Thousands of military members to be cut off as Ottawa introduces expanded housing benefit - Action News
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Politics

Thousands of military members to be cut off as Ottawa introduces expanded housing benefit

After working on it for almost a decade and a half, the Department of National Defence is rolling out a new benefit to help military members deal with the high cost of housing but it's not going over very well with everyone.

Military official says more members overall will receive the benefit but that's not stopping the backlash

Members of Canada's military parade through downtown Calgary, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2008.
Members of Canada's military parade through downtown Calgary, Saturday, Nov. 1, 2008. A new military housing benefit is not going over very well with some members. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

After working on it for almost a decade and a half, the Department of National Defence (DND) is rolling out a new benefit to help military members deal with the high cost of housing but it's not going over very well with everyone.

Military members learned at a virtual town hall Tuesday that a new, highly-anticipatedhousing benefit is coming in July. It's meantto help lower-ranking members cope with steep housing costs in dozens of additional Canadian locations.

But not everyone is getting it. The military estimates thenew policy will meanroughly 7,700 military members who have been receiving a monthly housing allowance will soon be cut off. That news sparkedanangry online backlash from those who say they will receive less than before.

Brig.-Gen. Virginia Tattersall, the military's director general of compensation and benefits, said that more members overall will receive the housing benefit under the new taxable benefit policy.

While she said she's "sympathetic" to those no longer eligible, Tattersall added the math shows those losing the housing benefit "are able to afford" housing or can live in military housing with protected rental rates.

"They will feel that they have lost, but we have delivered a benefit that is equitable, that is endeavouring to help those that need it the most," Tattersall told CBC News.

A series of military families contacted CBC News saying losing the benefit couldn't have come at a worse time due to inflation. Some familiesliving on bases in military housing are "reeling" from the news, one person said.

The family membersdid not want to be named citing a fear of reprisal to their spouses or childrenserving in the Canadian Armed Forces. Military members need authorization by their chain of command to do media interviews.

DND and the Treasury Board negotiated the new benefit for14 years after the military housing allowance was frozen in 2009, Tattersall said.

The new taxable benefit can beused for rent or mortgage payments.The benefit varies according to income and location. For example, said Tattersall, members in Vancouver can receive$600 to $2,500 permonth,

Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Wayne Eyre said last year that the main concern he hearsfrom militarymembers when he's travelling across Canada is therising cost of living.

Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Wayne Eyre arrives to appear before the House of Commons standing committee on National Defence in Ottawa on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022.
Chief of the Defence Staff Gen. Wayne Eyre says military member have told him they struggle to find and retain affordable housing. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

In Comox, B.C., some military members were toldby email last year to consider contacting the charity Habitat for Humanity if they can't find affordable housing.

In Borden, Ont., the shortage of housing has somemilitary families doubling up and sharing homes, said Tattersall.

In Ottawa where military members were not eligible for housing allowances before the new benefit isintroducedjunior members were struggling to pay for accommodation while training, she said.

Eyre has said addressing the cost of living for military members isone of his top priorities.

Tattersall said the military chose to target the benefit at lower-ranking members with smaller salariesto ensure they don't have to pay more than 25 per cent of their annual gross income on housing.

Tattersall described the old housing benefit as a "one-size-fits-all approach."Everyone got thesamestandard housing benefit adjusted to the local cost of housing, she said including high-ranking, high-earning members.

The military estimates more than 28,000 Canadian Armed Forces members will receive the new housing benefit in 65 Canadian housing markets.

That meansan estimated 6,300 military members who didn't qualify for the old benefit will qualify for the new one. It also meansthe new benefit will be available in dozens ofhousing markets where the old one didn't apply, including Ottawa, Comox and Borden.

Tattersall said the new benefit is going to make life easier for military members struggling to get by.

"They're not going to sort of have to be scrimping just to be able to afford the basics," she said."They can occasionally enjoy... being able to go out and have a meal and breathe a little bit easier."

Military critics of the new benefit have accused the military online of scrimping to save $30 million a year. Tattersall saidthat's not the case.

As part of the new deal, Treasury Board is requiring that the military stick to its $150 million annual budget for the housing benefit, Tattersall said. The Canadian Armed Forces went over budget by $30 million to$180 million when the Treasury Board approved the new policy, she added.

"We've only ever been approved to spend a finite amount on this benefit," she said. "We were spending more than what we were approved.

"There's no savings here. We have not shortchanged the men and women of the Canadian Armed Forces in terms of endeavouring to provide a form of assistance to them."

A controversial 7-year deadline

Some military membersonline have zeroed in oneaspect of the new housing benefit the fact that members become ineligible for it if they don't move for seven years or more.

The benefit policyTreasury Board approved says thata member loses the benefit after living seven years in the same city or community because they are expected to have "adjusted to the cost of that location," Tattersall said.

Tattersallsaid the benefit is also tied to income: as a member's salary increases, the benefit shrinks.Those who earn over a certain threshold receive no housing benefit at all.

The military announced a pay increase for members asit unveiled the new benefit.

Non-commissioned members, general service officers, pilots at the rank of lieutenant-colonel and below, and medical and dental officers will receive fourpay increases, ranging from 1.5 to 3.5 per cent annually, for the years 2021 to 2024. Members will receive a lump sum payment for their retroactive increases in July.

A rental availability sign showing no vacancy is pictured outside of an apartment building in Vancouver, British Columbia on Monday, November 21, 2022.
A rental sign showing no vacancy outside an apartment building in Vancouver on Monday, November 21, 2022. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Tattersall saidthe military plans to assess the housing benefit programand local housing marketsand could in future askthe Treasury Board to extend the benefit beyondseven years.

"But we also need time to be able to see how this benefit is actually going to impact Canadian Armed Forces members and to make adjustments as necessary," she said.

Natalie Frodsham, a broker at Exit Ottawa Valley Reality, said the new housing benefit likely won't help military members at CFB Petawawa looking to buy housing in Ontario'sRenfrew County.

"Because it's the low inventory that's the problem for buyers," said Frodsham.

The challenge military families face, she said,is finding housing in their price range. She noted there are fewer multiple offers for sales now, which is starting to make "things a little biteasier."

With files from Murray Brewster