What’s up with Canada?

Housing

  • If you took as gospel the good word from the talking heads at the CBC and CTV, or the ink-stained scribes at The Globe and Mail and National Post, you’d swear Justin Trudeau’s carbon tax will doom us all.

    But what the hell is the carbon tax, anyway? And why is it the worst thing ever?

    Carbon pricing (derisively and henceforth called ‘the carbon tax’) is a fossil fuel fee levied on everything from gas at the pump to plastic packaging. While it’s endlessly irritating for consumers, economists generally agree it’s among the most effective ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    In 2015, Trudeau’s third-place Liberals defeated Stephen Harper’s incumbent Conservatives in part on a promise to introduce carbon pricing. But now Pierre Poilievre is running on a promise to kill the tax – even though the Conservatives ran on a similar plan in the last two elections.

    Trudeau announced three changes to the carbon tax last week. One of them is totally uncontroversial: The Liberals are doubling the pre-existing carbon-tax rebate for rural Canadians, who tend to be poorer and who tend to rely more heavily on fossil fuels.

    The other two changes have Poilievre’s Conservatives and Canada’s commentariat crying foul. First, the government is now offering to cover the entire cost for low-income households to switch from oil furnaces to heat pumps. Second, home heating oil will be exempt from the carbon tax until 2025.

    One key complaint is that these changes amount to a policy flip-flop and betrayal in the fight against climate change. Yes, it’s true that home heating oil – effectively kerosene – is significantly more polluting than natural gas. As yes, it’s true that the carbon tax is meant to reduce, not reward, pollution.

    But only 3% of Canadian households still use heating oil. So Canada actually stands a chance of eliminating it – or at least reducing usage to the point where it’s only being burned by off-the-grid ideologues who don’t want to give up their oil furnaces.

    The other key criticism is that these changes amount to regional pandering. Yes, it’s true that Atlantic Canada is the only place where a significant number of homes are still heated with oil. And yes, it’s true that Atlantic Canada is the only rural area where Liberals are popular.

    But Atlantic Canada is relatively tiny, and the rest of Canada is relatively huge. While 30% of Atlantic Canadian households are heated with oil, compared to just 3% in Ontario, that’s nearly the same number of homes – 286,000 in Atlantic Canada compared to 266,000 in Ontario.

    Nonetheless, critics claim Trudeau’s tweaks to the carbon tax create two classes of Canadians. Yes, it’s true that homes heated with natural gas are not getting the same break as those heated with oil. And yes, it’s true that this is unfair to homeowners with natural gas furnaces.

    But here’s the thing: There are already two classes in Canada – and they have nothing to do with how homes are heated. The two classes in Canada are those who live pay cheque to pay cheque – or social-assistance cheque to social-assistance cheque – and those who don’t.

    Those who can afford to transition off home heating oil have already done so, because doing so saves $1,000 or more per year in energy costs. Those who haven’t done so simply couldn’t afford the upfront $15,000 or more it costs to buy and install a heat pump.

    There is of course a more fundamental question: Does carbon pricing even work? Yes, it’s true that 80% of households benefit financially from carbon pricing, thanks to the federal rebate. And yes, that suggests the tax could hardly be effective at curtailing their carbon consumption.

    But it’s also true that the top 20% of households consume far more than their share of carbon – to say nothing of corporations. That’s why the government estimates that the carbon tax will account for a third of Canada’s total greenhouse gas emission by 2030.

    Plus it’s worth remembering that we aren’t even supposed to like the carbon tax: It’s a sin tax, for god’s stake. It’s no different than the tax levied on cigarettes or alcohol.

    If you’ve never been addicted to either, you probably resent the comparison. But fossil fuels are perhaps as bad for your health – and certainly worse for the environment.

    You’re not supposed to like the carbon tax

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  • Once a week, the leaders of Canada’s four major political parties do all the talking during Question Period. It may be a bit undemocratic; but it’s definitely entertaining:

    Mr. Speaker 3, 2, 1 … Go!

    Pierre After eight years of Justin’s taxes and deficits, Canadians can’t afford to eat. A record-smashing two million people are now using food banks. Why do Liberals want Canadians to starve?

    Justin I know Canadians are struggling. But this government has lifted half a million kids out of poverty.

    ­Pierre Oh, so you’re saying Canadians have never had it so good?

    Jagmeet Canadians know who’s to blame for food prices: It’s greedy grocery CEOs. So why do you let Galen get away with it?

    Pierre Jagmeet, you’re Team Trudeau – remember? Plus Galen isn’t greedy – it’s you and Justin who are greedy … greedy for hardworking Canadian tax dollars.

    Justin This government established $10-a-day daycare, free dental care for poor kids, bigger child benefit cheques … which program would you cut?

    Pierre How about the ArriveCAN app? It didn’t work; it cost 500 times what it should have; and now it’s under criminal investigation. Why did you shove this horrible app down Canada’s throat?

    Justin OK, ArriveCAN may suck. But the real reason you hate it is your hidden agenda: you’re covertly courting votes from COVID deniers. In other words: your tinfoil hat is showing.

    Jagmeet Enough! Canadians are being forced to live in tents, cars … even apartment lobbies. And seniors are forced to choose between food and heat. How will you keep them safe this winter?

    Justin Let me get back to you on that.

    Pierre Ah! Finally something the Conservatives and the NDP can agree on: Liberals want old people to freeze to death.

    Justin If you care so much about seniors, why did you raise retirement to 67? We brought it back to 65.

    Pierre Fewer seniors used food banks when Conservatives were in charge. Their joints ached less too. And when I was housing minister, average rents were $950 and mortgage fees were $1,400.

    Justin When you were housing minister you only built 99 homes!

    Pierre Not true! I built 200,000 homes in a single year! You’ve been in power for eight years … how many homes have you built? Z to the E to the R to the O.

    Justin We’re getting homes built all over Canada: Ajax, Brampton… you name it. We just invested in a project in Moncton. Hamilton too. Did I mention Brampton?

    Yves You love to talk about food and housing. But you neglect the most important topic on everybody’s mind: Quebec sovereignty. Why are you scared to admit that Quebec could make it on its own?

    Justin If you don’t want to be part of Canada, why are you here?

    Pierre The Bank of Canada said this week that your drunken spending is driving up inflation: True or false?

    Justin If it’s true, why is inflation falling?

    Pierre If it’s false, why is Canada in housing hell?

    Justin Oh, and what’s your housing plan?

    Mr. speaker OK, time’s up!

    This was edited for length and clarity.

    Canada’s leaders debate affordability

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  • Imagine you woke up yesterday as Justin Trudeau: you’re exhausted; you can’t believe it’s Monday again; you want to call in sick; but you remember that Pierre really wants your job; so you feel around the bed for your phone, open an eye, and open your email:

    Jagmeet [URGENT] I urgently urge you to change your mind on Israel

    The Delhi Mail 10 reasons Trudeau loves terrorism and cocaine

    Sean Re: Hi Sean … any update on our plan to fix the housing crisis?

    Pierre Fwd: Poll finds most Canadians think Trudeau should resign

    Unknown [EXTERNAL] Hey, fuck you!

    Which one would you open? If I had to pick: Housing. Why? Because Trudeau can’t fix the Middle East. Nor can he make India behave like a democracy. But building more homes? That’s a problem the Canadian government can actually do something about.

    That’s the good news. The bad news is that they’ve utterly failed so far. As Poilievre’s Conservatives love to point out, the average home price in Canada has nearly doubled in the eight years since Trudeau took office – and the average rent has more than doubled.

    Why the housing crisis has occurred is absolutely clear: Canada’s population has been booming – but Canadian home building hasn’t. Between 2016 and 2022, Canada’s population grew by 2.4 million people – but only 1.6 million new homes were built in the same period.

    Who we should blame for the housing crisis is muddier: municipal governments control project approvals and some zoning; provincial governments control more zoning and some funding; and the federal government controls more funding and taxes; to say nothing of regulatory frameworks, labour availability, material costs, and more.

    Not that these nuances have prevented Poilievre from laying all of the blame on Trudeau. Nor did Trudeau help his own case when he truthfully if tactlessly told reporters in August that “housing isn’t a primary responsibility of the federal government.”

    By September, he was singing a different tune. After replacing the Liberal MP responsible for the housing file, Trudeau confessed to reporters that he “should have” and “could have” done more to address Canada’s housing crisis before it got so bad.

    So far, housing minister Sean Fraser is doing a good job. His plan to solve Canada’s housing crisis is to “make the math work for builders,” “change the way cities build homes,” “build more social housing” and “scale up innovation in home building.”

    To do that, Fraser has been tweaking the Housing Accelerator Fund to reward ambitious proposals from municipalities that: speed up project approvals; re-zone to allow for midrise apartments and laneway suites; and remove fees levied on new home construction. He also said he’s considering crackdowns on Airbnb and empty investment properties.

    Moreover, Fraser said to expect more measures to improve housing affordability in the government’s forthcoming fall economic and fiscal update – as well as additional actions in the coming months: “I’m not going to wait and hold out for some magic date…. As soon as policy is ready, we need to implement it so that it will have the intended impact.”

    These all sound like worthy incremental improvements. But Fraser didn’t say the one thing I really wanted to hear. What I really wanted to hear is something Trudeau told reporters last month: “the prices of homes have become far too high” and “cannot continue to go up.”

    He almost said the unsayable thing: Trudeau almost admitted that what Canada really needs is a housing crash. It may be true… but try telling it to a Millennial with some absurd mortgage – or better yet, a Boomer whose retirement plan is to sell their home for some absurd profit.  

    It would be political suicide. So politicians don’t do it. But that doesn’t change the fact that housing prices need to fall if we want home ownership to once again be within the reach of Canada’s middle class.

    Plus it doesn’t look like the prime minister can survive another election anyway. So Trudeau may not be the hero Canada wants… but maybe he can be the villain Canada needs?

    A Monday morning as Justin Trudeau

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