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Here are three ways Edmonton's housing task force is trying to tackle city's supply issue

Here are three ways Edmonton's housing task force is trying to tackle city's supply issue

Yahoo01-04-2025

The city's Community Mobilization Task Force on Housing and Houselessness has released recommendations to council to find faster ways to build more housing in Edmonton.
Edmonton's task force wants council to put forward $3.5 million toward community-led solutions to tackle homelessness in the city. The funding is meant to go toward retrofits, development of a bridge housing platform and the creation of a new peer support service for vulnerable tenants.
"This was a really cross-jurisdictional group of individuals from housing service agencies, academia, business community, that all came together to really address what we could be doing to address housing and houselessness," Coun. Erin Rutherford said at city hall. She is part of the task force.
Tina Thomas, CEO of Edmonton Community Foundation, said housing in general is a major issue, as it affects everyone.
"It spans everything from shelter spaces to near market housing. It targets people that are individuals and families and newcomers. It targets people that have mental health crisis is to students," Thomas said.
"So we really tried to focus on community mobilization, how we could get community to act and to operate. We also tried to look at things that could be preventative, but also intervention. So we could prevent people from becoming houseless, but also working with people that are currently at that state."
The task force's report on their progress and investments was also released on Monday.
Edmonton has more than 394,000 homes, but fewer than 15,000 homes are social and affordable housing, according to data referenced in the report from August 2023.
Close to one in eight Edmonton households, or 46,155 Edmontonians, cannot afford to live in the city and spend more than 30 per cent of their income on housing.
This number is expected to increase to 56,337 households by 2031.
Data from Homeward Trust found 2,980 Edmontonians had instable housing with 775 reported they accessed shelters and 1,283 reported being unsheltered as of February 2025.
Nick Lilley — CEO of HomeEd, the City of Edmonton's non-profit housing corporation — said there are a variety of underutilized properties that may be retrofitted to house vulnerable Edmontonians.
"This fund would effectively [incentivize] some of those property owners to consider new use cases and really support some of the costs for pre-development or feasibility studies to try and make that a new reality," Lilley said.
The peer support program would be tailored toward renters having to navigate the complexities of support systems.
"The idea here being that vulnerable tenants within current housing could use some additional support from those who have lived experience and those who have been provided appropriate training to be able to assist them with navigating some of these very complex system challenges," Lilley said.
The third major proposed initiative to be funded would involve a bridge platform to connect tenants with social agencies and landlords.
"There'll be good, strong relationships and trust and transparency within the course of placing and supporting these individuals into long term housing," Lilley said.
The recommendations will be presented to city council on April 8.

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‘Loyal to the oil' – how religion and striking it rich shape Canada's hockey fandom
‘Loyal to the oil' – how religion and striking it rich shape Canada's hockey fandom

Yahoo

time04-06-2025

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‘Loyal to the oil' – how religion and striking it rich shape Canada's hockey fandom

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GOLDSTEIN: Can Carney Liberals fix damage caused by Trudeau Liberals?
GOLDSTEIN: Can Carney Liberals fix damage caused by Trudeau Liberals?

Yahoo

time24-05-2025

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GOLDSTEIN: Can Carney Liberals fix damage caused by Trudeau Liberals?

Prime Minister Mark Carney's mandate letter to his cabinet is largely an attempt to address problems created, ignored or exacerbated by his predecessor, Justin Trudeau. In that context, it's hard to see how effective Carney's cabinet will be in achieving his goals, given its large contingent of Trudeau-era ministers who, under Trudeau's leadership, screwed up many of the files Carney now says he wants to fix. In his mandate letter to his newly-appointed cabinet released last week, Carney wrote that he has seven priorities, which are: – Establishing a new economic and security relationship with the U.S. and strengthening collaboration with reliable trading partners and allies around the world; – Building one Canadian economy by removing barriers to interprovincial trade and expanding nation-building projects that will connect and transform the country; – Bringing down costs for Canadians and helping them get ahead; – Making housing more affordable by unleashing the power of public-private co-operation; – Protecting Canadian sovereignty, strengthening the Canadian Armed Forces, securing Canada's borders and reinforcing law enforcement; – Attracting the best talent in the world to build our economy while returning overall immigration to sustainable levels; – And spending less on government operations so that Canadians can invest more in people and businesses that will build the strongest economy in the G7. KINSELLA: Murky Mark Carney remains an enigma wrapped in a riddle LILLEY: Trudeau lowered bar so much, Carney gets credit for being an adult Blanket mandate letter worrying sign for Carney era, observers say Here's the issue. Bringing down costs for Canadians and making housing more affordable were problems exacerbated by the Trudeau government's high immigration policies, which Carney says he now wants to address by 'returning our overall immigration rates to sustainable levels.' The Trudeau government dramatically hiked immigration levels despite being warned in advance by its own public servants that that this would increase the cost of housing and put additional stress on public services such as health care. Carney's plan to reduce spending on government operations is a direct repudiation of the Trudeau government's record of increasing the size of the federal civil service at more that twice the rate of Canada's population growth during its almost decade in power. Carney himself said during the Liberal leadership race that two policies of the Trudeau government – unsustainably high immigrations levels and government spending increasing at a rate of 9% a year – weakened the Canadian economy, even 'before we got to the point of these threats from President (Donald) Trump.' Carney's goal of keeping Canadians safe by strengthening Canada's Armed Forces is intended to address the failure of the Trudeau and Stephen Harper governments to meet Canada's promised NATO target of committing 2% of GDP to national defence. As for Carney's goal of securing Canada's borders and reinforcing law enforcement, both would be massive improvements over the near decade record of the Trudeau government. The Trudeau Liberals had almost a decade to bring down barriers to interprovincial trade, which Carney now wants to address, while 'nation-building projects' were few and far between, fraying national unity and exacerbating tensions between the Alberta and federal governments in particular. As for Carney's goal of making Canada's economy the strongest among members of the G7, after their nearly-decade in power the Trudeau Liberals had the worst record on economic growth of any Canadian government since that of R.B. Bennett during the Great Depression. Real GDP per capita – a widely accepted metric for measuring a nation's prosperity – fell by 1.4% in 2024, following a decline of 1.3% in 2023. It's true the economic uncertainty caused by Trump's tariff war with Canada is having a depressing effect on the Canadian economy, but as Carney himself has said, our economy was already weakened by Trudeau government policies before Trump was elected president. lgoldstein@

GOLDSTEIN: 'Elbows up' was Liberal rhetoric while policy was 'quietly fold' on tariffs
GOLDSTEIN: 'Elbows up' was Liberal rhetoric while policy was 'quietly fold' on tariffs

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

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GOLDSTEIN: 'Elbows up' was Liberal rhetoric while policy was 'quietly fold' on tariffs

As it turns out, Prime Minister Mark Carney's election strategy of publicly talking tough about taking on U.S. President Donald Trump in his tariff/trade war, while practising a far more conciliatory approach behind the scenes, was hiding in plain sight all the time. Ian Bremmer, president of New York-based Eurasia Group, a political risk analysis firm with close ties to Carney, accurately predicted this strategy in a March 26 column titled, 'The end of the transatlantic relationship as we know it.' Unlike Mexico, which took a more conciliatory approach, he wrote, 'Canadian leaders have a political incentive to put up a bigger fight because Trump's threats toward Canada's economy and sovereignty have sharply inflamed nationalist sentiment north of the border in the run-up to the April 28 elections. However, I expect Ottawa will quietly fold shortly after the vote to ensure that ongoing relations with the U.S. remain functional.' This now appears to have been the Liberals' successful election strategy all along. LILLEY: Carney dropped most tariffs the day after meeting Trump KINSELLA: Anita Anand seems to side with Jew-and-Israel-haters in propaganda war GOLDSTEIN: Carney, like Trudeau, thinks big deficits are the answer to tough times GOLDSTEIN: Honda decision raises doubts about Canada's $52.5 billion bet on EVs Carney initially said 'dollar-for-dollar retaliatory tariffs by Canada' against the U.S. 'should be a given' during the Liberal leadership race – 'elbows up' as the popular saying went. 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