Big city mayors say homelessness, housing affordability must be tackled by all levels of government - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Big city mayors say homelessness, housing affordability must be tackled by all levels of government

Politicians from across Canada will spend the weekend in Regina attheFederation of Canadian Municipalities' 2022 annual conference.Homelessness and affordability appear to be the central topic on the agenda.

Federation of Canadian Municipalities' 2022 annual conference takes place in Regina this weekend

Regina Mayor Sandra Masters, left, Halifax Mayor Mike Savage, centre, and Laval Mayor Stphane Boyer, right, speak at the opening news conference for the Federation of Canadian Municipalities 2022 annual meeting held in Regina, Sask. (Alexander Quon/CBC News)

Politicians from across Canada will spend the weekend in Regina as they look to plan apost-COVID future in Canada.

Homelessness and affordability appear to be the central topic on the agenda, according to Thursday's opening news conference attheFederation of Canadian Municipalities' 2022 annual conference.

Mayors from three citiessaid homelessness is a growing issuein communities across Canada and that it is quickly becoming serious enoughfor every level of government to start playing a role.

"When it comes to housing and homelessness, the feds have the money, the province has the jurisdiction and the cities have the problem.So we all need to be at the table at the same time," said Halifax Mayor Mike Savage, who chairs the Big City Mayors' Caucus.

On Thursday, Savage was joined by Regina Mayor Sandra Masters andLaval, Que.,Mayor Stphane Boyer.

All three stressed that it's important to start increasing the supply of affordable homes in an attempt to address the ongoing housing crisis.

Discussions about bringing all three levels of government together are set to begin this weekendwith municipal officials at the conferenceset to meetwith Dominic LeBlanc, Canada's minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Infrastructure and Communities.

'When it comes to housing and homelessness, the feds have the money, the province has the jurisdiction and the cities have the problem. So we all need to be at the table at the same time,' Savage said Thursday. (Alexander Quon/CBC News)

Savage also pointed to the $4-billionfederal housing accelerator fund that was announced in the last federal budget as one of the ways forward.

"It can help housing get built faster through direct and flexible investments, but only if it is designed together with speed and results in mind," he said, stressing that more needs to be done beyond just this one pool of funding.

Masters said Regina is set to experience a housing crunch in the coming years and the solution is clear.

"Not unlike every city across the country, bringing more [housing]on stream and getting more built is paramount," she said.

Masters said Thursday Regina is set to experience a housing crunch in the coming years. (Alexander Quon/CBC)

Halifax and Regina have seen their unhoused populations grow during the COVID-19 pandemic.Both municipal governments have responded tocamps being established in public parks by attempting to engineer solutions.

Regina helped support the creation of an interim shelter in its warehouse district that was operated by community organizations.

Halifax purchased modular housing units that it placed on municipally owned property.

When asked how he saw municipalities dealing with homelessness inthe future, Savage said it would require action.

"People don't want to hear about jurisdiction, they frankly don't want to hear about political parties. What they want to hear about are solutions," said Savage.