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Comment: Budget's housing measures glimpsed in throne speech

Tuesday's B.C. Budget announcement will likely emphasize plans for affordable and social housing – but will senior homeowners' pain be relieved?
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The provincial budget being announced today (February 19) will set forth Victoria’s spending plans for the coming fiscal year, a glimpse of which was seen in last week’s throne speech.

The speech delivered few earth-shaking pledges so far as real estate went, outlining plans to continue protecting agricultural land as part of ongoing efforts to revitalize the 46-year-old Agricultural Land Commission and the lands it oversees as well as continue its 10-year plan to invest $7 billion in new housing.

While many doubt the government’s ability to deliver on its promises to build 114,000 affordable new homes by 2028, investments in housing have been a recurring topic of its press releases. The week prior to this column’s deadline saw announcements of 132 new units completing in Langford; $1.5 million to purchase a three-acre site in Revelstoke; $7.4 million for 70 seniors’ homes in Mission that will begin construction this year; $6.1 million for 24 units of supportive housing in Smithers; $24.8 million for 120 new rental homes for Indigenous families in Colwood; and the opening of 52 units of modular housing in Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­that received $8.2 million.

The budget will likely emphasize the good these and other projects are doing and confirm funding for a steady stream of similar announcements in the year to come.

“Your government will improve the development process by speeding up much-needed rental housing and delivering more efficient and effective project approvals,” the throne speech proclaimed. “And your government will continue to work with partners to build the homes people need, improving housing affordability for young families, renters, seniors and everyone who calls B.C. home.”

Those stung by the province’s speculation tax and other measures designed to cool the housing market are right to think the government isn’t helping them. Whether the latest budget includes provisions to ease the pain on long-standing homeowners – especially seniors, a part of the population the province says it wants to help – is another question.

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