Upcoming Census Asks Canadians for First Time If They Have Been Homeless

The next federal census will ask Canadians for the first time if they have experienced homelessness, which Statistics Canada says will “shed light on people who may face significant social and housing challenges.”

Statistics Canada will conduct the next Census of Population in May 2026, and has released its questionnaire ahead of time. The new questions contained in the census will “provide important data to measure Canada’s diversity and support communities across the country,” according to the agency, which was first covered by Blacklock’s Reporter.

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Cut housing prices? It will be all we can do just to slow their increase

Across Canada, you could hear the eyes of Gen Zers rolling. The headline in The Globe said it all: “CMHC gives up on comparing housing affordability to 2004 levels.”

Where a previous headline-making report by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, the federal agency whose stated purpose is to make housing affordable, had set out a series of policies aimed at returning housing costs, relative to income, to 2004 levels – by 2030 – the new report dismisses this as “no longer realistic.”

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Canada’s population standstill rattling Vancouver’s housing industry

For the first time in 74 years, the population of both B.C. and Ontario dropped by a few thousand people in the first months of 2025.

Sounds dramatic. And in some ways it is.

That’s even though the dip in the total number of people doesn’t make a statistical difference for either province. In the first quarter of this year, B.C. had 2,357 fewer residents than at the end of 2024; Ontario lost 5,644.


Don’t trust developers to act in anyone’s but their own best interests.

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Olivia Chow was never going to solve the housing crisis

The idea that Olivia Chow was going to be Toronto’s housing champion was always a fantasy. Many voters, especially younger ones, pinned their hopes on her after years of inaction by John Tory, which they wrongly ascribed to his more conservative ethos. In a quick election, Chow’s long-standing brand as a “progressive” helped carry her to victory.

When it comes to housing, however, it appears Chow is anything but.

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New Federal Report Links Immigration to Rising Housing Costs

So it turns out the government of Canada just released a report — and it’s not from some conspiracy blog or partisan think tank. No, this is from the Trudeau government’s own bureaucrats at Statistics Canada and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada. What does it say? Well, it quietly admits that something many of us have known for years and were called racists, bigots, and extremists for saying out loud is actually true: mass immigration has directly caused housing prices to skyrocket in Canada.

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‘Every year is worse’: Housing crisis reaches boiling point ahead of Quebec’s moving day

As Montreal prepares for its traditional moving day, the housing crunch reached alarming new heights — with hundreds of households still searching for a roof over their heads and advocates calling for urgent action.

“We see a lot of people who are low income and very vulnerable tenants struggling to figure out how to pay rents,” said Gary Saxe, executive director of Project Genesis, a housing rights organization based in Côte-des-Neiges. “And every year is getting worse as rents go higher and higher.”

Saxe said rents have gone up “astronomically” over the last few years — and it’s not just a problem on July 1, but all year round.

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How many homeless shelters in Forest Hill? The Kingsway?

Toronto wants to put homeless shelters in its suburbs. Neighbours say not so fast

On a Tuesday evening in April, south Etobicoke residents gathered around their laptops to spar over the issue that had been roiling their community for months — a city plan to build a homeless shelter at the end of a residential street.

Even through the sterile format of an online town hall, the intensity of each speaker was palpable. One man warned a shelter at 66 Third St., currently a parking lot at the end of a row of modest homes and a few newer builds, would bring homeless people into their New Toronto neighbourhood from elsewhere in the city. He feared occupants using street substances in public areas, such as the nearby lakeside park.


I’m going full communist on this issue, make the rich enjoy the vibrancy that homeless shelters bring!

There is no point giving a substance abusing addict shelter unless they have first received treatment for their addiction and proven themselves capable of supervised reintegration with society. Housing First as a strategy is the expressway to failure. Mandatory treatment is the solution.

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Failed New Zealand scheme is cautionary tale for Carney’s homebuilding agency: report

OTTAWA — Researchers with the Montreal Economic Institute say Canada’s new federal homebuilding agency is likely to overpromise and underdeliver, drawing a cautionary tale from down under.

The free-market think tank argues in a new study that New Zealand’s now-defunct homebuilding scheme KiwiBuild, a signature policy of Jacinda Ardern’s Labour government, shows why government bureaucrats shouldn’t try to play real estate developer.

Ardern is a ChiCom stooge so Ottawa will love her scheme.

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Young Canadians struggling to meet mortgage payments about seven times more than rest of population

Young Canadians aged 30 and under are failing to make payments on their mortgages at a rate seven times higher than the rest of the population, according to the latest data from the credit agency TransUnion.

The report, which analyzed credit trends for young consumers in the first quarter of 2025, found 29-year-olds and 30-year-olds had the worst mortgage delinquency rates at 1 per cent and 1.1 per cent, respectively -nearly 10 times the average national rate of 0.12 per cent. The average delinquency rate of mortgage holders between 18 and 30 was 0.84 per cent.

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‘Sales have stopped’: Ontario developers predict layoffs if cost to build doesn’t fall

A developer lobby group is renewing calls to introduce tax cuts for new projects as housing starts continue to slow, warning that if something doesn’t change, tens of thousands of jobs could be at risk.

On Monday, the Building Industry and Land Development Association released a brief calculation considering how far new home construction could fall and how many jobs could be lost if the sale of new homes remains low.

Exploiting a crisis?

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Renters Struggle With Affordability Despite Declining Prices: Survey

Canadian renters are still grappling with affordability issues even though rent prices have decreased this year, while those contemplating the move to home ownership are adopting a wait-and-see approach, a new report suggests.

Fifteen percent of renters in Canada dedicate more than half of their net income to monthly rent costs, according to the 2025 Canadian renters report by Royal LePage.
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To solve Canada’s housing crisis, we need to change the way we think about wealth

Hard work in Canada has never paid less, in economic opportunity or quality of life. For most young Canadians, it doesn’t really matter how much you make in dollars and cents: without family money, the big picture is largely the same. No homeownership. No path to building wealth. Delayed family formation, or none at all.

This corrosive disconnect between salary and lifestyle goes to the heart of Canada’s generational tensions. Outside rural areas, even a six-figure salary often means living paycheque to paycheque by the time rent, transit, food and other basic expenses are paid for. Needless to say, many young people make far less than six figures, which is why one out of every four food bank users in Ontario these days is employed.

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Canada is facing a housing crisis. Could it take a page from Europe?

Slavica Salihbegovic’s family was growing. So she did what anyone living in Vienna would do: She asked the city for a bigger apartment.

“At that time, I was pregnant with my first kid,” she said. “I lived in a two-room apartment … it was an OK building, but it was small for us.”

Salihbegovic went to an online portal, entered her income and requirements, and was ranked alongside thousands of other residents. Soon, she was assigned a new apartment: a three-bedroom unit in a brand-new building, adjacent to Vienna’s Central Station.


We have subsidized housing. My guess is that Austria’s social housing has not been made stronger by diversity.

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GTA elementary school teacher making $120K a year says that she ‘had better expectations’ for her finances. Here’s what happened

Christine Miller has been a Grade One teacher with the Peel District School Board for the better part of a decade and while she earns close to $120,000 annually, she says she is living pay cheque to pay cheque.

Miller belongs to a rising number of middle-income households making up to $125,000 a year that are at risk of being squeezed out of the region, according to a report released by Civic Action this week.

Many members of the group, like Miller, have healthy salaries well over the median income for Toronto but are still struggling to stay afloat and have essentially become ‘the invisible poor,” Civic Action says.


I hope she didn’t vote Liberal or NDP and mass immigration.

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