Tuesday, May 8, 2007

everyone needs a place to live.

Only a week after Premier Ed Stelmach ruled out using rent control to deal with the skyrocketing cost of housing and then changed his mind, PC Party delegates forced Stelmach to change his position another 180 degrees to turn against the use of rent control (again):
In the [PC] party's annual general meeting, delegates rejected a motion to adopt the resolutions of an all-party legislature committee that had urged Premier Ed Stelmach's Tory government to adopt rent controls.
Meanwhile, as Stelmach continues to not act on the issue, it seems like Albertans are being left to dry in a climate of skyrocketing rent costs.

Alberta Liberal Leader Kevin Taft
has been continuing to hammer the Stelmach Tories on the issue.
Liberal Leader Kevin Taft says both Premier Ed Stelmach and Housing Minister Ray Danyluk got farm support payments last year.

Taft says its ironic that they take farm support cheques but wont help people struggling with soaring housing costs by imposing rent controls.

He says some Albertans are being forced to sleep in their cars and trucks because soaring rents and a shortage of housing.
Edmonton City Councillor Michael Phair responded
"It's very misguided," Phair said. "There are many people who rent across the province who will be quite disappointed that the [PC] party didn't take a different course of action."
Long-time Calgary Alderman Joe Ceci responded:
"I think it's indicative of the fact that the grassroots of the Tory party doesn't have the best interests of low-income people in mind," he said.
It seems that the Stelmach Tories have found themselves squarely on the wrong side of an explosive issue.

As someone who presented recommendations to the Affordable Housing Task Force earlier this year, it's disappointing to see that the Provincial government hasn't taken a strong leadership role on the issue.

13 comments:

  1. Dave, surely you don't actually believe that the PC Party controls the government caucus. I know Dr. Taft tries to mix the two up in public perception as much as possible - but you are smarter than that.

    Also, you know that as soon as it is passed in the Leg there will be a ban on raising rent in Alberta for one year - retroactive to the end of April. That's going to affect alot of Albertans on both sides of this issue, one which I don't think that the "PC Party" can find itself "squarely" on the wrong side of this issue at all - given that as a party we are made up of people who rent, own and are property owners who rent to others. We encompass this issue, as all Albertans do.

    People need to give their head a shake here. In the past week I have even heard "liberals" suggest that private home owners should be FORCED by the government to start taking in "renters" regardless of their home size - we have to stop with the madness and approach this problem from a logical and productive place.

    Oh, and on a related note - bus passes are going up. Alot. Maybe the government should be forced to make my neighbour drive me around when I need to go places?

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  2. Stelmach apologist.

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  3. Relent on rent controls, Tories urged


    When Taft asked Danyluk if he would meet with the renters, he said he would.

    So, after question period, about two dozen of them made their way to Danyluk's office to meet with the minister or his staff. When Danyluk arrived, he ushered the crowd into a larger room, where he was joined by Snelgrove.

    The meeting was tense at times. Danyluk allowed each person to speak in turn, listening as they detailed their rental woes. The group included a single mother, a Rwandan refugee with a five-month-old baby and a woman pushing a walker.
    One woman cried. Others thumped the table when they heard something they agreed with.

    "We're not looking for handouts, sir, we're looking for solutions," said Peter Tyleman, 55, whose apartment building is being turned into luxury condos.

    Jim Sexsmith, a 74-year-old military veteran in a wheelchair, said he wasn't pleased with the minister's response.

    "All we got today was lip service, typical political lip service," he said. "The landlords are just raising the rents too high."

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  4. You know what - the price of everything is high. My rent is high too. But rent is always high, depending on your means - when I was a single mom I worked three jobs to support two kids and pay the rent - which really did seem high then too (6 years ago). There are always going to be people who can't pay the rent. We need to be able to deal with those people with a sense of compasssion while recognizing that yes, the housing siutation is a crisis - especially in some places like Grand Prairie - but that rent controls are NOT a real solution to the problem. Matter of fact for a renter, rent controls could make the problem even worse.

    I don't know what the percentage of Albertan's actually unable to pay highering rent costs (there is a difference between not wanting your rent to go up and not being able to pay it), but I do know my neighbours all pay 1500.00 a month for their units (that's "market value") and don't bat an eye at doing so because they earn enough out at the Oil Rigs to pay it. That's the current reality in Alberta right now and no matter how hard the government tries they aren't going to change that.

    I struggle with this because yes, I do rent, and I don't like my rent going up either, and essentially I can't move unless I want to pay that market value price elsewhere... but I do try to see it from the view of the property owner as well. If you have a property that you rent out, I assume that you do so not as a service to Albertans but to make a profit, to secure your families lively hood, or to create a safe future for your retirement.

    With rising costs, utilities, property taxes, higher wages for maintenance workers, higher contract costs for upkeep and the associated legal fees with renting - what would motivate someone to continue to rent (especially with property prices at an all time high) if they could not meet all these new needs, rising bills AND still support their families and the goals they set out to achieve when deciding to invest in rental properties?

    Why on earth would any developer or potential owner even build new rental units if rent control were in place? Why not just build condos or houses and sell them - at least you will get market value for them.

    Nothing is cheap in our province, and I suspect (knowing a few) that most landlords are good people who have families to support and bills to pay, just like us. We need to find a solution that works for all Albertan's, and in the mean time find a way to support the lowest income members of our province who are having the hardest time dealing with the rising costs.

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  5. You know those wankers who talk about Economics 101? I'm going to be one of those wankers. Quite literally, in my Economics 101 class at Grant MacEwan College, there was a section of the text that talked about the things on which almost all economists agree. I think the point was to show that there are things economists agree on. They were ranked in order of the percentage of economists who agree with them. Number one on that list?

    1. A ceiling on rents reduces the quantity and quality of housing available. (93%)

    Later, in the chapter that explains the economic mechanism that causes that problem, they quote an economist who said rent control was "the best way to destroy a city, other than bombing."

    For your reference, those quotes appear on pages 12 and 122 of the 2nd Canadian Edition of "Principles of Microeconomics", Mankiw et al., Nelson, 2002.

    So I think that when people like Allie say that they're worried about what rent controls would do, there is a reason to take them seriously. Rent controls can have the effect of turning the rent-controlled properties into slums, and reducing the number of rental properties available.

    So you end up with more people who have no place to live, and those with a place to live are living in squalor.

    That is not, however, an excuse for doing nothing. What the government should do is provide income supplements to help people pay for the ridiculous price of renting.

    Then, because they're not going to have the money to do that forever, they're going to have to do something to cool down the economy as a whole. The money that is being poured into the oil sands in the north of our province is putting incredible inflationary pressure on the rest of our economy, and these rent increases are a sign that the government has been thoughtless in its development of our resources.

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  6. The PC Party doesn't control Stelmach but the Premier is in a much weaker position than Ralph Klein was in terms of party control.

    Stelmach chose the easy way out on the issue, he deferred to his party as an excuse to scrap the idea of rent control.

    Not that I think rent control is the best solution. In fact, I don't. But I do think there needs to be leadership from the provincial government on the issue.

    Not surprisingly, there is little leadership coming from the Office of Premier Ed Stelmach (and judging from his PC Convention speech, I think he'd have a difficult time communicating it if he did have a plan).

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  7. I love your 'suck it up' attitude, Allie. Tell that to 74 year old veteran Jim Sexsmith. Tell it to the people in Grande Prairie and Fort McMurray who are living in tents or in the backs of their cars.

    I blamed Ralph, and now I blame Ed.

    This is what happens when you don't have a plan. Stelmach had 13 years in cabinet to say his bit, instead he stayed quiet as Infrastructure Minister while these problems grew.

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  8. I agree with Allie. Give me a break Dave.

    My dad was a landlord and he raised his rents very infrequently. In fact, his rents were not even close to market rents and he was losing money every year from his rental properties.

    My dad was loyal to all his tenants and you know how some repaid him. They trashed his apartment units and failed to clean up when they vacated the premises. They left the places like a filthy pigsty. And my dad and I had to clean up for them.

    I have been a renter for all my life and I keep my rental unit spotless and I pay my rent on time. If I cannot afford my rent, I go out and get another job. Last time I looked there were lots of jobs in Alberta.

    They are a few bad apples on both sides that spoil things for all the good landlords and tenants.

    I'm frankly sick and tired of Taft, Blakeman and the rest of the Liberal elite trashing all landlords as greedy and uncaring. That a bunch of bullshit and you know it. Ask Taft and Blakeman where they live in Edmonton. It's not a rental unit, I can assure you. Maybe they can donate their hosues to house some of the people who are actually hard up. My dad would have done that.

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  9. $1000 increase!?!May 9, 2007 at 4:11 PM

    I agree with Dave. Give me a break Allie.

    Anonymous, I'm glad that you're dad wasn't giving his tenants $1000-$2000 rent increases, but the fact of the matter is that this is what is happening to many Albertans right now.

    You may be tired of hearing it, but I'm glad that Taft, Blakeman and the rest of the Liberals are standing up for Albertans on this issue. Stelmach doesn't seem to want to move on it and Danyluk is giving renters lip service.

    It's called leadership and if Ed Stelmach isn't willing to step up to the plate, I'm going to have to put my vote behind someone who will.

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  10. Conservative philosophy: tell the 74-year old facing a ridiculous rent increase to "get a job."

    Talk about compassion.

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  11. Anonymous 6:24 pm

    I have compassion for 74 year olds who have worked all of their lives. They don't deserve what is happening to them. Nor do those who cannot fend for themselves. It is the young able bodied people who don't take any responsibility for their own lives or the lives of others that irritate me. My dad taught me the value of hard work and I have lived by that credo all my life.

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  12. $1,000 increase. Let's talk real solutions. Here is one for you. See if yopu can get your head around this. I believe rent increases should be tied on a temporary basis to wear and tear on a rental unit, as well as depreciation. That would be fair to both renter and landlord and would make them both responsible. Call the program the rent stabilization program. Check out what your Liberal pal McGunity did in Ontario. Even they realized that pure rent controls don't work, despite their campaign rhetoric. Do the research my friend.

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  13. Oh boo hoo. Winnipeg has had rent controls since the early 90's. What happened there?

    No new wholly private Apartment building developments since rent controls began. Widespread deterioration of rental units as repairs (let alone improvements) and maintenance suffered as landlord's incomes dropped. The value of rental units dropped so much that the city lost millions of dollars in taxes when owners were able to challenge their property assesments.
    Ultimately, rent control leads to a reduction in affordable housing, not an increase.

    I don't oppose direct assistance for seniors and AISH victims. I think they deserve our special consideration.
    Everyone else should just suck it up... or leave.

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