欢迎访问爱城网
爱城网

爱城网

埃德蒙顿中文网

埃德蒙頓門戶網站
新闻» 加国新闻
埃德蒙顿中文网 埃德蒙顿中文网

爱城市长称赞联邦预算案对可负担住房和公交基础设施的投资

原始发布日期: 2017-03-23    发布者:玉山

           

Mayor Don Iveson pleased with federal budget investment on affordable housing

Don Iveson (left, Mayor of Edmonton) and Susan McGee (right, CEO, Homeward Trust Edmonton) discuss the progress being made to update Edmonton’s Plan to End Homelessness at City Hall on Monday March 13, 2017. (PHOTO BY LARRY WONG/POSTMEDIA)

Mayor Don Iveson is lauding the federal government's investment in affordable housing, which he said will "move the needle" on homelessness in Edmonton.

"It will mean the opportunity to do more projects like Londonderry (and) partner with the province to build more permanent supportive housing," he said Wednesday in an interview from Ottawa, where he's heading the Big City Mayors’ caucus of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. "It's a strong budget for cities."

The federal budget released Wednesday slated $11.2 billion for affordable housing in Canada over the next decade, with money coming from the government's social infrastructure fund.

"(It's) unprecedented in this generation to have the federal government so deeply re-engaged in affordable housing and social housing," Iveson said.

He also touted the government's $20.1-billion investment in public transit infrastructure over the next 11 years — Edmonton's share of that should be sufficient to fund the west leg of the LRT and the Blatchford LRT extension, he said.

But that news comes with an asterisk, Iveson said.

"The federal government will provide up to 40 per cent for new construction. We need the provincial government, ideally as they've long signalled out of the carbon fund, to match the federal government's increased level of commitment to transit.

"Otherwise the undue burden on property taxpayers will make it difficult for the City of Edmonton to keep up."

He said council will be able to set other transit extension priorities with additional funds once they know how much money they're working with.

The federal government is axing the public transit tax credit, which reimbursed transit users at tax time.

"I'm actually not sad to see that go," Iveson said, adding that it didn't help low-income riders. "I don't think it was actually an effective incentive and it only worked for people who ... had taxable income."

The federal budget also eliminated tax on naloxone, a life-saving drug used to treat people overdosing on fentanyl.

"Treating naloxone as an essential is only appropriate given the opioid crisis we are experiencing," Iveson said. "It's part of a larger suite of investments from the federal government on the opioid crisis that we're also pleased to see in the budget."
埃德蒙顿中文网 埃德蒙顿中文网 前一篇:特鲁多政府新预算说的多做的少
后一篇:村民为给省道“让路” 竟将自家三层楼平移150米(组图)

编辑注:新闻主要来自于摘录和编译。我们尽量给读者提供全面的信息。新闻并不反映本网的立场。