Manitoba needs help from federal government to build housing affordable for low-income renters: advocates - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 08:40 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Manitoba needs help from federal government to build housing affordable for low-income renters: advocates

Housing advocates in Manitoba are calling on the federal government to redirect funding and help put shovels in the ground to build at least 10,000 new affordable units in Manitoba over the next decade, in hopes of addressing the housing and homelessness crisis.

Only 253 units built in last 7 years required to offer rent geared to income: Right to Housing Coalition

Construction workers on scaffolding in front of new housing build
Manitoba's Right to Housing Coalition says the federal government's national housing strategy programs have helped build 2,000 new housing units in Manitoba over the past seven years, but few of those units offer rent geared to income. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Housing advocates in Manitoba are calling on the federal government to redirect funding and help put shovels in the ground to build at least 10,000 new affordable units in Manitoba over the next decade, in hopes of addressing the housing and homelessness crisis.

The Right to Housing Coalition made the callduring anews conference at the Manitoba Legislature on Thursday, ashousing advocacygroups gather at locations across thecountry this week in recognition of what they've designated asNational Housing Dayon Friday.

Thehousing groupswantthe federal government to not only invest in building more units, but also prioritize the construction of non-market social housing.

"When we look at the type of housing that's being built, very little of it is affordable to low-income renters," said Kirsten Bernas, chair of the Right to Housing Coalition."Manitoba is no exception."

The Right to Housing Coalition says reports from the federal government'snational housing strategyindicate more than2,000 new housing units have been built in Manitoba over the past seven years through that strategy's main programs.

A headshot of a woman in front of a building.
'When we look at the type of housing that's being built, very little of it is affordable to low-income renters,' said Kirsten Bernas, chair of the Right to Housing Coalition. (Jeff Stapleton/CBC)

But only one of its programs the rapid housing initiativerequires units with rent-geared-to-income rates that make them affordable to the lowest-income renters, said Shauna MacKinnon, a University of Winnipeg urban studies professor who is a member of the Right to Housing Coalition.

That means of the 2,000 units built, only 253 are geared to renters withthe lowest incomes, Bernas said.

Part of the reason Manitoba is falling behind on affordable housing is a continuing reliance by all levels of government on the private sector to meet the needs of the housing market, she said.

"For the federal government, it's clearly not been a priority up until now and the private market simply does not produce housing that is affordable to low-income renters," said Bernas.

The Right to Housing Coalition says at least 10,000 new affordable units need to be built over the next decade in Manitoba to help ease the housing crisis, including 7,500in Winnipeg alone.

Ottawa 'needs to change course': advocate

Manitoba's NDP government campaigned on a promise to end chronic homelessness in the province within eightyears.

The province says it has housed around 1,200 people since taking office last year, and committed $116 million to build new affordable housing units and maintain infrastructure already built.

"We saw our social housing being boarded up, left in an unmaintained state," and the province is now acting on that, saidBernadette Smith, the province's minister responsible forhousingand homelessness.

Between 2011 and 2021, the number of social housing assets owned by Manitoba's government shrunk, while the number of unhoused people continued to soar, said the U of W'sMacKinnon.

But she also said the promise to deliver social housing can't be left to the province alone.

"They need the federal government at the table to provide financing," MacKinnon said, but Ottawa has "devolved responsibility to the provinces, and this set in motion a serious decline in investment in new social housing as well as in the maintenance of the existing stock."

A woman wearing a lanyard is pictured in a large hallway outside of a conference room.
Shauna MacKinnon says the federal government needs to be 'at the table to provide financing' for affordable housing. (Prabhjot Singh Lotey/CBC)

After the national strategy was initially unveiled in 2017,programs to stimulate the development of purpose-built rental housing were launched.

Butby 2024, Manitoba had built only 2.5 per cent of the affordable housing units needed in the next 10 years, said MacKinnon.

Her group is now pushing the federal government to allocate some of the existing funding available in programs to building housing for low-income tenants.

"The government of Manitoba understands that it will need more social housing. The City of Winnipeg wants to play its part in creating housing," she said.

"But if the federal Liberal government wants to leave the legacy of housing it promised, it's going to need to change course quickly."

With files from Radio-Canada