Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm pleased to participate in the committee's study on the housing accelerator fund.
Housing affordability is the top concern of us all. We know that boosting housing supply is one of the main tools to address the housing affordability challenges facing Canadians. That means increasing the supply of both market housing in addition to and in combination with affordable housing, which requires, quite frankly, different actions.
To fill the gap that already exists, and to keep up with our growing population over the next decade, Canada will need to build at least 3.5 million new homes by 2031, according to budget estimates.
Our government's newest budget contains multiple items to bring new supply more quickly—measures that address the breaks and delays in the housing system that are preventing new units from being built.
The biggest single measure in this category is the housing accelerator fund. Budget 2022 proposes $4 billion over five years starting in 2022-23 to launch the housing accelerator fund. The target is to create at least 100,000 net new housing units over this period, with a focus on affordable housing with greater energy efficiency and on densification.
The fund will do so by incentivizing communities to get more housing built. It will, for example, ensure that local governments get the support they need to streamline and modernize their housing approval and delivery systems. Local governments are key partners for us in the housing system. This fund will strengthen partnerships and be flexible enough for the different needs and realities of cities and communities across the country, including in rural Canada.
When you talk to mayors across the country, they will tell you that they're facing barriers. A lot of them don't have the fiscal capacity to overcome some of these needs, whether they are infrastructure or the investments necessary to modernize permitting systems, introduce inclusionary zoning and incentivize transit-oriented development. The barriers they're facing are real, and this fund will certainly help with that.
The housing accelerator fund has already received support from right across the housing system, including from the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, the Canadian Home Builders' Association and the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association, among others. We also heard widespread support for it at our recent national housing supply summit.
The housing accelerator fund will join a suite of programs the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, CMHC, has in place to increase market and affordable housing supply in Canada—all part of the national housing strategy.
One such program already in place is the federal lands initiative, which this committee is also looking at. This $200-million initiative, launched in 2018, is intended to create 4,000 homes by transferring surplus federal lands and buildings to housing providers at low or no cost. Once transferred, the property is developed or renovated into affordable, sustainable, accessible and socially inclusive housing.
My mandate letter requests enhancements to the federal lands initiative to ensure that the federal government is more effectively deploying its inventory of lands to advance the objectives of the national housing strategy. Once again, I want to thank this committee for looking at the federal lands initiative and helping us get there.
Just last week, for example, we announced that our government was providing nearly $3 million for the purchase and development of land at the former Canadian Forces base Edmonton Griesbach barracks site. This fund will assist in the development of more housing in the Village at Griesbach in north Edmonton. This will include support for a proposed project of approximately 127 homes for Métis and other indigenous members of the community and families, including 50 units dedicated to women and children fleeing gender-based violence. Residents will also have access to full on-time wraparound supports, cultural programming, counselling, child care and a community garden. Stories like this really show the success of the federal lands initiative and the potential to do even more.
I want to thank you, Mr. Chair, for allowing me to be here today to talk about these programs.
Once again, I want to thank the committee for their study of both the housing accelerator fund and the federal lands initiative.
We look forward to the results of your study, and to working together to continue supporting housing supply and affordability in this country.
At this time, Mr. Chair, I'd be more than happy to take questions from members of the committee.
Thank you.