P.E.I. government pledges $308M for infrastructure projects next year
CBC
The P.E.I. government tabled the largest capital budget in Island history in the legislature Wednesday, pledging to spend $308 million in the next fiscal year on roads, schools and new government-owned housing units.
"This is a bold capital budget that addresses the challenges Islanders are facing," said Finance Minister Mark McLane in a media briefing before his budget was released.
Included in the budget was a five-year plan with a commitment to spend $1.16 billion on infrastructure projects.
That includes a commitment to spend $100 million over the next five years to build an additional 365 publicly-owned housing units. Currently the province has 475 public housing units for families and 1,160 for seniors, with rent geared to income.
The King government had previously committed to adding 100 public housing units through a combination of new builds and buying up existing stock. The new commitment pushes that number up to 465.
P.E.I. is in the midst of a housing crisis, with increased rental costs one of the factors fuelling the province's inflation rate, which for more than a year has been the highest in the country.
The availability of rental units has also been an issue. The vacancy rate in the province in 2021 was 1.5 per cent. In recent years it's dropped as low as 0.3 per cent.
Building more publicly-owned affordable housing is part of a new plan being developed under Housing Minister Matthew MacKay, which includes 1,400 additional housing units over 14 months.
The other units are supposed to be private units built with new government incentives, which have yet to be announced. The influx of housing should push P.E.I.'s vacancy rate up to four per cent, said MacKay.
The province is also pledging to spend $3.6 million in the coming fiscal year on repairs to government housing, with the goal of eventually having electrical generators in all government seniors' housing facilities. There was no timeline included in budget documents as to when that work will be complete.
Some government seniors' facilities were without power for up to 12 days after post-tropical storm Fiona knocked out power to the entire province in late September.
The King government also said it will build a new school in Evangeline where École Évangéline was severely damaged by Fiona.
The French Language School Board has been asking for a new school there for years, with the commitment from government flip-flopping between a new build or renovations.
The new capital plan sets aside $41 million over five years for that project, with the school expected to open in September 2026.