Banff and Canmore workers finding jobs, lack of housing
Global News
Businesses in Banff and Canmore can't find people to work because of a lack of housing in the communities, leaving workers in the lurch.
Instead of ads featuring bedrooms, living spaces and nearby amenities, home finder websites for Banff and Canmore are loaded with snapshots of smiling people promoting themselves as great tenants, promising not to party or smoke. Personal profiles from around the world populate the pages, many who have already found a jobs and now have the more difficult task of finding a place to call home this winter.
Marion Lejuene, a 34-year-old nurse from France, has been looking for a place to stay in the Bow Valley for over a month and finally found a room after placing an ad online. She said there were 30 other applicants all vying for the same spot to rent.
“I feel very lucky because the rent is low: it’s $750 all included for a room,” said Lejuene “What everyone said is they liked that I was a little bit older and single. I think that helped.”
Another 27-year-old Global News spoke with, who lives with eight other people and works in early childhood development, is facing a rent increase and is having a hard time finding accommodations for less than $1,000 a month.
According to the Banff Job Resource Centre, there are close to 1,000 job openings right now. This time of year, there would be around 300.
The centre’s director Michel Dufresne said employers need staff but accommodation is hard to find and expensive.
“For Banff it’s $1,850 for a two-bedroom and for Canmore is $2,300 for a two-bedroom a month. I expect those numbers to go up by 10 per cent this year,” Dufresne said. He blames the lack of inventory partly on more people turning their properties into vacation rentals.
Banff’s YWCA just opened a 33-unit affordable housing complex and there were 100 applicants. There is now a waiting list to get in.