Prime minister announces $175 million for Edmonton to help build affordable housing
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Wednesday $175 million in funding to fast-track more than 5,200 new housing units in Edmonton over the next three years.
"We're changing the way housing gets built in this country," Trudeau said at an apartment complex construction site in southwest Edmonton.
The money is to flow through the federal Housing Accelerator program and be used to eliminate barriers to getting the homes built.
Trudeau said the funds would create more housing options in the city, including more rentals, affordable apartments, and housing near university and college campuses.
"One of the challenges we're facing right now with this housing crisis is over the past decades the federal governments of different stripes stepped back from the business of ensuring that housing was properly built right across the country in affordable ways, meeting the supply needs, meeting the growth of the country," Trudeau said.
Before announcing the agreement, Trudeau toured a project in the city's southwest corner that is to provide 334 housing units by the summer — with 60 per cent of them classified as affordable.
Walking through half-built hallways hanging with conduit, heavy with drywall dust and the smell of industrial adhesives, a hard-hatted Trudeau spoke with a number of tradespeople.
"Work's been picking up," said James Cameron, a plumber working on the apartment project. About 80 workers were on the site Wednesday.
"I think I speak for all of us when I say how it's good to make changes," Cameron's co-worker Joey Boelhouwer told the prime minister.
Trudeau listened as David Mitton, president of builder Leston Holdings, described Edmonton-created wood framing technology that is speeding construction of the units. Cellphone apps and other technological tools also help workers communicate faster and more efficiently, he said.
"We keep trying to find ways to build homes quicker," Trudeau responded.
Trudeau appeared at the news conference with Edmonton member of Parliament and cabinet minister Randy Boissonnault and Edmonton Mayor Amarjeet Sohi.
The city passed a motion last month declaring a homelessness and housing emergency.
"This city council has been committed to ensuring that everyone living in this city has a decent place to call home," Sohi said Wednesday. "We're very appreciative of how federal investments have been able to build more supportive housing.
"Our city has been leading the charge in removing barriers to housing by overhauling the zoning regulations, making it easier for people to build."
Trudeau spoke about the need for different levels of government to work together on the issue. But unlike a housing announcement Trudeau made Tuesday in British Columbia, no representatives from the Alberta government were on hand.
In a social media post, Alberta Seniors, Community and Social Services Minister Jason Nixon demanded Trudeau provide per capita housing funding and "end his attacks on the men and women in our oil and gas sector."
"The prime minister must stop hiding from Alberta’s government and come to the table to talk about these important issues," Nixon posted.
Trudeau said he's happy to meet with provinces "whenever they ask me to meet."
He said the federal-provincial program announced earlier in B.C. sees Ottawa match financing with that province to build affordable rental units. Trudeau and Premier David Eby appeared together to announce $2 billion in federal funding to expand the BC Builds program.
"I would love to be here with the province in the coming months announcing an Alberta Builds program," Trudeau said. "We would like to see the province sit down with us in trilateral meetings on countering homelessness."
Using provincial and federal money, the B.C. program is to use government, non-profit, community-owned, and underused land and fast-track development approval to build an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 new homes.
Also Tuesday, six smaller Alberta communities signed deals with Ottawa that provide nearly $14 million to help build 400 new homes over the next three years in Banff, Sylvan Lake, Bow Island, Westlock, Smoky Lake and Duchess.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 21, 2024.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Mexico president says Canada has a 'very serious' fentanyl problem
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is not escalating a war of words with Mexico, after the Mexican president criticized Canada's culture and its framing of border issues.
Freeland says it was 'right choice' for her not to attend Mar-a-Lago dinner with Trump
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says it was 'the right choice' for her not to attend the surprise dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Mar-a-Lago with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump on Friday night.
Quebec doctors who refuse to stay in public system for 5 years face $200K fine per day
Quebec's health minister has tabled a bill that would force new doctors trained in the province to spend the first five years of their careers working in Quebec's public health network.
NDP won't support Conservative non-confidence motion that quotes Singh
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he won't play Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's games by voting to bring down the government on an upcoming non-confidence motion.
Speaker's ruling clears path for Trudeau's government to face successive tests of confidence in days ahead
After rallying his party's caucus and staffers on Parliament Hill Tuesday, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh signalled that he's still not ready to help the other opposition parties trigger an early election, yet.
Opposition leaders talk unity following Trudeau meeting about Trump, minister calls 51st state comment 'teasing'
The prime minister’s emergency meeting with opposition leaders on Tuesday appears to have bolstered a more united front against U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s tariff threats.
Calgary man who drove U-Haul over wife sentenced to 15 years
A Calgary man who killed his wife in 2020 when he drove over her in a loaded U-Haul has been sentenced to 15 years behind bars.
Man severely injured saving his wife from a polar bear attack in the Far North
A man was severely injured Tuesday morning when he leaped onto a polar bear to protect his wife from being mauled in the Far North community of Fort Severn.
Canada is pausing private refugee sponsorship applications until 2026
Immigration Minister Marc Miller says that the recent pause in most private refugee sponsorships is because there is an 'oversupply' of applications and they don't want to give people fleeing war zones false hope.