July 21, 2006
Selling out, moving
on
The benefit package
in the North hasnt kept pace
JACKIE
WALLACE
For
Sale signs like these are popping up on houses all across Iqaluit this
year. (PHOTO BY JACKIE WALLACE)
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Iqaluit has become a far
less attractive place for people hoping to make a lot of money, says realtor
John Matthews.
That helps to explain why
the number of houses for sale in the city has climbed this summer, says Matthews,
owner of Atiilu Real Estate.
People used to come
here and make a large amount of money in a few years, but that is no longer
the case, he says. The benefit package in the North hasnt
kept pace with the benefit package in the South.
Just off the Road To Nowhere,
three houses in a stretch of seven have For Sale signs prominently
displayed.
Matthews currently has
nine single homes, four townhouses and one four-plex listed for sale. On a drive
around town, Nunatsiaq News noted a total of 21 For Sale
signs, including Atiilu properties and private sales.
With a transient population,
changes to the GNs staff housing policy and a strong economy down south,
Iqaluits real estate market could potentially have some tough times ahead,
according to Matthews.
Its a cyclical
market and it varies, says Matthews. That said, there are a lot
of houses on the market at the moment. Theres always a high turnover rate
in Iqaluit, but this year it does seem higher.
Although Matthews finds
it difficult to pinpoint trends or patterns for people deciding to put their
house up for sale, he says that common reasons include retirement, people selling
a second house that they own as an income property, and people looking to get
rid of their assets before moving.
But for some, leaving Iqaluit
is more a matter of quality of life. For Susan Smith, who has lived in Iqaluit
for 10 years, its just time to go.
Smith, her husband and
their three young children will be moving to Arnprior, just outside of Ottawa,
in September.
Weve put our
time in here, she says. A lot of our friends and family were leaving
and I think that is what makes the North.
For Smith, the decision
to move comes at a time when her children are getting older and she feels there
is more for them to do down south. Her sister-in-law is also moving her family
south as her daughters are approaching high school and she wants them in what
she sees as a better education system.
Although the market can
be difficult to predict, Matthews sees reasonably priced houses in good locations
selling quickly while some of the higher priced houses on the market can take
a long time to sell.
When Smith put her six-bedroom
home in Upper Tundra Valley on the market for $460,000 a month and a half ago,
she got a call and the house was sold within two hours. Her sister-in-law sold
her house by the beach in Lower Base after three weeks.
Under the new GN staff
housing policy, rents began rising toward market levels this past Jan. 1, in
the first of a step-by-step set of increases, and in Iqaluit, the GN will get
out of staff housing altogether by 2010.
Most people from
the south are hesitant to buy property until they have been here for a while,
Matthews says. I think the government will really have to reexamine this.
Under this policy, Matthews
sees there is less incentive for people to come north and less disposable income
to spend on the high cost of real estate once they get here.
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