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  1. How to make Vancouver more affordable? Look to Texas

    Vancouver’s growing housing costs are outstripping income increases in the city. There’s no single, easy to spot cause for Vancouver’s growing housing costs. Low interest rates, population growth, and the region’s liveability encourage ...

  2. Who suffers most from high energy prices in Canada?

    We all know that humans consume a lot of energy. It lets us cook our food, heat our homes, clean our clothes, and get to work. In fact, using energy to convert resources and provide goods and services is responsible for a lot of our ...

  3. Higher energy prices fuel energy poverty in Canada—especially in Ontario

    Appeared in National Newswatch, March 19, 2016 Energy is more than the fuel of our economic growth. In fact, energy fuels just about all of modern life’s comforts. But energy costs have risen substantially over the last decade, potentially placing a ...

  4. Energy Costs and Canadian Households: How Much Are We Spending?

    Energy is the basis of our modern lives. It fuels our economy, generating the economic production that underpins the high living standards Canadian households have achieved. But energy costs have been rising for Canadians in recent years, potentially ...

  5. B.C. Budget insight: Vancouver’s affordability concerns need municipal attention

    In an effort to make housing more affordable in Greater Vancouver, British Columbia’s latest provincial budget exempts newly-built homes worth up to $750,000 from the property transfer tax. This change could cut the tax bill on certain ...

  6. City hall red tape and rising property assessments in Greater Vancouver

    Provincial updates of property value assessments—which determine property tax levels—are generally a prosaic affair, but Monday’s release of British Columbia’s latest assessment has received a lot of attention. More than half a million ...

  7. Laneway housing no silver bullet for Vancouver’s rental housing shortage

    A recent CityLab article praised the city of Vancouver effusively for using laneway housing to ease the city’s housing shortage. While the city hall should be lauded for the decision to legalize accessory dwellings, Vancouver has ...

  8. Think local when addressing housing affordability across Canada

    Housing markets in Canada’s largest cities are once again the subject of national news, this time because of an increase of the minimum down payments for government-backed mortgages on homes over $500,000. Although the policy applies ...

  9. New homes and red tape in Canada’s Capital Region

    posted December 10, 2015 Canada’s Capital Region is growing quickly, and will continue to require a steady stream of new housing to keep up with new demand. Between the last two censuses, the Ottawa-Gatineau metropolitan area’s population grew by 9.1 per ...

  10. Residential development approval timelines in four Capital Region municipalities average one year or longer

    Between the last two census periods, the Ottawa-Gatineau metropolitan area’s population grew by 9.1 per cent, in step with Greater Toronto and Vancouver. In order for the area (also known as the Capital Region) to continue offering ...