Calgary barely keeping up on affordable housing, report says - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:33 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary barely keeping up on affordable housing, report says

The proportion of Calgarians needing help finding affordable housing is about the same as it was 20 years ago, according to a report being presented to a city committee Tuesday.

Proportion of people in need of affordable housing options has remained constant over 2 decades

The proportion of Calgarians needing help finding affordable housing is about the same as it was 20 years ago, according to a report being presented to a city committeeTuesday.

Thats in spite of the fact that Calgary is roughly half-way through its 10-year plan to end homelessness, said Coun. Brian Pincott, who chairs the Calgary Housing Company and sits on the board of Attainable Homes Calgary.

"We're not getting there fast enough and the systems that we have are not working well. We are in crisis," said Mayor NaheedNenshi.

The report to the city'spriorities and finance committee says about 18 per cent of Calgariansare in need of affordable housing.

The bad news is the percentage is the same. The good news is that were adding close to 30,000 people a year to Calgary, so we are creating more affordable housing, Pincott said.Were keeping up, were not getting in front of it we need to get in front of it.

In order to do that, the key players must look at the entire housing spectrum analyzing how factors work together rather than continuing to approach inter-related problems in isolated silos, Pincott said.

Its all part of a piece and weve never really tackled the whole thing before, he said. This report, for lack of a better term, is a bit of a gap analysis.

Pincott said the mindset is starting to change, as government officials, the not-for-profit sector and the for-profit industry realizing the need to work together.The overall effort should be led by the city, the report suggests.

Officials need to take a closer look at such things as secondary suites, inclusionary zoning and even requiring developers to set aside five per cent of a given project as affordable housing, Pincott said.

Affordable housing isnt just an issue affecting "poor" people, Pincott said, pointing out that the average price for a single-family house in the city is $473,000.

The average family income that you need to get a mortgage for that is $93,000.

One major hurdle is the ongoing shortage of rental properties, Pincott said.

Were losing rental stock. We lost 600 apartments in 2012. Thats before everything that we lost in the flood. That would primarily be condo conversions, he said.

Why arent we building new rental in Calgary? Obviously the economics arent there but what are the little things we can do to tip the economics in favour of getting more built.

The city is confronted with the added challenge of dwindling money from Ottawa for affordable housing, Pincott said.

That pot of money from the federal government is going away, he said, referring to a $1.7-billion per year envelope that Ottawa had earmarked for affordable housing thats starting to expire.

And that money is sliding off the table at a time when we need it.

A report on the next steps will come back to city council later this year.