June 11, 2004
Income scale change
could double some Nunavik rents
New policy to push high-income
families to build homes
JANE
GEORGE
Watson
Fournier, manager of the Kativik Municipal Housing Bureau in Kuujjuaq. (FILE
PHOTO))
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Last week councillors with
the Kativik Regional Government got a preview of a new social housing rent scale
that will see some tenants paying twice as much as they pay now.
The rent increases didn't
surprise the councillors.
"They knew that the
region has no choice but to accept what is to happen, that is the gradual implementation
of a rent scale," said Larry Watt, the KRG's director of communications.
Nunavik's new rent scale
will be phased in over 15 years, starting next year.
Since 1980, rents have
only gone up by one or two per cent a year.
But, from July 2005 on,
most rents will rise as much as 10 per cent a year until the amount nearly equals
monthly household costs for a similar-sized, privately-owned dwelling in Nunavik.
"In 15 years, the
people who are renting a three-bedroom house should be paying 85 per cent of
what the homeowner is," said Watson Fournier, manager of the Kativik Municipal
Housing Bureau in Kuujjuaq.
The idea is to kick-start
home ownership in Nunavik by encouraging higher-income residents to build their
own homes.
Nunavik already has an
affordable housing program that subsidizes home ownership costs.
But, due to the low social
housing rents, many high-income earners are reluctant to leave the region's
2,000 social housing units.
Social housing rents now
vary from about $120 to $400 a month at the very most, depending on the size
of the unit. Households receiving social assistance pay slightly less rent for
a unit.
Under the new scale, elders
will have a fixed low rent.
Other households who find
the new base rent too high can apply for an adjustment to no more than 25 per
cent of their adjusted income.
In other regions of Quebec,
rents for social housing units are set at 25 per cent of income, according to
a complex scale that requires information about every penny coming into the
household.
Nunavik agreed to revise
the rent scale as part of the multi-million dollar Canada-Quebec-Nunavik deal
in 2001 to build 240 new social housing units in Nunavik.
"That's what we said
we'd do in exchange for houses," Fournier said.
Fournier said households
with lower incomes probably won't see much of a difference in their rents under
the new scale.
Elders should see a drop,
but high-income earners, who may now be paying only four per cent of their income
in rent, will be paying much, much more.
The new rent scale may
also be implemented with a new rent scale for tenants of dwellings that belong
to Nunavik employers.
The proposed rental increase
reflects the KMHB's business-like approach to managing its social housing units.
The housing bureau has taken 600 tenants to the Quebec rental board for rent
arrears and, in many cases, is now using garnishees to recover unpaid rent from
income assistance and wages.
A community consultation
is scheduled for next August and September to explain the new rental scale in
more detail to Nunavimmiut.
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