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Provinces 'hold the key' to building more homes, new report argues
(www.nationalobserver.com)
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From other parts of the internet. I don't agree with all of it but for the most part it's decent and worth thinking about.
People should understand at this point if we keep trying to point to a single thing to that needs change it likely won't actually do much or at least in our lifetime. We need a lot of things to go in the right direction to bring back affordability and should appropriately call out people who aren't pulling their weight.
🔹 1. Federal Government
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 2. Provincial Governments
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 3. Municipal Governments
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 4. Homeowners
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 5. Home Buyers
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 6. Developers & Builders
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 7. Financial Institutions (Banks, Mortgage Lenders, Investors)
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 8. Real Estate Industry (Agents, MLS systems, Speculators)
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 9. Media & Cultural Norms
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
🔹 10. Labour and Materials Supply Chain
Role:
Barrier Mechanisms:
Your chart somewhat implys that infrastructure is strictly a federal issue when all 3 governmental levels play a role. Feds play a role in funding and transport across provincial borders, provinces play a role in funding for themselves and municipalities. Municipalities can decide how many lanes, specific speed limits, and transit development. Until very recently a municipality had all the power to build a bike lane themselves without provincial permission.
The way our cities are built are one of the biggest issues with our housing crisis. Increasing density is one of the best things we can do to build out of this crisis and for the most part, we don't need anything from the feds to do it, funding would be nice but its certainly possible to start without it.