Experts blame the housing crisis on decades of underinvestments by the federal government

Here’s Why Out-Of-Control Housing Costs Have Become a Top Issue in Nanaimo, BC’s Federal By-Election

Here’s Why Out-Of-Control Housing Costs Have Become a Top Issue in Nanaimo, BC’s Federal By-Election

With homes in Nanaimo, BC ranking among the least affordable in the world, housing affordability is set to be a top issue in the upcoming federal by-election in Nanaimo-Ladysmith.

According to the Canadian Rental Housing Index, both cities are “severely unaffordable” by national standards: low-income residents in Nanaimo now spend an average of 72% of their income on rent and utilities while in nearby Ladysmith, the lowest-income earners spend 55% of their paycheque on those expenses.

Housing experts blame decades of underinvestment in social housing for the housing crisis in cities like Nanaimo and Ladysmith — and only significant increases in federal investment can ease it.

Brian Clifford, policy manager at the BC Non-Profit Housing Association, told PressProgress that “the real issue here, in my opinion, is the lack of sustained federal investment, particularly over the last 25 years.”

“The taps kind of turned off after 1993,” he explained. “For a generation, we really didn’t see any federal support for the housing system.”

Back in the 1990s, the Chrétien Liberal government cancelled all federal co-operative and non-profit social housing programs. That helped reduce the affordable housing stock by a staggering half a million affordable rental units.

Clifford said successive federal governments have made matters worse by encouraging debt-based home ownership instead of building affordable social housing units.

“The federal government’s role was to set the stage for the penetration of finance into the housing system, and the flow of mortgage debt and debt based policy for households,” he explained.

Requirements for mortgage financing were relaxed in the early 1990s, increasing the flow of mortgage credit in a housing system with limited supply. This trend contributed to steady increases in house prices.

“In terms of the need (for British Columbia) … we’re looking at a total investment annually of about $1.8 billion to be cost matched by the federal and provincial governments,” Clifford said.

Other experts say the current Liberal government’s National Housing Strategy — which promises to invest a total of $40 billion in affordable housing across Canada over 10 years– is too little too late to address Nanaimo and Ladysmith’s needs.

A 2018 report by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives pointed out the National Housing Strategy allocates just “790 new units in BC per year.”

“That’s far less than what’s needed,” the report noted.

The federal Conservatives, the BC Liberals and allied big business groups insist the answer to the affordability crisis is to “cut red tape,” suggesting that removing rules for luxury developers will magically expand the housing supply.

But UBC professor David Ley, whose work focuses on urban social geography and housing market bubbles, notes high-income home buyers typically buy-up market housing supplies, leaving nothing for renters seeking affordable living spaces — that means lower-income families are gradually forced out of urban centres.

“[Market-rate] supply is only for high-income people,” Ley told the Globe and Mail. “Whenever redevelopment occurs, it means higher income people are occupying the space.”

“Two things are happening: there is gentrification in the inner city, but then there’s what I call ‘capital deepening,’ which is an area that is becoming richer.”

Jim Spinelli, CEO of Nanaimo Affordable Housing Society, told PressProgress policies that help home buyers do nothing to help vulnerable people living on fixed incomes in Nanaimo and Ladysmith.

“It will help people that can afford to buy homes. But it’s not going to help people that can’t afford to buy homes,” Spinelli said. For example, he noted, “we have a huge need on the ground for housing for people with for instance with permanent disabilities that get $375 a month from the province.”

More units at the usual market rate doesn’t help them much.