Federal housing minister says progress is being made on building homes in the Maritimes
New numbers were released by Statistics Canada that show a drop in building permits for properties all across Canada.
In an interview with CTV Atlantic on Monday, Federal Housing Minister Sean Fraser says while the numbers may look worrying, there has been some progress made.
“I try not to get too excited when the numbers are good month-to-month, and I try not to get too down when month-to-month they shift they other way, but when you look over a longer time horizon, you have to follow the trajectory of what’s actually playing out, month-to-month construction conditions, weather patterns, the investment decisions of companies can vary significantly,” said Fraser.
“But if I actually compare the last six months that we have data for, the beginning of this year to the end of June, in Atlantic Canada and Nova Scotia that’s a 64 per cent increase in the number of homes being built. Here in Nova Scotia that means last year we were dealing with a ball park of 2,500 homes that got under construction and this year we’re more than 4,000.”
Fraser says while there is still work to be done, there are signs of progress.
“I’m not going to sit here and tell you the housing crisis is solved, far from it, there are real people that are struggling in real ways, but we’re seeing signs of progress as a result of the measures we’ve put in place.”
While the new projects and programs implemented by government has been successful for putting pressure on prices, Fraser says it’s tough to tell when prices will begin to drop.
“There’s a lot more that goes into the price of real estate separate and apart from government policy, you deal with the access to labour, you deal with the cost of land materials, supplies, there’s a number of factors that go into play, but when you start to see prices flat line or potentially drop a little bit, it’s when you have supply that exceeds the demand that exists,” said Fraser.
“We need to continue to build more and more, the numbers that I’m seeing coming in with the recent report we’ve seen from CMHC indicate that we’re trending in the right direction.”
In addition to building more homes, Fraser says affordability is also a huge factor.
“We have to make sure that there’s enough affordable housing being built for the most vulnerable members of our community.”
Fraser adds that pumping more money into a broken system won’t help to fix the problem.
“You have to fix the underlying structure, but still make the investments necessary. The answer to challenging housing or health care dynamics is not to pull investments out of the system, it’s to fix the structural deficiencies but then make the investments necessary to achieve the outcome you want to see,” said Fraser.
Fraser says we must also change the way homes are built, and explore home-building opportunities in other sectors.
“In addition to the traditional homebuilding sector, there’s massive opportunity to invest in factories to have manufactured homes. We’ve made an investment, low cost loans to Nova Scotia companies just a few weeks ago that is going to help them scale up their productivity,” said Fraser.
“This allows you to create another workforce, it’s not usually competing with the same tradespeople who are in conventional homebuilding, but if we scale up the training for the traditional homebuilding sector, if we have targeted immigration programs where the skilled labour doesn’t exist in Canada, and we invest in building homes differently by embracing manufacturing, we can dramatically scale-up the level of productivity to get the number of homes up.”
Fraser said while he believes immigration is one factor in the housing crisis, he doesn’t believe it’s the only factor.
“There is an issue when you’re dealing with the how many people live in a community compared to the number of homes that you have. I do believe when it comes to permanent residency we are growing at a pace that we can sustain, in face we’re building enough homes now to roughly cover that number of people that become permanent residents each year, but we have challenges in our temporary programs,” he said.
With files from CTV's Todd Battis.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Byelection results: Justin Trudeau handed his second byelection upset in recent months
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been handed his second byelection upset in recent months, as the Bloc Quebecois won LaSalle-Emard-Verdun, Que., a longtime Liberal seat in Montreal.
DEVELOPING Canada's inflation cools to 2% in August, the smallest gain since early 2021
Canada's annual inflation rate reached the central bank's target in August at it cooled to 2 per cent, its lowest level since February 2021, data showed on Tuesday.
Watch out for texts offering free gifts — it's likely a scam
An Ontario man thought he got some good news when he received a text message offering a $30 gift for being a loyal Giant Tiger customer. 'I do go to that store so I clicked on the link and it said it was a customer appreciation award they were going to give people,' Mark Martin, of Simcoe, Ont., told CTV News Toronto.
Employee who called the Titan unsafe before fatal voyage to testify before U.S. Coast Guard
A key employee who labelled an experimental submersible unsafe prior to its last, fatal voyage was set to testify Tuesday before U.S. Coast Guard investigators.
GoFundMe cancels fundraiser for Ontario woman charged with spraying neighbour with a water gun
A Simcoe, Ont., woman charged with assault with a weapon after accidentally spraying her neighbour with a water gun says GoFundMe has now pulled the plug on her online fundraiser.
'Not that simple': Trump drags Canadian river into California's water problems
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump promised "more water than you ever saw" to Californians, partly by tapping resources from a Canadian river.
Toxic chemicals used in food preparation leach into human bodies, study finds
More than 3,600 chemicals that leach into food during the manufacturing, processing, packaging and storage of the world's food supply end up in the human body — and some are connected to serious health harms, a new study found.
Sean 'Diddy' Combs is expected in court after New York indictment
Sean 'Diddy' Combs, the hip-hop mogul who has faced a stream of allegations by women accusing him of sexual assault, was arrested late Monday in New York after he was indicted by a federal grand jury.
A French man admits in court to drugging his wife so that he and dozens of men could rape her
A 71-year-old French man acknowledged in court Tuesday that he drugged his then-wife and invited dozens of men to rape her over nearly a decade, as well as raping her himself. He pleaded with her, and their three children, for forgiveness.