Skip to content

Mark Cassidy on affordable housing

It’s a familiar story in St. Albert. Young people strike out on their own to find something appropriate to their needs, including price range, and they end up moving elsewhere in the Capital Region.
Mark Cassidy
Mark Cassidy

It’s a familiar story in St. Albert.

Young people strike out on their own to find something appropriate to their needs, including price range, and they end up moving elsewhere in the Capital Region.

Young families looking for starter homes struggle to find something affordable in St. Albert. Some stay anyways, but others move away to places like Edmonton and Spruce Grove or Beaumont, where young populations are thriving.

Seniors want to downsize from the home where they raised families in to something more manageable. Are there options in St. Albert that meet those citizens’ needs?

Recently the previously No. 1 ranked place to live in Canada by MoneySense fell to fourth place. Part of the reason for St. Albert’s decline in the rankings? High housing prices generated by Alberta’s good economy.

“That does push prices up and makes it less affordable compared to other cities on our list,” said Sarah Efron, acting editor-in-chief of the magazine.

Dick Tansey, chair of the St. Albert Seniors United Now group told council back in March that affordable housing for seniors is badly needed in the city, urging council to approve a housing diversity action plan.

“The affordable housing situation in St. Albert is becoming more and more critical,” Tansey told council.

The housing diversity report highlighted a need for more housing options here in St. Albert. The report said there’s a need for more types of housing, some lower-price point homes and more rental options.

Median housing prices of single-family residential homes exceed the prices in other communities by more than $100,000, the report said.

This past fall, two young parents shared their struggle to find a starter home in St. Albert where they grew up. René Busque and his wife wanted to upsize from their condo but took a lot of time to find something in their price range, especially compared to what they could get in Edmonton.

“There were pretty substantial gaps,” Busque said in October.

It’s a consistently mentioned issue, so the Gazette asked the byelection candidates what they think can be done to increase the range of housing available.

Question:

How do you think St. Albert can develop a wider range of housing choices in order to keep young people and others from moving away?

Answers:

Mark Cassidy

Yes we can relax unit size requirements and implement higher density in our multi family zoning. Provide less restrictions on basement suites. Young adults adapt quite well to smaller accommodation and like affordability. Better transportation for commuting to and from urban centres. Have a demographic needs-based list to accommodate the demand. Providing the ideal urban community setting that allows them to work, dine and shop close to where they live.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks