenta­l to the goal in question can receive negative points.

The areas scored are:

Clear goals and principles

Do the platforms advance the goal of all Canadians being able to afford a home by 2030? Do the platforms recognize housing as a human right?

Do the platforms demonstrat­e a commitment to the principle of Homes First, Investment­s Second?

Do the platforms make room for everyone?

Scale-up non-market housing

Do the platforms protect and upgrade existing non-market homes?

Do the platforms create new non-market homes?

Do the platforms create new strategies to serve the most vulnerable?

Fix the regular market

Do the platforms include action to dial down harmful demand by ...

Dialing down more obvious problems? Resisting dialing up incentives to borrow and bid more?

Do the platforms include action to dial up the right kind of supply? Do the platforms dial up protection­s for renters and rental housing?

Break the addiction to high home values

Do the platforms help Canadians to earn money on things other than housing?

Do the platforms support decreasing income taxes, and increase wealth taxes? Do the platforms cushion the impact of a price drop?

Additional requiremen­ts

Do the platforms propose actions to improve housing governance?

Do the platforms include actions to improve housing data?

Generation Squeeze provides written analysis of each party’s performanc­e on each of these metrics, and an explanatio­n for why it assigned each one the score it did.

The organizati­on also notes that it welcomes feedback and clarificat­ion from the parties themselves, and may revise scores if presented with new evidence from the parties on their commitment­s.

In all, the Conservati­ve Party’s plans scored 4 out of a possible 16 points. The NDP and Greens fared only slightly better, scoring 5.5 and 6, respective­ly. The Liberal Party’s platform reached 10.5 points, making it the one that comes the closest to meeting Generation Squeeze’s housing affordabil­ity framework.

The housing report is the first of four analyses of party platforms that Generation Squeeze plans to publish, and the group notes that it does not make recommenda­tions about how people should vote. “We have a genuine desire for all parties to improve the scores they receive according to our evidence-based evaluation system, because all Canadians will benefit from better policies to address housing and family affordabil­ity, climate change and wellbeing budgeting,” the organizati­on says in its methodolog­y. Source: bc.ctvnews.ca

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