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The new report believes

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No provinces achieved a higher score than C+ in the report of the Housing and Climate Task Force assembly, a non-governmental agency supported by the Charitable Clean Economy Fund in 2023.

The task force’s “report card” evaluates the government based on its policy of building houses quickly and sustainably.

It brought the highest score in the country to the federal government – A B-, while Alberta uses D+ as the bottom of the pile. The scores of the remaining provinces are within the C range.

Mike Moffatt, the author of the report and founding director of the University of Ottawa’s Mid-term Initiative for Missing Midterm Initiative, suggested that so far, the provinces have avoided “censorship” because of their role in the permanent housing crisis, while Ottawa and the city have taken a vibrant impact on the tropic and high costs of prosperity.

“The provinces do have the key here. They have the most policy leverage and in many cases, they actually do the least.”

The task force is co-chaired by former Edmonton Mayor Don Iveson and former federal conservative deputy leader Lisa Raitt. Prime Minister Mark Carney was a member of the group before becoming a federal liberal leader.

“At present, no government has done enough to build these houses,” Wright said in a statement in the report.

The task force compiles its transcripts based on its assessment of government policies to encourage factory-built housing, fill market gaps, increase density, map high-risk areas and update building regulations.

The report found that there is a lot of variability even within the provinces, and he said both Saskatchewan and Ontario have done a good job in building away from high-risk areas, but are understanded due to the increase in density.

The report gives British Columbia, Quebec and Prince Edward Island a score of C+, the highest score any province has earned.

Moffat said the BC grade suffered losses because, while it encourages density to be “on paper,” its slow permit approval and high building costs frustrate development.

He said that while Alberta performed well in the beginning of housing, it was largely due to leadership in the city of Calgary and Edmonton, rather than provincial policies.

Alberta Prime Minister Danielle Smith said in the provincial legislature in November that the government “does not go out of its way to build more affordable housing.” She said the increased housing supply would “automatically” reduce costs in Alberta.

Moffat said Smith’s position was “right” – reducing development barriers are crucial to expanding the supply of affordable housing – but that’s just “part of the story.”

He said Alberta must take “responsibility” for its successful marketing campaigns that lure Ontario’s housing needs.

Moffat said the province must also ensure that houses are built sustainably, rather than on wildfire roads and cannot give up its responsibility to fill social housing gaps.

“We all need both. We need a strong, strong private sector to deliver housing, but we also need governments to fill the gap,” he said.

Moffat said these provinces lag behind the map flood level and need to be held accountable for provincial legislation leading to higher development allegations.

He noted that the transcript was based solely on implementation policies and did not capture the impact of proposed legislation, such as Ontario Bill 17, which aims to speed up licensing and approvals, streamline development costs and fast track infrastructure projects.

The federal government’s Housing Accelerator Foundation encourages municipalities to streamline zoning rules to get more shovels on the ground, but progress has been made, but implementation tools are needed to make the city accountable after reaching a funding deal with Ottawa.

Moffat said he hopes to use a transcript framework to track progress on future housing goals and conduct separate studies to evaluate municipalities’ housing policies.

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Last modified: May 29, 2025

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