Colborne response acknowledged again

Photo taken by Age Cymru provided through Unsplash

By Cecilia Nasmith

Presenting the Northumberland County Housing Corporation annual report at Wednesday's meeting of county council's Social Services Committee, Associate Director of Housing and Homelessness Rebecca Snelgrove took a moment to extend special thanks to all who came through for the tenants who lost their homes in a Jan. 30 fire at their King Street apartment house in Colborne.

The fire at 8 King St. W. resulted in one fatality and left 20 people homeless, though the county soon found residential placements for all of them.

Thanks go to the tenants and their families, county staff and the community at large, Snelgrove said.

“I would just like to, once again, give my sincere thanks to the emergency-services professionals that responded, Cramahe Township, our partner agencies, board members, county staff – it's an honour and a privilege to continue to work alongside these people. And the work they have done following that tragic fire is remarkable.” she stated.

“You didn't mention yourself and your team, but I know you guys did an awful lot of work and responded really fast and had people with housing within a couple of days,” committee chair John Logel said.

The report listed properties at some stage of completion to become part of the NCHC portfolio, such as the one at 473 Ontario St. in Cobourg that will eventually offer 62 units of affordable and mixed-income housing.

It also outlined activity undertaken to extend and improve the useful life of NCHC assets such as hot-water tank replacements, structural repairs and smoke-detector replacements.

Annual housing and homelessness report by Homelessness Services Manager Bill Smith.

Committee member Olena Hankivsky asked if there were any way to tell how Northumberland County stacks up against similar municipalities in terms of such metrics as getting people off the affordable-housing waiting list.

This is hard to measure, Snelgrove said. Comparable size is less important than some historical factors. The fact is, 30 to 50 years ago, the county was underserved in terms of Federal and provincial support for rent-geared-to-income units. And the county saw much lower numbers of purpose-built rental properties built as well.

“What that means – there is an increase of pressure on the system to respond to that.

“We are also, compared to other communities our size, in closer proximity to the GTA, so we also have a higher demand for community housing and affordable housing – in a community that wasn't invested in 50 years ago to do that.”

The county is working hard to address the problem, currently with more than 100 units in some form of development (from design to construction). The redevelopment in Cobourg's Elgin Park project was completed last year, fitting the property out to accommodate 40 households instead of 18. They are always on the lookout to acquire small buildings to refit for use as transitional housing, and to bring developers on board to create affordable housing.

“But generally, across the province, wait lists are growing at the same level we are experiencing.”

It's challenging to address a 50-year-old disparity, she added.

“We do know anecdotally that folks looking for affordable housing often find affordable housing elsewhere. We are more expensive than Durham Region, Peterborough, Kawartha Lakes, Hastings County.”

Cobourg Mayor Lucas Cleveland (not a committee member, but sitting in) said that he is a renter himself, and can confirm prices are steep in his town. Rent for a one-bedroom condo can run $2,500 a month, he said, and it would cost twice that to rent a four-bedroom house.

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In Northumberland's housing, history is destiny