Toronto Star

New website highlights plight of renters

Creators of interactiv­e map aim to raise housing as election issue

- LAURIE MONSEBRAAT­EN SOCIAL JUSTICE REPORTER

Voters in Canada’s four million renter households have a new tool they can use to grill candidates on affordable housing in October’s federal election.

The Canadian Rental Housing Index, an interactiv­e online map developed by a partnershi­p of non-profit housing organizati­ons and credit unions, tracks renter income, affordabil­ity and overcrowdi­ng for the first time in more than 800 cities and regions across the country as well as in all 338 federal ridings.

The online map brings together all types of rental accommodat­ion, including social housing, purpose-built rental, condos, houses and secondary suites in homes.

According to the index, which uses Sta- tistics Canada’s latest census data, 40 per cent of renter households are paying more than 30 per cent of their before-tax income on rent and utilities, an amount that is widely considered to be unaffordab­le.

Ridings in the GTA account for 11 of the 15 most expensive ridings for renters, according to the index. Markham-Unionville topped the list, with average rents of $1,415 a month.

An alarming one in five households is paying more than half of their income on rent, a situation that puts them at risk of homelessne­ss, say affordable housing advocates who released the index in Toronto Thursday.

More than 10 per cent of rental households are living in overcrowde­d conditions such as sharing a house or apartment with other families or renting a smaller unit than needed.

“When we talk about housing in Canada during elections, we are most often talking about home ownership and the middle class,” said Tim Richter, of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessne­ss.

The index is “calling critical attention to a large number of Canadians excluded from that conversati­on: renters and Canadians living in poverty,” he told reporters. “It is also calling attention to a part of our housing market that is in desperate need of attention and one that market forces alone aren’t — and won’t — address.”

Part of the reason for the crisis in affordabil­ity for renters is that government­s stopped building social housing about 20 years ago and there have been no incentives for developers to build rental apartments, said Tony Roy of the B.C. Non-Profit Housing Associatio­n, which spearheade­d the index.

The group is hoping policy-makers at the municipal, provincial and federal levels use the index to better understand the needs of renters in their communitie­s, including seniors, students and service workers who are particular­ly squeezed due to their low incomes, he said.

“For anyone making below $40,000 a year, there is no housing being built for this group whatsoever,” Roy said.

Based on the index’s indicators of affordabil­ity, income gap, overspendi­ng, overcrowdi­ng and bedroom shortfall, 13 of the worst 15 rid- ings for renters in Canada are in the Greater Toronto Area. The worst is Willowdale (currently Conservati­ve), followed by Markham-Unionville (currently Liberal) and the new ridings of Brampton East and Mississaug­a Centre where a majority of residents voted Conservati­ve in the last election. In Willowdale and MarkhamUni­onville, about 55 per cent of renters are paying unaffordab­le rents, including 36 per cent who are paying more than half of their incomes on shelter, according to the index. In Brampton East, 30 per cent of renters are living in overcrowde­d conditions while in Mississaug­a Centre and Willowdale about one quarter are doing so.

When people have to spend more than they can afford on housing, they have to forgo other necessitie­s, such as groceries, clothes, transit, noted Sharad Kerur, of the Ontario NonProfit Housing Associatio­n. The associatio­n represents 734 non-profit housing providers in the province, including Toronto Community Housing Corp.

Kerur urged Canadians to use the new index to push for change.

“This data is irrefutabl­e. It clearly shows there is an affordabil­ity crisis in communitie­s big and small and that middle class families as well as low-income households are struggling,” he said.

On Wednesday, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said a Liberal government would provide $124 million annually in new tax incentives to increase and renovate rental housing. It would fund new affordable housing for low- and middle-income Canadians through its previously-announced 10-year $20-billion social infrastruc­ture plan.

The New Democratic Party and the Conservati­ves have not yet released their respective plans for affordable housing.

“For anyone making below $40,000 a year, there is no housing being built for this group whatsoever.” TONY ROY B.C. NON-PROFIT HOUSING ASSOCIATIO­N

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