Spacing and the Balanced Supply of Housing research node proudly present The Overhead: Understanding Canada’s Affordable Housing Crisis, a special podcast series.
THIS EPISODE: Breaking the addiction to high home values
We’re all used to headlines about impossibly soaring housing prices in Canadian cities: prices that leave many out of the market, and out in the cold. But this model of perpetually increasing home values is the dream for many owners. You buy a home, let it accumulate in value, and do whatever you can to insure that growing value isn’t threatened. But this model is unsustainable and leaves many people without proper housing options.
Dr. Paul Kershaw is a University of British Columbia professor, founder of Generation Squeeze, and author of the paper “Wealth and the Problem of Housing Inequity Across Generations.” He says these rising home values have changed what it means to be wealthy:
PARTNA is a Black-founded, Black-led organization working with multiple levels of government to let owners of detached and semi-detached houses add long-term, affordable units to their properties. Cheryll Case is the planning director and Jason Allen John is finance director. Cheryll says there are existing homeowners who are ready to break with the status quo and help make a change, and that’s where PARTNA comes in:
Can we really change the way we see housing from an asset garnering increasingly high value to a human right everyone should have access to?
Reposted from Spacing Radio