P.E.I. housing strategy coming, while new builds are lagging
CBC
P.E.I. is falling short of the 2,000 new housing units per year needed to begin to make a dent in the province's housing crisis.
Both the Green Party and the King government agreed Wednesday in the Legislature that the province isn't meeting its goal, and the vacancy rate won't improve until it does.
Green Party Peter Peter Bevan-Baker said both the PCs and the Liberals have failed to invest in the infrastructure needed to service the Island's growing population.
Housing Minister Rob Lantz said the department is working with "community partners and stakeholders" on a housing strategy which will be released when it's done.
"The department's busy working on many initiatives to help clear the way to make housing starts more efficient and it will be a focus of the department," he said.
Lantz said many other provinces are seeing a drop in housing starts.
"I think we can attribute that to some of the market conditions, some of the financing conditions. I feel like we will bounce back from that ... It's going to take time, but we have to work across departments with our labour strategy, with our community partners."
Bevan-Baker pointed out that before the election, the King government said it was committed to getting to a 4% vacancy rate. Now that number is 3%.
Lantz agreed the province is facing a huge challenge.
"In terms of the figure that the the leader of the Third Party presented earlier about 2,000 starts per year just to keep up, that's correct. That's just to keep up with our projected growth. In fact, we need to build more than that to affect their vacancy rates," Lantz said.
Green Party MLA Karla Bernard said P.E.I. will need to recruit and retain more skilled construction workers in order to increase housing starts.
She said Build Force Canada's outlook for P.E.I. projects nearly 1,500 retirements in the construction sector over the next 10 years.
Premier Dennis King responded by saying his government has been talking to the P.E.I. Construction Association, and those kinds of conversations are informing the province's decisions.
"We're trying to upscale, we're trying to rescale, we're trying to bring new people to the province to fill the vacancies that will be coming, and to add to the skilled workforce," he said.
The Rachel Notley government's consumer carbon tax wound up becoming a weapon the UCP wielded to drum the Alberta NDP out of office. But that levy-and-repayment program, and the wide-ranging "climate leadership plan" around it, also stood as the NDP's boldest, provincial-reputation-altering move in their single-term tenure.