Liberals go cold on talk about right to housing law, housing groups say
OTTAWA — The federal Liberals aren’t living up to a promise to legislate a right to housing, a group of housing and homelessness advocates say, and that’s threatening the objectives of their own $40-billion housing strategy.
“The right to housing means that every Canadian should have access to safe, decent, appropriate and affordable housing. It doesn’t mean that the government is going to buy everyone a house,” said Tim Richter, CEO of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness. “(But) often what we find is policy or government systems will get in the way of a person’s ability to access housing.”
The Liberals’ decade-long strategy, released a year ago, promised to progressively implement a right of every Canadian to have adequate housing and remove government roadblocks to getting it. Richter welcomed the plan, which also included major promises to build and repair affordable units, as “a very big deal.”
But after a year of consultations, groups such as Richter’s say the Liberals have gone quiet about the idea of a right to housing.