[CAH] Wellesley update: Affordable housing squeeze tightens for Canada's renter households
Darcy Harvey
dharvey at cahhalifax.org
Fri Dec 15 08:43:32 EST 2006
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Hello members,
Here is another update form Michael Shapcott in Toronto from the new CMHC housing data released this week. Entails alot of what we know of ocurse and see first hand everyday in our lives and our work but gives great new ammunition for advoacting the need for a National Housing Strategy.
-Darcy
From: Michael Shapcott
Sent: December 14, 2006 8:57 AM
To: NHHN (nhhn-can at povnet.org); HHNOlist (hhno-on at povnet.org)
Subject: Wellesley update: Affordable housing squeeze tightens for Canada's renter households
Higher rents and fewer vacant units - Canada's nation-wide affordable housing squeeze is continuing to tighten for the country's four million renter households.
That's the news today as Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation released its latest rental market numbers. Detailed numbers will be released for provinces and metropolitan areas throughout the day, and are available from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation at http://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/en/corp/nero/nere/2006/2006-12-14-0815.cfm
Some early highlights (a more detailed background will follow):
- vacancy rates (the measure of vacant units in the private rental market) have dropped in 21 of 29 municipalities across Canada, signaling a continuing supply squeeze. Nationally, the rental vacancy rate has dropped to 2.6%.
- average market rents rose three times faster than the rate of inflation across Canada. Toronto continues to lead with the highest rents in the country, followed closely by Vancouver. Rents in Calgary increased by a record-breaking 19.5% - more than 19 times faster than the rate of inflation.
There is no relief for tenants in the secondary rental market (rented condominiums). CMHC reports that in every part of Canada, the average rents in condos are much higher than private rental units, and the vacancy rate is lower.
The combination of a continuing supply and affordability squeeze marks grim conditions for renter households and points to the urgent need for a national housing strategy by the federal government, in collaboration with the provinces and territories. The federal government, along with a number of provinces and territories, made massive cuts to affordable housing funding in the 1990s, which triggered the drop in rental vacancy rates and the increase in average rents.
The all-party House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance has urged the federal government in its pre-budget recommendations, released earlier this week, to develop a new national housing strategy to meet the desperate housing needs of Canadians.
More to follow.
- Michael
* * *
Blueprint to End Homelessness in Toronto
* * *
Michael Shapcott, Senior Fellow - Public Policy
The Wellesley Institute, 45 Charles Street East, #101,
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M4Y 1S2
Tel. - 416-972-1010, x231 // Cell - 416-605-8316
michael at wellesleyinstitute.com
www.wellesleyinstitute.com
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