Build Canada Homes: Hope, Urgency, and 10 Questions Canada Must Ask ๐
In recent months, the federal government has launched Build Canada Homes (BCH), a new housing agency aimed at building more homes faster, using modern construction methods like prefab and modular units and unlocking partnerships across provinces and cities. The initial $13 billion investment and emerging partnerships — including in British Columbia — show that real work is underway.
So first: thank you to the leaders, civil servants, and community advocates working to translate policy into homes. I mean that sincerely — including Mark Carney and others trying to bring more housing into Canadian communities. Your efforts are necessary. ๐
But this moment also needs clarity.
We’ve spent the last few posts exploring who affordable housing actually serves (Parts 1–3), what solutions might work (Part 4), and what success or failure could look like (Part 5). Today, I want to tie those ideas together and ask hard questions we all need to wrestle with.
๐งฑ What’s Happening Now
Yes — Build Canada Homes is moving.
Yes — partnerships and funding agreements are starting to produce housing projects.
Yes — construction of supportive and transitional housing is beginning in the next 12–24 months.
This is progress, and it’s welcome.
But Canada still faces:
- Thousands of people experiencing homelessness in cities like Vancouver.
- Thousands more who can’t find housing they can afford.
- Shelters that turn people away because there is simply no space.
The structural crises we face are urgent and human. And good intentions must meet real results.
๐ง Why This Matters
Build Canada Homes is more than a construction program. It should be a turning point — not just in the number of homes built, but in who gets them and how fast.
To be worth it, BCH must:
- Reach the lowest income Canadians, including people on social assistance.
- Deliver housing that is actually affordable, not just “below market.”
- Include rapid response solutions like tiny homes or modular villages.
- Ensure that eligibility rules don’t filter out the most vulnerable.
We know supply matters. But supply without accessibility leaves people behind.
❓ 10 Hard Questions for Canada (Not Just Leaders — All of Us)
These questions aren’t easy. They require reflection, honesty, and empathy — whether you’re a policymaker, a renter, a homeowner, an employer, or someone early in your career:
-
What does “affordable housing” really mean if people on social assistance still can’t afford it?
Is tying rent to market rates enough, or must we tie it to actual incomes? -
How can we expect people to thrive if they are housed — but still living paycheck to paycheck?
Should affordability benchmarks change? -
If thousands are homeless now, why do so many housing plans focus on long-term supply rather than immediate shelter?
What does urgency look like in practice? -
How much are we willing to invest in truly affordable housing versus housing for “middle-income” households?
Is there room for both? -
Do we value housing more as an investment asset or as a basic human right?
How would that choice change policy? -
Are we prepared to rethink land use, zoning, and community resistance — even when it’s uncomfortable?
What kind of country do we want to be? -
What does success look like 1 year from now? 5 years from now? 10 years from now?
Are we setting goals that truly reflect human dignity? -
If modular and tiny homes can be built quickly and affordably, why aren’t they central to the plan?
Whose voices are shaping those decisions? -
How do we measure the success of housing programs — by units built or by people sheltered?
What story does each metric tell? -
Are we willing to hold leaders accountable when progress is slow — even when we want them to succeed?
Accountability shouldn’t be about blame; it should be about results.
๐งฉ Final Thought
Build Canada Homes can make a difference — but only if we insist that housing is defined by access, dignity, and urgency. It is not enough to build more homes. We must build homes that people can live in, afford, and thrive in.
So thank you, truly, to everyone trying to make this work — including those inside government. But let’s not let good intentions become excuses for delayed impact.
Housing is a human need. And Canada’s future depends on meeting that need now, not just promising more in the years ahead.
๐ Let’s keep asking the hard questions — and demanding answers that change lives.
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