Design of new housing supplement critical to its success, CMHC head says
OTTAWA — Federal officials are working out the kinks in a government plan to tie housing assistance to the person who needs help, not the place where they are living.
Benefits have traditionally been tied to a housing unit through rent-geared-to-income plans or rent supplements, meaning they can’t accompany a person who moves, such as women fleeing domestic violence.
Officials with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. are working with provinces and territories on how to deliver the supplement without driving prices higher in markets where affordable housing is in short supply, said Evan Siddall, the corporation’s president and CEO.
Siddall’s comments suggest the supplement will be part of the national housing strategy set to be released this fall, something government officials have privately indicated for weeks. But there are complications with the supplement that must be ironed out before it can be rolled out, much like the strategy itself.