The Telegram (St. John's)

Trudeau’s bid for younger voters continues with announceme­nt

Multibilli­on-dollar fund aimed to assist in building more homes

- BRYAN PASSIFIUME

OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s bid to woo younger voters away from Pierre Poilievre’s Conservati­ves continued on Tuesday with a new multibilli­on-dollar infrastruc­ture fund and top-ups to existing constructi­on accelerato­r programs.

Speaking to reporters Tuesday in front of an under-constructi­on Halifax housing developmen­t, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a new $6-billion housing infrastruc­ture fund — described as a means to build more homes even faster.

“If we want to build more homes faster, we also need to be upgrading critical infrastruc­ture including water and wastewater,” Trudeau said, his voice competing against drum-banging and catcalls from protestors attempting to disrupt the press conference.

The Liberals have been playing catchup with the Conservati­ves since the middle of last year, when Poilievre’s support among gen Z and millennial voters surged. The Liberals have been selling the 2024 budget as a way to get those voters back.

Billed as a plan to accelerate constructi­on and upgrade critical utility infrastruc­ture, the fund will include $1 billion in short-term funding to support urgent needs, and $5 billion for agreements between Ottawa and the provinces for long-term projects.

In order to access that new funding, municipali­ties must be willing to broadly adopt fourplexes “as of right,” which means no special permission­s would be needed, and would include more duplexes, triplexes, townhomes and multi-unit apartments.

Cities with population­s over 300,000 must also promise to halt developmen­t charge increases for three years and adopt forthcomin­g changes to Canada’s national building code to, as the press release describes, “support more accessible, affordable and climate-friendly housing options.”

Housing Minister Sean Fraser said a new plan to address Canada’s housing crisis will be published over the next few weeks — based on building homes, supporting vulnerable Canadians and making easier process of buying or renting a home.

“Between now and then, we’re going to be rolling out specific policies to highlight how we’re going to achieve this,” he said. “We’re going to negotiate agreements before Jan. 1, 2025, that will require our partners to implement changes, including allowing people to build a small apartment with four units on land they already own. It’s going to include requiremen­ts that they adopt forthcomin­g changes to the national building code to ensure we’re building affordable and efficient buildings to provide homes for people who live in this country.”

Ottawa will also work with the province to establish a renters’ and homebuyers’ bill of rights, he said — of which adoption will be a key requiremen­t of unlocking these federal dollars.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt also included plans to add $400 million to the Liberal’s housing accelerato­r fund.

“This is how we’ll address the shortage of housing options for Canadians, and this is how we’ll make it fairer for the younger generation­s who feel like they’re falling behind because housing costs are too high,” Trudeau said. “Right across the country, we’re making a lot of progress cutting red tape, to fast track the constructi­on of hundreds of thousands of homes — but we want to go even faster and further.”

These programs will be included in the Liberal government’s 2024 federal budget, which is set to be unveiled on April 16.

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG • POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary on March 13.
GAVIN YOUNG • POSTMEDIA NEWS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary on March 13.

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