Eby promotes prefab homes, Rustad focuses on approval process
CBC
Both of the main candidates in British Columbia's election campaign pushed their own plans to solve parts of the province's housing crisis.
B.C. Conservative Leader John Rustad told a news conference in Surrey that his government would end the multi-year permit delays and get homes built at the speed and scale needed to address the housing crisis.
NDP Leader David Eby went to Cumberland on Vancouver Island to promote his party's plan to fast-track factory-built homes.
Eby said pre-built homes would cut waste, reduce emissions, and advances in the industry mean the homes are "beautiful and high-quality."
He said the process was "more like Lego" than normal construction.
WATCH | B.C.'s NDP and Conservative leaders pitch voters on their housing ideas:
"The idea is pretty straightforward. In a controlled factory environment, you can build faster, you can build with less waste and the homes that are built are more consistent and more efficient and it's cheaper."
Rustad said the Conservative Party of B.C. would redesign the approval process for home building, setting a six-month limit for rezoning and development permit and three months for a building permit.
"This means that we will significantly be able to improve the time frame it takes to actually get construction happening in this province, and we'll be working with city halls across the province to be able to meet these timelines," Rustad said.
If a clear yes or no isn't issued by a city within that limit, the province would issue the permit, said a B.C. Conservative news release announcing the platform.
Rustad said the party would remove NDP taxes on housing, support transit-oriented communities, reform development cost charges and make taxes fair for homeowners.
"We have so much regulation that has been put in place associated with housing that it makes it really difficult for anybody to be able to actually get through and build things, not to mention the cost," he said. "So we'll amend the Local Government Act to prevent any home-killing red tape that has been introduced by this government."
The party's statement also outlined its zoning plan, adding that it would work with B.C. Assessment "to make sure that current homeowners don't get hit with higher tax bills based on future potential."
The party statement said, if elected, a Conservative government would build new towns, saying B.C. is blessed with an abundance of land, but the NDP refuses to use it to end the housing shortage.
Burlington MP Karina Gould gets boost from local young people after entering Liberal leadership race
A day after entering the Liberal leadership race, Burlington, Ont., MP and government House leader Karina Gould was cheered at a campaign launch party by local residents — including young people expressing hope the 37-year-old politician will represent their voices.
Two years after Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly declared she was taking the unprecedented step of moving to confiscate millions of dollars from a sanctioned Russian oligarch with assets in Canada, the government has not actually begun the court process to forfeit the money, let alone to hand it over to Ukrainian reconstruction — and it may never happen.