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Old Posted Feb 9, 2024, 8:58 PM
Ifyoubuildit Ifyoubuildit is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ThePurpleHouse View Post
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-ed...etown-housing-accelerator-fund-1.7110314

The federal government will provide Charlottetown with $10 million through the Housing Accelerator Fund as part of an agreement they say will help spur the construction of more than 1,000 homes over the next decade.

Charlottetown has agreed to make changes to its building permits and zoning as part of the agreement. Those changes include:

A new official plan that will enable more medium-density housing.
Allowing up to four units on existing residential lots.
Building heights will be increased from six to eight storeys near post-secondary institutions and in high-growth areas.
Expediting the permitting of accessory dwelling units.
Reducing parking requirements.
Improved building permit processes, including e-permitting.

P.E.I.'s housing situation has been described as a crisis since 2018, when the apartment vacancy rate fell to 0.3 per cent.

The federal government is giving Charlottetown $10 million that’s part of an agreement they say will help get 1,000 homes built in the next decade.

The crisis has been driven by unprecedented population growth, which has been running between three and four per cent a year.

Housing starts in P.E.I. less than half of what's needed to meet population growth

P.E.I urged to press pause on immigration, while health care and housing feeling the pinch

The most recent population numbers, measuring growth from Oct. 31, 2022 to Oct. 31, 2023, show Prince Edward Island added about 6,700 residents.

With an average of 2.3 people per household on the Island, that puts the requirement for homes for those new residents at 2,900.

But according to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, the province managed only 1,139 housing starts in 2023.
Having the highest property taxes in Atlantic Canada combined with very low percentage rent caps, compounded by high interest rates and construction costs is most likely deterring private development of apartment buildings in PEI.
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