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Canada budget 2021 sees Liberals top up long-term plan for affordable housing

WATCH: Budget 2021: Any help coming for those looking to enter Canada's white-hot housing market? – Apr 19, 2021

The federal government tweaked its housing and infrastructure plans in Monday’s budget, but held back on an overhaul.

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In the first budget in more than two years, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland topped up the Liberals’ 10-year, $40-billion housing strategy with an additional $2.5-billion commitment.

Some 60 per cent of that will go toward construction of 4,500 new units under the so-called Rapid Housing Initiative, which seeks to provide vulnerable Canadians with affordable homes.

The budget’s plan to build or repair 35,000 units in total — with the help of a reallocated $1.3 billion in existing funding — makes only a small dent in the more than 1.6 million Canadians who “live in core housing need,” the budget states.

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“There’s more money on the table for affordable housing. Is that a major change? I don’t think so,” said Genevieve Tellier, a political science professor from the University of Ottawa.

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“It’s not a big amount in the sense that the needs of Canadians are much higher than that.”

The 739-page document also reiterates an eight-year, multibillion-dollar pledge from February for public transit projects ranging from new subway lines to electric buses.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised cash-strapped cities $14.9 billion dollars in permanent funding for transit, though most of the money won’t start flowing until later in the decade.

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About $6 billion will be made available to municipalities right away for projects that are ready to go, according to the government, while the remainder will go into a $3-billion per year fund that can will be doled out on a project-by-project basis starting in 2026-27.

The budget further sets aside $23 million over four years for Infrastructure Canada to conduct what it calls the country’s first-ever national infrastructure assessment, partly to identify next steps toward a long-discussed, never-developed high-frequency rail link between Toronto and Quebec City.

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