Friday, October 28, 2022

Housing Crisis

So, what part of the housing crisis are you more concerned about?  Are you worried about the middle class not being able to afford to buy or rent a house?  Are you concerned about young couples unable to get into the housing market?  Or are you concerned for the homeless getting shelter of any sort?  How about immigrants being able to find anywhere to live?  These are all facets of what is being billed as the housing crisis.

For example, this is the time of year when homeless people migrate to the west coast to places like Vancouver and Victoria to avoid freezing to death farther east.  This is not a new phenomenon.  I remember years ago when I lived in Victoria seeing people late in the evening huddled in store fronts along Douglas and Government Streets. 

But here is one thought about how we may alleviate some of these problems (remember there are not problems, there are only challenges).

In Pictou, Nova Scotia, there is a neighbourhood called Victory Heights.  It was built during the Second World War to house the influx of workers and their families who arrived in Pictou to work primarily in the local shipyard.  These houses were small, boxy little places largely constructed as prefabricated units.  In one form or another many are still there.  Go to almost any large or middle-class city in Canada and you will also see them.  In Peterborough, they were built to house mostly workers at the sprawling General Electric plant.  In Hamilton, it was for the steel plants and other defense industries.  And so it goes all across Canada.  All of these places were built between 1940 and 1944. Many of the remaining houses have been modernized and upgraded.  New brick or metal siding, added rooms. Some have even had a second stories added. And that is 80 years since they were first constructed as “temporary” housing.

So, does the wartime example give us an idea for dealing with the most dire parts of the crisis?  It could.  Suppose we had the political leadership to undertake this initiative and provided several thousand low-cost small housing units.  They don’t have to be single family dwellings but could be row houses or small apartment buildings but please, no high-rises that can blight a neighbourhood as witnessed by the many “projects” of the 60s and 70s which turned out to be complete social failures.  The idea would be to build these quickly with not a lot of embellishment.  What could it solve?  For the homeless, it can provide shelter of a permanent nature which can give people some hope and has shown to encourage people with mental and addiction problems to seek help and improve their lot.  For people just entering the housing market it can provide that first dwelling that they can provide a place of their own (no more adult kids in the basement?) and stability.  For immigrants it can provide a haven in their new country while they can find work and adapt to Canada.  It will also give immigrants a sense of belonging.  Success will come later.

So, whose stopping us?  Probably developers for one. They will determine that there is not enough profit in this for their stockholders.  So, give smaller contractors the opportunity to thrive.  It will take some degree of effort by all levels of government to resist developers’ lobbying, to provide the funding to get the projects started and provide monetary support, to resist Nimbyism, and to work together with each other to find solutions.  Short term support could provide long term benefits to just about everyone.  Why don’t we give it a try, not on a very small scale but on a reasonably large scale with projects in several large and small cities and towns.  It can’t be any worse than the present situation.

 

Saturday, October 22, 2022

The Trip

 

The Trip

Well, have you missed me?  I haven’t posted anything for several weeks because I have been on the trip.  The trip was an idea that my wife Denee, now deceased, and I mulled over for several years. We both loved train travel and this trip promised one of the best such travel.  But her growing dementia meant that we never made the trip together.  So, I decided to do it by myself this fall. 

The trip involved flying to Calgary and visiting my daughter, Robyn, and her family for almost a week.  Then I was to take the Rocky Mountaineers train trip from Banff to Vancouver on my way to Victoria to visit my son, Peter, and his family, again for almost a week.  I was then to fly home, initially direct from Vancouver.  That was the plan.  The trip was supposed to be from the 14th of September to the 29th.  Notice I said, “supposed to be”.  More of that later.

Oh, did I mention that the trip started by going to a Jays game with my son, Andrew who then drove me to a hotel near Toronto’s Pearson Airport?

One of the luxuries I allowed myself was to use almost all of my airline points to fly in business class in each direction.  I must admit I enjoyed that.  My knees just don’t fit in economy class anymore.

The first stop was Calgary to visit my daughter Robyn.  The day after I got there, I started sneezing and dripping which I thought at the time may have been allergies. There was some smoke in the air from forest fires.  But the symptoms got a bit worse, and I got a sore throat.  Robyn suggested I test for Covid which I did and guess what – I was positive.  I had had four shots and had avoided the disease for two and half years.  Of all the inconvenient time to get it.  So, isolation was in order.  What to do now?

Well, here was where a tablet and cell phone came in handy.  The first thing was the train trip.  I had to get a PCR test to prove Covid.  With that the people at the Rocky Mountaineer were very helpful in getting me booked on the trip a week later than originally planned.  So, that determined the rest of the timing.  So, hotel, flights and rental cars all had to be dealt from my isolation.  A few tweaks were made to the original plans which, as it turned out were for the better. 

I finally came out of isolation and had a few more days with my daughter and got a chance to see all of my family there including a charming young lady who seems to have got stuck with my grandson. 

If you ever want a wonderful travel experience, I greatly recommend the train trip on the Rocky Mountaineer.  It is truly a first-class experience.  You start with the excellent staff on each car.  On the Goldleaf car I was in, we had two hosts upstairs where you spend most of your time in the dome part.  Our two were not only knowledgeable and friendly but had only recently been married to each other.  Downstairs there is a dining room where you take breakfast and lunch (you are on your own at the hotel for dinner). There are two wait staff who look after you there plus two cooks in the galley. The meals served were excellent.  The hosts keep you informed about sites and history as you go.  And the scenery, if you have not seen it, is spectacular. From the high mountains of the four ranges through them to the many river valleys you traverse really is spectacular. This is a truly beautiful country we live in.  The only downside to the whole trip was a late arrival in Vancouver due to train traffic and a minor crew issue. 

So, then it was on to Victoria where I visited my son, Peter, and his lovely partner. I just got to his house and before I could even unpack anything, I whisked off to a Toronto Raptors pre-season practice game.  That was very unexpected.  In Victoria I had the chance to have lunches with a couple of old friends where we talked about old times, new times and told a few lies . . . er exaggerations. I also had dinner with very old friends that I hadn’t seen in years.  Getting caught up with family was the most important part of the visit.  I visited my grandson along with his new family where I got the friendliest reception.  His wife is expecting in November, and she insisted that I had to come back then to see the new baby.  She has nine-year old twin girls who I found to be very charming, particularly when they started calling me great-grand-dad. I also got to visit with my granddaughter who is my oldest grandchild.  She is a very free spirit and gives the best hugs. Unfortunately, it was then time to come home despite my son telling me I should stay longer.  The trip home by plane was uneventful.  Then I was home and was actually glad to be there. It had been a wonderful experience, but you have to come down to earth sometime.

I should probably mention that this trip came at the end of a summer of travel.  In June I was in Ottawa for a few days, July in Burlington, Ontario, August in Nova Scotia (for the internment of Denee’s remains), and again in August a few days in Markham, Ontario.  All were great trips to see friends and family apart from the sadness of burying Denee.

I wonder what next year will bring.

 

My Train Car

 


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