Bill Hulet Editor


Here's the thing. A lot of important Guelph issues are really complex. And to understand them we need more than "sound bites" and knee-jerk ideology. The Guelph Back-Grounder is a place where people can read the background information that explains why things are the way they are, and, the complex issues that people have to negotiate if they want to make Guelph a better city. No anger, just the facts.

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Affordable Housing in Guelph: Home Ownership

In my last blog post I tried to explain how the rental housing stock in the city has completely "decoupled" from the needs of the lower 26% income earning households in the city. I also showed how even lower-middle class people---like single working mothers with children in childcare---would find it extremely difficult to find an apartment that would be considered "affordable". This part of the article will deal with home ownership.

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According to the 2016 census, 70.2% of Guelph households own their own home. This is a decline from 72.1 in 2006. In addition, across Canada there seems to be a generational shift in ownership taking place, as in 2006 72.2% of seniors owned their homes, versus 74.6% in 2016. Conversely, every cohort under 65% saw it's percentage of home ownership decline. To understand this phenomenon, consider that in 1981 that 55.5% of people age 30 owned their own homes in Canada, versus only 50.2% in 2016.

One way of understanding this change is to look at the cost of home ownership broken down by year.

Cost of a single detached house in Guelph (click on image for bigger version),
from Guelph & District Association of REALTORS
fair use copyright provision.


As you can see, in 2001 ("Q1" just means "first quarter of the year") the median price of a home in Guelph was something like $160,000---now it appears to be over $540,000! And be careful to realize that this is a median price, not an average. That means half of the houses for sale were more than $540,000. It isn't the case of a small number of hyper-expensive mansions drawing up an average with a lot more much cheaper homes. Take note of the time frame between 2011 and 2016, this isn't an extension of the constant arithmetic progression between 2000 and 2015, it changes the curve and starts to look like an asymptote (think crazy exponential growth.)

Let's look at the same time frame for something generally considered cheaper:  townhouses.

Cost of a row house in Guelph (click on image for bigger version),
from Guelph & District Association of REALTORS
fair use copyright provision.
As you can see, almost exactly the same phenomenon is at work, only at a lower price:  the median cost for a row house in 2000 was about $125,000 and in 2018 it has risen to about $425,000!

It's important to compare the increase in house prices to household income. The median family income in Canada in 2000 was $50,080 and in 2015 it had risen to $80,940 ($81,480 in Ontario.) At the same time the median price of a single detached home in Guelph had risen from something like $160,000 to over $400,000! (And please notice that 2015 is the last year before the slope on the graph dramatically angles upwards.) Obviously, this wild growth in house prices is not being driven by an equally dramatic increases in people's wages. 

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Why has the cost of a house risen so dramatically? There are a variety of potential suspects. First, it could be that the cost of borrowing money has declined so much that people are just taking on bigger debts because it costs so much less to borrow. Second, it could be that the new restrictions on urban sprawl have cut access to land so competition has increased for space. Third, it could be that people are using real estate as an investment and we are currently in the middle of a financial "bubble".

What have the mortgage rates been like from 2000 to 2018?

Image from RateHub.ca, used under Fair Use provision.
Click for a larger size.
As you can see from the above chart for a five year mortgage, rates have been declining slightly, but mostly stable during the time that housing prices have been exploding. It's important to remember, that even with low rates the cost of borrowing can be quite high. Just looking at the Toronto Dominion Bank website I see that they are offering a 10 year fixed rate of 6.1% and a five year variable rate closed (you are limited about how much principle you can pay in a year) of 2.85%. Let's say a person borrows $100,000 at 6.1% for ten years, that means that if you pay it off over ten years, you would have to pay $256/week and at the end of that time you would have paid $33,112 in interest. At 2.85%, it is $221/week and $14,847 in interest.

Ten years is a rather fast pay down, though. So let's look at what happens if you expand the time of pay down to 25 years. Let's also look at the median price of a single detached home in Guelph, $540,000, with a 20% down payment, which cuts the mortgage down to $432,000. At that point, 6.1% translates to $643/week and the interest costs $403,297. And, at 2.85%, it comes to $464/week and $170,848 in interest. This means that at 6.1% over 25 years a $540,000 home in Guelph costs $943,297 and at 2.85%, $710,848. (I've been using the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation's Mortgage interest calculator to come up with these numbers.)

Ever wonder why some people are upset about banks?
Image from Pixabay, registered public domain. 
Even at today's interest rates borrowing money for a mortgage is really expensive. So borrowing a huge amount of money at a slightly lower rate of interest is hardly any great cost saving over borrowing less at a higher rate. I think it is safe to say that house prices are not going up primarily because of low prime rates---although it might have some effect.

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Recently the leader of the Conservative Party of Ontario, Doug Ford, raised the idea that the big reason why housing prices have gone up is because land has been preserved in the Ontario Greenbelt.



It appears that when he made these statements, he was just parroting a line being promoted by developers. This is important to remember because even though Ford backed down under pressure from the public once the above video was leaked to the Toronto Star, readers should remember that this is one of those unique opportunities that ordinary people have to see what big business people really think---instead of what their public relations people tell us. Ford---in his usual ill-informed way---seems to think that land is just land, and we can easily trade off one "farmer's field" for another. But as I've pointed out in my article about the Greenbelt, the land being preserved by it mostly consists of unique types of geography that simply cannot be found anywhere else and which serves vital needs for the province's citizens: the Oak Ridges moraine, the Holland Marsh, and, the Niagara Tender Fruit Belt. 

Beyond this issue, the idea that we can just "build out" of the present situation misses the consensus among urban thinkers that suburban sprawl is just too expensive to service. Here's an interesting graphic that illustrates the differences in servicing costs per household that comes from Halifax. (Click on the image to get a larger version and read the fine print.)

From the Smart Prosperity Institute
Image used under Fair Use provision of copyright law.

The other thing to remember is that commuting back and forth to work by car is not a trivial expense. According to the CAA auto cost calculator, an annual commute between Guelph and Brampton (73 kilometers) in a new compact car will cost $7,730/year. If you live in the burbs, you'd better consider doubling that, as your spouse will probably need a car too---and unless you are very well off, you need a spouse's income to afford a house. So now we are at $15,460 or $297/week. If you don't remember, that's more than it cost to pay off a $100,000 mortgage over ten years according the calculations I mentioned in the section about the cost of borrowing money. The cost of commuting by car is now at the point where you simply cannot "drive your way out" of real estate costs.

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This leaves the question of whether or not we are in the midst of a housing bubble. An economic bubble is when the price of a commodity goes up beyond it's intrinsic value. Generally, this comes about because a consensus arises that the items in question will continue to go up in price, so people keep paying more and more for them on the expectation that prices will continue to rise. The classic historical example of this was the "tulip mania" that took place in Holland during the early 17th century. At it's height, one prized bulb could be sold for as much as 10 times the annual income of a skilled worker---which would be something like $1,000,000 in today's money. The thing to remember about bubbles is that they aren't strictly speaking irrational, because if someone gets into a bubble, they can make a lot of money---as long as they know when to get off the merry-go-round.

Tulip bulbs---each one worth $1,000,000!
Public domain image c/o Wiki Commons

Consider that insanely expensive flower bulb. If someone pays $100,000 for it and sells it at $1,000,000 they are a canny investor who just made $900,000! Lest this sound like something far fetched, I have an friend who has made a LOT of money off a couple recent bubbles. I can remember before the 2008 stock market crash him ranting and raving about the way the way the US stock market was tied to a crazy real estate bubble and he was chewing his finger nails off trying to figure out when he should dump his stocks and put them in something else. Sell too soon and he'd lose lots of potential earnings, sell too late and he would lose a lot of money. After the crash, I bumped into him and asked him about how his investments were faring. He said he was doing fine---he'd sold out and bought shares in Canadian banks and said he thought that they would pick up some undervalued holdings in the USA. A few years before that, he came over to show me his fancy new sports car that he picked up when Jim Flaherty announced that he was axing the "Income Trust" investment vehicle. He had invested against the promises by Stephen Harper that the conservatives would keep this tax loophole---even though it was costing the government huge amounts of money in tax revenue.

The key point that my savvy investor friend has made to me is that whenever he makes an investment decision like this, the "professionals" always try to talk him out of doing it. They invariably say that the there is still lots of room for improved earnings. In effect, they say that the tulip bulb will continue to increase in value---maybe up to $2,000,000! The other thing that this guy says is that he makes investment decisions based on what the front page of the newspaper says, not the financial section. In both cases, what he means is that bubbles are examples of "Groupthink".  That is, when a consensus emerges inside an institution or body of people that refuses to think about an issue based on evidence and doesn't consider minority points of view. Instead, they look towards each other for reinforcement---especially when it reinforces a point of view that promises rewards for those that hold it. In his case, the people who were making money selling investments to people---both in brokerage offices and as reporters for the financial sections of newspapers---had a vested interest (primarily unconscious) in promoting the idea that "the sky was the limit" for both NINJA mortgages and Income Trusts. I'm sure much the same thing happened in the 16th century Netherlands.

In the case of real estate, I once had a conversation with a fellow at my day job that pretty much epitomizes the Groupthink. I suggested that real estate was over-valued, his response was "houses NEVER go down in price". I suppose the reason he said that was because in his personal experience he'd never seen a house decline in price. Unfortunately, a lot of people actually believe this. If you do, take a look at the following graph of Toronto housing prices (in constant 2017 dollars.)

Image from "TorontoHomesforSale.com",
Fair Use Provision.

If you see the graph, there are two peaks---one in 1974 and another in 1989. These are when housing bubbles crashed and house prices declined. (I bought my house after the 1989 one.) Yes, Virginia, houses do go down in price. 

The important issue with regard to housing is that there is a very strong tendency towards Groupthink because of two factors. First, for most people their home is the only real investment that they make. That means that there is a strong fear that if they don't buy a house, they will never have any sort of financial security in their lives. Secondly, there are very strong ideological and emotional ties to the concept of home ownership. The iconic image of a good family life is the white picket fence and a grassy backyard for "the children to play in". A lot of people literally think that if they cannot provide a single detached home they have failed as human beings and are committing some sort of child abuse.   

Yup, this is the "bare minimum"---anything less means failure as a parent!
Public Domain image c/o the Wiki Commons

The thing to remember about a bubble is that the key issue is whether or not what you pay for a thing exceeds its intrinsic value. I previously did some calculations for a median priced ($540,000) single detached house in Guelph. I assumed that there was a 20% down payment, which means that the real value of the money borrowed was $432,000. I also assumed a 25 year pay-off window. I worked this out according to the highest rate of interest I could find, 6.1%, which meant that borrowing cost was $403,000 in interest; and; the lowest rate I could find, 2.85%, which translated into $171,000 in interest. In 25 years there are 300 months, which means that the interest charges come to $1340/month at 6.1% interest, and, $570/month at 2.85%. That interest per month is the amount of money you are paying to "rent" the house you are living in while paying off your $432,000 in equity.  What really is useful to think about, however, is to compare these monthly interest payments to the average rent payments that I talked about in my last article.

  • bachelor apartment: $750
  • one bedroom: $980
  • two bedroom: $1,124
  • three bedroom: $1200
  • average cost of an apartment: $1,066
As you can see, just the cost of the interest that people pay for buying a house compares very favourably to the rent that people are paying for apartments in Guelph. This means that if a person can scrape together a good down payment and afford to pay the full mortgage costs (interest plus principle) buying a home is still intrinsically a good thing---if the housing market doesn't crash and the cost of borrowing doesn't increase dramatically. And it is even better if houses still keep increasing in value. I would suggest, therefore, that no, Guelph isn't in a classic housing bubble. But having said that, I doubt if there is a lot of room for houses to increase at the wild rate that they have over the last ten years. I expect the prices to plateau and maybe even decline slightly.

Of course, in the calculations above I haven't taken into account the cost of paying off the principle, which is $1,440/month. But if a person can afford it, that really isn't a cost because it is money that they are paying themselves. It is an investment into personal equity. But that is pretty cold comfort to someone if they have trouble making those monthly payments of $2,780/month at 6.1% or $2,010/month at 2.85% (interest plus principle.)

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I recently heard a podcast by "Canadaland" where Jesse Brown interviewed a professor where they talked about the impact of modern technology on journalism. One of the ideas that really caught my attention is that the news consumer market always consisted of two streams. The first consists of 'hip' people like the readers of "The Guelph-Back-Grounder" who were always interested in getting more in-depth information than was ever provided by newspapers. Others are people who only ever picked up news as a "by-product" of other interests. They are the people who bought a subscription to the local paper for "match, hatch, and, dispatch" (marriage, birth, and, death notices), and would glance at the front page along the way. They are also the people who would watch a sitcom and suffer through the tv news because they were too lazy to get off the couch and every other channel had news on at the same time anyway.

The internet and sources like "The Guelph-Back-Grounder" is providing better information than newspapers and tv newscasts ever did. For the hip folks like the people reading this blog, there has never been a better time for news. But, unfortunately, for the folks who never actively sought out news, this is the worst time ever. There is no paper providing "match, hatch, and, dispatch" anymore---so they never get exposed to the front page stuff. And with Netflix and the 1,000 channel universe you never end up sitting through a news cast because there's nothing else on. These are the people who believe that the Pope endorsed Donald Trump and the Hilary Clinton is a pedophile who buys children from a Washington Pizzeria. I suspect that they are also the people who are going to vote for Doug Ford in the next election.

One way you can push against this tendency is to share real information with the crazy members of your family. And the way to do this is very simple---simply share "The Guelph-Back-Grounder" on social media. Share it on Twitter, share it on FaceBook, if you see it on Reddit, vote it "up". Push back against the paid advertising and the trolls from Russia, by simply sharing real news instead of just complaining about the fake stuff.

Oh, one last thing you can do---support "The Guelph-Back-Grounder" financially. You can commit to a monthly micro-payment through Patreon or make a one-time payment through the "tip jar". (Thanks to Douglas for your payment after the last post---you are awesome!) You may think I am a filthy capitalist scumbag who doesn't deserve a sou, but the fact is that unless people will pay for real news you are eventually going to get nothing except propaganda on the web. And believe me, that would suck mightily! 


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As I mentioned before, Stats Canada says that the median household income in Ontario is $81,480. In the last post I brought up a graphic from the Credit Counselling Society which I think bears another look: 

Image added under the Fair Use provision.

If you look at the pie chart there are three elements that refer to purchasing a house:  housing, savings, and, dept payments. Let's consider a couple of people who earn the median income of $81,480, that means that the 35% of their income that the Credit Counselling Society believe should go to housing comes to $28,518. Divide that by 12 and you get $2,377/month. That comes pretty close to the numbers I came up with in the above at 6.1% ($2,780) and 2.85% ($2,010). Having said that, it is very important to remember that these are just the numbers for paying principle and interest. There are significant other costs that come from owning a home:  taxes, insurance, maintenance, and, renovations. But having said that, the $540,000 home that I based all of this calculation on is a median-priced, single detached house. This means that half of the single detached houses in Guelph sold for less than that. It also means that there are cheaper options, such as row houses, duplexes, semi-detached, and, condos---most of which are cheaper than fully detached houses. It is also possible to cut the costs of maintenance and renovation by doing the work yourself. 

It is also important to understand, however, that the money that people spend on buying a house is not completely "housing". It is also a form of "savings", and, paying off a mortgage is also a form of "debt". So if you follow the pie chart above, you could say say that what people really put into their homes could be as high as 60% of their income (35% housing, 15% debt repayment, and, 10% savings). And 60% of $81,480 comes to $48,890 or $4,074/month, which makes home ownership seem a lot more affordable. Of course, not a lot of people are going to want---or even be able---to devote 60% of their income to buying a place to live, but it is important to realize the implications of the numbers. It isn't much fun to scrimp and save for decades in order to buy your own home, but lots of our parents did the same thing---and the result is what usually is the biggest chunk of personal wealth that anyone owns.

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It seems to me that the real problem we are facing in Guelph is wealth stratification. That is, people who can afford to buy a house can use that purchase to amass more wealth in the form of equity whereas the people who cannot will end up just losing all the money that they pay in the form of rent. Luckily the CMHC has provided household income tables that break down Guelph residents into increments of $20,000. (Unfortunately, the latest numbers are from 2011, but I think it shows a trend that if anything has gotten worse since then.)

  • less than $20,000/year, 5,770 or 10.5%
  • $20,000 to $40,000, 8,320 or 15%
  • $40,000 to $60,000, 8,920 or 16%
  • $60,000 to $80,000, 7,635 or 14%
  • $80,000 to $100,000, 6,690 or 12%
  • $100,000 and over, 17,530 or 32%
As you can see, 44% of Guelph's households make $80,000/year or more. These are the people who can buy homes without enormous personal sacrifice---depending on what they buy. People making less than $20,000/year can't even find a place to rent. But what about the households making between $20,000 and $80,000/year? That comes out at 45% of the population. These folks have to compete with the upper 44% for houses to buy and it can be tremendously frustrating to never find anything you can afford, even though you are making what used to be considered not a bad income. There are a lot of issues raised by this, but this post is already getting rather long, so I'll save that stuff for a future article. 

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Affordable Housing in Guelph: Rental Housing Stock

A while back a friend of mine who lives in rent-geared-to-income contacted me all a fluster about a change that is taking place in her housing complex. Until recently, she received access to a washing machines and driers as part of her "rent", but it was announced that this was going to change to a "pay-as-you-go" system. The costs are less than what a commercial laundry mat would charge, but not that much less. To middle-class people like myself, this is a trivial amount of money, but to the people in this complex, it is a very big deal because it comes out of their very small pool of disposable income. What I found surprising about this situation is that this was a significant change in the cost of living in the complex, but had no impact on the formula that provides a subsidy to the rent. After some research, it turns out that the formula specifically refers to the actual unit of housing---nothing else is considered to be intrinsic to the subsidy. That means that any sort of "side benefit"---like access to laundry---is something that the people who manage the property can use to raise more money.

I recently called my friend to see how things are going, and she says that there was such a big "push-back" against this change that management has put the change on hold and things are continuing as they were before. But this incident got me thinking about affordable housing in general terms and I thought I'd write a story about it.

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The Different Types of Housing

The first thing that needs to be spelled-out is that there are a huge number of different types of housing. These include:

  • single, detached homes
  • apartments
  • condos, co-ops, and, tenancy in common
  • "social" housing---like seniors centres, group homes, nursing homes, etc
  • boarding and rooming houses
  • emergency housing---such as shelters for the homeless
And, of course, some of these types of housing can be split into into whether they are owned, rented, or, subsidized through systems like rent-geared-to-income.

To a certain extent all of these different types of housing have an impact on each other. For example, if the price of single, detached homes goes up it tends to increase demand for apartments because increasing numbers of people cannot afford to purchase a home, so instead they seek to rent. Similarly, if the supply of cheap rooming houses dries up, this increases demand for social housing and emergency shelters. Another element to consider is the demand by university students for seasonal housing, as they place significant demand on the lower end of affordable housing. One final issue to consider are the number of people who choose to live outside of the city and commute to Guelph for work---and the opposite. Add in planning regulations that detail what sort of homes that developers are allowed to build in what quantity. There are also several federal and provincial programs aimed at providing relatively cheap accommodation for people of limited means. The result if is a very complex, inter-dependent "ecosystem" decides whether or not any given person can afford a good place to live.

The Current Guelph Housing Stock

According to the latest figures (2011) from the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation, Guelph has:
  • 32,265 single detached homes
  • 2,265 semi-detached 
  • 6,425 row houses
  • 2,485 duplexes (these are houses with units that are more apartment-like than semi-detached which are more like single detached homes that share one common wall)
  • 5,790 low-rise apartments (five stories or less)
  • 5,265 high-rise apartments (more than five stories)
  • 380 "other" (these include things like mobile homes and single-attached houses) (I looked and looked and could not find a good definition of a "single-attached house"---so your guess is as good as mine. Since 350 of the 380 "others" are in the townships and nothing at all in the city proper, I suspect that the vast majority of this number are mobile homes at trailer parks---which do not exist in Guelph proper.) 
According to Google Images, these are "single-attached" houses.
To me, they just look like row houses that have been separated out.
From a real estate site called "my property". Fair use provision.
The result is 54,870 structures for habitation. Please note that these figures say nothing about how these buildings are owned.  In 2011, according to Statistics Canada, the population of Guelph and townships was 140,000. This averages out to 2.6 citizens per unit of housing, so these numbers pass that basic "smell test".

Rental Units: Vacancy and Pricing

As of 2011 CMHC says that there were 7,040 condominiums. These would be spread through the row houses, and, low/high-rise apartments---as that form of ownership makes no sense for the other structures. Since it is safe to assume that any low or high-rise apartment building that isn't a condominium, is a rental apartment, that leaves 4,015 unambiguous apartments (5,790 plus 5,265 minus 7,040.) Unfortunately, CMHC has no numbers about how many row houses are condos or rental units, how many condos are being rented out by their owners (a very common phenomenon), or, how many of the various other types of house are being rented out, so there are no real numbers about how large the rental pool really is. 

There are, however, numbers about the size of the vacancy rate (for October 2017):

  • One-bedroom apartments: 1.3%
  • Two-bedroom apartments: 1.0%
  • Three-bedroom apartments: 2.2%
When we look at those numbers it is important to understand that these are just the numbers of units that are currently empty. As such they are a snapshot of any given moment, but not a real picture of the actual market. When people are looking for a place to live they are rarely in the situation of having no place at all to sleep and need something immediately. Instead, they are seeking a place within a given time frame. For example, if I want to move to some place that suits me more than where I currently reside, I will look at places that already have people in them, but who have already given their notice to their land lords. Landlords don't want their properties to sit empty. It's important to understand a second number when looking at housing:  the availability rate. That is, the number of units that are currently unoccupied (vacancy) plus the ones where the current occupants have given notice to their landlords that they plan to move out by a certain date (availability.) I'm just speculating, but seems to me that since every other element of economy has used computers to squeeze out unused capacity (just-in-time manufacturing, uber, air bnb, etc) I suspect that landlords are using things like gottarent.com, padmapper.com, and, gscrentals.com to lower the vacancy rate by making sure that their units are never empty. As a result, I think that the availability rate is probably now more important than vacancy.


Looking at the CMHC numbers for October 2017, the availability rates are:

  • One-bedroom apartments: 2.8
  • Two-bedroom apartments: 2.0
  • Three-bedroom apartments: 3.0
What this means is that between 2 and 3 percent of the units in Guelph are available for rent when a person is looking for a place to live.

Of course, there's no comfort in there being an apartment to rent if you cannot afford it. So let's look at the average rent for an apartment in Guelph as of October 2017:
  • bachelor apartment: $750
  • one bedroom: $980
  • two bedroom: $1,124
  • three bedroom: $1200
  • average cost of an apartment: $1,066
Now please remember that these numbers are only for the primary rental market. CMHC points out that there also exists a secondary market. These are things like condominiums that people bought as investments and rent out, and, illegal rental housing. This is not an insignificant part of the rental market, although a great deal of it is devoted to seasonal rental to students. Unfortunately, CMHC has no data for this type of housing.

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A while back someone on a social media page was talking about the importance of supporting the people who are trying to fill the void created by the final elimination of "The Guelph Mercury" as a real newspaper. He didn't mention "The Guelph-Back-Grounder" until I reminded him, but then stepped up and seconded my suggestion. Another person grudgingly suggested "yes, it does provide a useful synopsis of facts". I was a little annoyed, but not much (the guy has lots of cred with me for the work he does.) But thinking about this, it struck me that it's important to understand exactly what I'm trying to do with the "Back-Grounder".

It's important to understand the difference between a "journalist" and a "reporter". I've been told by people with a lot of time in the profession that I am one of the former, not the latter. A reporter is someone who gets an assignment and goes off to interview news-makers and then reports what they heard and saw to the public. In other words, they collect a segment of basic information to share with readers. A journalist, on the other hand, tries to assimilate a large amount of information in order to develop a nuanced picture of a social issue in order to create a complex narrative that explains the issue to readers. Of course, the separation of the two jobs is to a certain extent conceptual rather than hermetic---I sometimes interview people for these articles and reporters sometimes do research. But both jobs are equally important.

Unfortunately, when a news resource is under financial stress, journalism gets cut away before reporting does---simply because it is a lot more expensive to do. A
reporter can charge off and knock out several "he-said, she-said" stories in one day. A journalist can easily work for a month or more on one in-depth article. There is, however, a significant market for in-depth, newsletters. These generally deal with very narrow parts of the economy and are either subsidized by the industry or hide behind very expensive pay walls. (To cite one example, a friend of mine used to publish one of these newsletters---about recycling---that was paid for by a mysterious "patron".) What I am trying to do with the "Back-Grounder" is to create a Patreon-supported newsletter that helps all the citizenry understand the problems that Guelph faces---so they can do a better job of participating in our local democratic governance.  As such, I'm doing something that never really has been tried before. I hope that if I can built a significant audience of paying readers, that the business model will be "proved" and the enterprise won't just collapse when I finally get burned out and move on to something else (or die.) So if you like what I'm doing here, why not put up a token amount of money to support it? Even a dollar a month---$12 a year---works as "proof of concept", and, is a lot less than a subscription to the old "Mercury" would have cost you.  


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Of course, just saying that that a type of rental housing costs so much money doesn't mean anything unless you have a handle on the household income in Guelph. Luckily, the CMHC has that number too.
  • less than $20,000/year: 3,945 or 26%
  • $29,000 to $39,999/year: 4,225 or 28%
  • $40,000 to $59,999/year: 2,905 or 19%
  • $60,000 to $79,999/year: 1,760 or 12%
  • $80,000 to $99,999/year: 990 or 7%
  • $100,000 and over: 1,090 or 7%
  • Total renting households: 15,010
It's really important to remember that these numbers are how much a households makes, not how much their rent is. It's obviously true that there aren't going to be many apartments where the renters can't afford their rent---but it might be true that a significant number of people are living in places that are quite cheap compared to their income.

And, of course, it is important to have an understanding of what percentage of your income should go towards housing. That's a bit of a judgement call, but here's how the Credit Counselling Society says people should break up their living expenses:
From the Credit Counselling Society website,
image c/o "Fair Use" copyright provision.

Right away I think people should be able to see a problem. 26% of Guelph households make $20,000/year or less. This means that according to the Credit Counselling Society they should be setting aside $7,000/year (or less), or, $583/month (or less) for rent. Yet as we have seen above, the lowest price units for a household---a bachelor apartment (which are extremely rare)---averages $750/month. In effect, the primary mechanism that the city has committed to for providing housing (the development industry) is not properly servicing a little over one quarter of Guelph's households. 

I am assuming that the majority of people living on less than $20,000/year are people in some sort of financial difficulty because of some sort of "issue" in their lives (ie: age, physical or mental illness, chronic under or unemployment, etc) since a full time job at the minimum wage should provide something like $29,000 in gross pay ($14x40x52=$29,120.)  It could be argued that the govt should be providing housing for these people through some sort of social housing system---but unfortunately, the problems programs that do exist are woefully underfunded. (More about this in a later post.)

It's important to understand that most families can't live in a bachelor apartment. Nor do they usually want a room-mate to help with the rent. (This is the workaround most people without great jobs use to afford a place to live.) That's why it's important to consider the special case of single working parents. Statistics Canada says that in 2011, 20% of families had only one parent. Of those, the average income by single mothers was $35,700. (Single fathers, in contrast, averaged out at $55,500---that's an interesting figure to consider, but beyond the scope of this article.)  35% of $35,700 is $12,495, divide that by 12 and you get $1041/month for rent. As I quoted above, in Guelph the average cost for a 2 bedroom apartment is $1,124 and a 3 bedroom one is $1200. This isn't as bad as the 26% of household earning $20,000 or less that I mentioned above, but it probably still means that a lot of single mothers with average jobs find themselves in a situation where they have to count every penny in order to live some semblance of a functional life for their children. (Don't forget that I am totally ignoring the 600lb gorilla in the room---childcare. That 35% figure that the Credit Counselling Society came up with doesn't even add that into it's formula. That pretty much blows all of these figures to smithereens if our working single mom has preschool children.) Cheaper housing would definitely be something that would make a big difference in their lives.