Housing/affordability top of mind heading into House of Commons fall sitting

The federal government is getting set for the fall sitting of the House of Commons and the local MP says housing and affordability will dominate discussions.

The fall session starts on Sept. 18.

Barrie-Innisfil MP John Brassard has been touring the region with Kootenay-Columbia MP Rob Morrison and says it is the topic on everyone’s mind.

“In my view, I think that’s going to dominate the fall session,” he said.

“I expect as we have over the course of the last couple of years that we are going to provide solutions to the government to deal with the housing and affordability crisis.”

As the opposition, Brassard said their job is to suggest solutions.

“We don’t hold the levers of power as the opposition,” he added.

“Our job is to not just hold the government to account, but it’s also to suggest and much of what we’re going to suggest will likely come out of our caucus meeting.

The housing/affordability issue is the number one issue and we’re going to do everything we can to work with the government and provide solutions to come up with something that we can do to help deal with this problem.”

Since the Liberals are in power they drive the legislative bus, but Morrison believes accountability should also be top of mind.

“I wish it was accountability. I just wish we could get some accountability out of this government. What have they done and what have they spent it on?”

“There was 40 billion that was spent in the previous budget and we asked where that money went and the answer was nothing we’re not telling you.”

The fall session wraps up on Dec. 15.

Josiah Spyker
Josiah Spyker
Josiah is an integral part of our East Kootenay team. Since joining Vista Radio in 2021, he has combined his love of community and sport in his reporting for the news team, while also stepping in as an on-air announcer.

Continue Reading

chnv Now playing play

ckkc Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

B.C. adds 5k jobs in June, led by gains in part-time work

British Columbia added 5,000 jobs in June but saw a dip in full-time employment, according to the latest jobs report from Statistics Canada. 

B.C. maintains decision to end drug coverage for girl with rare, fatal disease

B.C. is standing by the decision not to continue drug coverage for a Vancouver Island girl with a rare, fatal disease. 

Measles cases reported in B.C. this year top 100

B.C.’s health officials have said 102 cases of measles have been reported across B.C. so far this year, with most of those in the Northern Health region.

Puck drop date set for KIJHL season

The puck will drop on the 2025-26 KIJHL regular season on Friday, September 19, when the league’s 21 teams each embark on a 44-game schedule.

Council votes to bring Baker Street market back downtown

Following months of community debate and vendor frustration, Nelson’s Wednesday farmers market will return to it’s longtime home on Baker Street next week (July 16). 
- Advertisement -