Skip to content

GOOD: Feds need to cool off heated housing market

One of the big issues facing all levels of government these days is clearly housing. It’s also clear that there are several housing challenges.
Good

One of the big issues facing all levels of government these days is clearly housing.

It’s also clear that there are several housing challenges. There’s housing the homeless, there is affordable housing for young couples wanting to purchase a first home.

There is the issue of skyrocketing prices in our bigger cities. There is no one solution. It would help if the federal government got back in the game.

When Paul Martin was Liberal finance minister, balancing the budget became a big issue and in trying to balance the federal budget Mr. Martin basically deserted the housing file and left it to provinces and cities to deal with.

Since then the issue has become more and more critical with homelessness rising right across the country. Little market rental housing has been built, and owning a home has become more difficult even for middle class families with good incomes.

In cities like Vancouver and Victoria, people from around the world have been pushing up the price of housing, and in smaller places like Qualicum and Comox people are moving in from places like North Vancouver and Coquitlam.

They cash in on the booming real estate by selling homes that have dramatically increased in value and moving to the island, buying very nice homes for a fraction of the house they sold on the mainland and putting hundreds of thousands, sometimes millions in the bank tax free.

Vancouver is moving to free up city-owned land to build lower cost housing.

The province has tried to help the homeless situation by buying up many single occupancy hotels and converting them into much more livable spaces. The province also provides thousands of homes for low-income people through BC Housing, but it never seems to be enough.

Rent supplements have been provided for low income people, but that never seems enough either.

The last B.C. government moved at the last minute to tax offshore buyers and while that may have cooled the red hot market for a time it didn’t really address affordability. It just made it harder to sell a $2 or $3 million house because it reduced the number of buyers for those high end homes.

That didn’t make a $300,000 or $400,000 home any more within reach of that first time buyer. The government then moved to provide up to $37,500 interest free for first time buyers on homes under $750,000. Critics say that will just increase the asking price for homes in that bracket.

Time will tell.

What we don’t need time for, is knowing that unless the federal government decides to return to an issue it abandoned two decades ago not much will happen to ease the burden on provincial and local governments or the burden on low and middle income families dreaming of a home they can afford.

The thought of home ownership or even reasonable rent seems more and more like a dream.

It seems in big cities like Toronto and Vancouver home ownership is going to be more like what we see in other international cities. It’s called living in apartments or condos, even for families with kids.

If you talk to people in London, or Paris or Sydney Australia, or New York and San Francisco, families don’t expect to buy the kinds of houses we thought about for decades.

They expect to live in condominiums, kids or no kids. If that’s going to be the case here then developers have to start building projects that welcome families and kids and pets. It can be done. Units with three and four bedrooms.

More green space with more playground capacity. We lived 10 years in Coal Harbour and there were many families who loved the lifestyle, but there aren’t many affordable places even high in the sky in Coal Harbour.

It’s clear there’s no simple and single solution to what has become one of the biggest issues for families and for governments today. In my opinion though, the federal government has to come to the table in a significant way.

Bill Good is a veteran broadcaster currently heard daily on News 1130. Reach him via Twitter@billgood_news.

What are your thoughts? Send us a letter via email by clicking here or post a comment below.