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NDP announces housing plan that would cover 40% of price of new home

Loan plan for middle-income earners 91Ƶcloser to a student loan91Ƶ says Premier David Eby
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B.C. Premier David Eby speaks in Cloverdale Sept. 25. Eby announced a new housing plan where potential homeowners can apply for a low-cost loan to cover 40 per cent of their housing purchase.

B.C. Premier David Eby was in Surrey Sept. 25 to announce a new housing loan plan.

The B.C. NDP unveiled a provincewide plan to offer low-interest loans to middle-income renters. The loans would cover 40 per cent of the purchase price of a new home for those that qualify.

91ƵEverywhere I go, families tell me they dream of buying their first home, but decades of rampant speculation in the market has put it out of reach for too many,91Ƶ said Eby. 91ƵOur plan will make that dream come true for thousands of first-time, middle-class homebuyers by substantially reducing the listing price and the mortgage you will pay.91Ƶ

Called 91ƵOpening Doors to Homeownership,91Ƶ Eby said the plan will add 25,000 homes over the next five years, or 5,000 per year.

He said the provincial contribution will be repaid91Ƶas will a share of the appreciation of the home when the owner sells the unit91Ƶwhich will finance the next generation of homeowners.

91ƵThe benefit of this plan means that people will be able to buy with a smaller down payment, the monthly payments will be lower and will be affordable, and taxpayers will be protected,91Ƶ he said. 91ƵIf home values go up, revenue to the public goes up, and resources for more affordable housing projects is more available. If housing prices go down, taxpayers are protected. This is a loan91Ƶthis is not a grant91Ƶand the homeowner pays interest on it just like they would any other kind of  financing.91Ƶ

Eby said there will be strict income and asset rules for people to qualify. He said applicants have to be in rental housing. He also said he doesn91Ƶt think the scheme will increase housing costs91Ƶin that multiple buyers will all of the sudden have a greater ability to purchase a property, thereby forcing up the market value of homes.

91ƵFunctionally, it91Ƶs a loan to the homeowner that is registered against the property,91Ƶ Eby explained. 91ƵThe homeowner pays interest on that loan to the government91Ƶit91Ƶs 1.5 per cent over the period of the loan91Ƶand also the government participates in the equity increase. If the home value goes up, taxpayers participate in that to the value of the contribution, which is 40 per cent of the increase in the equity.91Ƶ

Eby called the loan program 91Ƶinnovative91Ƶ and likened it to post-secondary education loans.

91ƵIt91Ƶs treated differently than any other kind of capital expense, in terms of government finances, because it's actually, in a financial sense, it91Ƶs a loan, so it91Ƶs closer to a student loan,91Ƶ Eby explained. 91ƵIt creates a flow of revenue for the government to invest in future affordable housing initiatives.91Ƶ

Eby said he didn91Ƶt think the program could be a back door for the province to get itself into the housing market if participants in the program defaulted on their mortgage and the property was repossessed.

91ƵIt91Ƶs possible that that scenario could happen,91Ƶ Eby told the Cloverdale Reporter. 91ƵBut given the structure of the program, and the income qualifications people have to have to participate, we think the risk of default will be quite low among qualified home buyers.91Ƶ

The plan could see up $1.29 billion per year in financing provided to prospective homeowners.

According to the NDP, 91ƵBuyers only need to secure financing for 60 per cent of the market price. This would mean a two-bedroom condo that would normally cost $1 million would be accessible at a price of just $600,000.91Ƶ

Applicants with an annual household incomes of less than $131,950 would qualify. The government's 40 per cent loan would have to be paid back when the property was sold, or after 25 years.



Malin Jordan

About the Author: Malin Jordan

Malin is the editor of the Cloverdale Reporter.
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