Flexibility for housing projects facing rising costs,
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Published Thursday, June 24, 2021 11:46AM EDTLast Updated Thursday, June 24, 2021 12:36PM EDT
According to an AARP survey, most older adults want to live in their own homes as long as possible, despite the fact that many of these homes and communities aren’t built for an older population. Therefore, more people invest in aging in place features for their homes than those from previous generations.
Feds have funding flexibility for housing projects facing rising costs, Hussen says
On Thursday, Hussen announced $165.6 million in federal funding — including $65.4 million as a forgivable loan — over nine years to help with capital repairs for 11,000 aging, affordable housing units in Ottawa.
The minister pointed to the project as an example of the due diligence and budgeting that must be done to maximize the effect of federal and local investments.
“They are facing increasing costs, but the costs of construction supplies ebb and flow. Sometimes they go up, sometimes they go down,” Hussen said.
“There’s always room within our procedures, within the national housing strategy, to take into account and give proponents that opportunity to get to give us feedback and readjust and amend their project proposals in order to have a more realistic picture of what their commitments are with respect to loans or contributions that they may receive from the government of Canada.”
Officials with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. told a Senate committee that they had noticed increases in construction costs, with lumber being used as an example, caused by supply chain disruptions and labour shortages.
The committee’s report released this month noted that CMHC builds a contingency into its spending estimates, which senators were reviewing, and the agency had no concerns about reaching their targets within budget.
Senators on the national finance committee wrote that they were concerned about housing affordability overall in the country, particularly among those most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, including low-income Canadians and young people. They called on the government to work with other levels of government to address the issue.
Hussen said that local and provincial governments can help small housing providers afford the land for projects by providing different incentives to make a project viable, such as giving land to non-profits or leasing it for $1, waiving development charges or helping with cleanup costs.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 24, 2021.
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According to an AARP survey, most older adults want to live in their own homes as long as possible, despite the fact that many of these homes and communities aren’t built for an older population. Therefore, more people invest in aging in place features for their homes...
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