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Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Note: All times local

Vancouver,British Columbia

8:15a.m. The Prime Minister will deliver remarks and participate in a featured conversation with the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.

Notes for media:

  • Open coverage

  • Media wishing to cover the event are asked to contactmedia@pmo-cpm.gc.cato confirm their attendance. Details on how to participate will be provided upon registration.
  • Media are asked to arrive no later than 7:30a.m.

9:30a.m. The Prime Minister will meet with the Premier of British Columbia, DavidEby.

Note for media:

Note: All times local

Vancouver,British Columbia

8:15a.m. The Prime Minister will deliver remarks and participate in a featured conversation with the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade.

Notes for media:

  • Open coverage

  • Media wishing to cover the event are asked to contactmedia@pmo-cpm.gc.cato confirm their attendance. Details on how to participate will be provided upon registration.
  • Media are asked to arrive no later than 7:30a.m.

9:30a.m. The Prime Minister will meet with the Premier of British Columbia, DavidEby.

Note for media:

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PM office canada

Friday, May 15, 2026

Note: All times local

Calgary,Alberta

11:35a.m. The Prime Minister will deliver brief remarks and participate in a signing ceremony with the Premier of Alberta, DanielleSmith, for an implementation agreement to strengthen energy collaboration and build a stronger, more competitive, and more sustainable economy.

Note for media:

11:50a.m. The Prime Minister will meet with the Premier of Alberta, Danielle Smith.

Closed to media

1:10p.m. The Prime Minister will meet with unionised skilled trades workers.

Note for media:

1:25p.m. The Prime Minister will hold a brief media availability.

Notes for media:

  • Open coverage

  • Media wishing to cover the event are asked to contactmedia@pmo-cpm.gc.cato confirm their attendance. Details on how to participate will be provided upon registration.
  • Media are asked to arrive no later than 12:30p.m.

Note: All times local

Calgary,Alberta

11:35a.m. The Prime Minister will deliver brief remarks and participate in a signing ceremony with the Premier of Alberta, DanielleSmith, for an implementation agreement to strengthen energy collaboration and build a stronger, more competitive, and more sustainable economy.

Note for media:

11:50a.m. The Prime Minister will meet with the Premier of Alberta, Danielle Smith.

Closed to media

1:10p.m. The Prime Minister will meet with unionised skilled trades workers.

Note for media:

1:25p.m. The Prime Minister will hold a brief media availability.

Notes for media:

  • Open coverage

  • Media wishing to cover the event are asked to contactmedia@pmo-cpm.gc.cato confirm their attendance. Details on how to participate will be provided upon registration.
  • Media are asked to arrive no later than 12:30p.m.

Continue Reading

PM office canada

Prime Minister Carney announces the Canada Strong Fund

Canada has always been a nation of risk takers and builders. The country was originally forged by Indigenous peoples and voyagers, who mapped the continent, built vast trading networks from coast to coast to coast before the Americans had even left St. Louis. And by the early 1870s, the young Canada was a vast land of provinces bound together, has to be said mainly in name, a mere geographical expression in Sir John A. Macdonald’s memorable phrase. Facing at that time an economic depression and threats to our sovereignty from our southern neighbour, Canadians chose to build. And the Canadian Pacific Railway became the connective tissue of a new country. The Iron Spine from east to west, expanding Canada and bringing British Columbia into Confederation. Our resources were unlocked, our trade increased, our industries grew in a stronger, more united and more prosperous Canada emerged. The CPR itself, Canadian Pacific Railway, became one of the most profitable enterprises in the British Empire, and its founders, Lord Mount Stephen and Lord Strathcona, numbered amongst its wealthiest people.

Now today, Canada faces new challenges from a world that’s changing, not gradually but suddenly. Technological change is accelerating. The foundations of the international order, the order which Canada helped to build and from which we have long benefited, that order is crumbling, and many of our former strengths, built on our close ties to the United States have become our weaknesses. The U.S. has changed. That’s their right. And we are responding, that is our imperative. We are responding with speed and ambition, focusing on what we can control, which is to build our strength at home and diversify our partnerships abroad. Abroad, we’ve secured more than 20 economic and security partnerships across four continents in less than a year. We’re reengaging with global giants like India, China and Brazil. And we’re deepening our partnerships with our closest allies, including the European Union, the Nordic countries and Australia. As a result, we’re attracting the strongest investment in the G7, and we’re on track to double our non-U.S. exports within a decade. That’s $300 billion new orders for Canadian resources, goods and expertise. At home, we’re catalyzing a series of nation building projects in energy, trade, critical minerals, transport, data and beyond. We’ve announced 21 nation building initiatives that will connect, diversify and propel our economy through over $125 billion of new investment. We’re realizing Canada’s full potential in clean and conventional energies to power Canadian homes, build Canadian businesses, and reinforce Canadian sovereignty. We’re building a strong economy where everyone has a chance to get ahead, where we can take care of the vulnerable in our society, where we pull together to make life more affordable today and better tomorrow. These are still early days, but we’re already delivering results.

We have already submitted 21 projects and strategies to the Major Projects Office: ports, highways, mines, and trade and energy corridors. Last year, construction began on the new Darlington nuclear power plant in Ontario. Earlier this month, we kicked off the Contrecœur Terminal expansion project at the Port of Montreal. A project that has been debated for more than four decades is finally under construction. And we have just approved the Sunrise Expansion Program. By increasing the capacity of British Columbia’s main natural gas transmission system, the $4-billion project will help meet the province’s growing energy demand. This summer, we will launch the Mackenzie Valley Highway Project in the Northwest Territories, a project I’ve been hearing about since I was a child. We have signed 56 agreements on critical minerals with more than 10 countries. These agreements will help unlock $18.5 billion for critical minerals projects in Canada. And we’re just getting started. We’re building projects across our vast country, from LNG facilities in British Columbia to mines in Saskatchewan and New Brunswick, to a new high-speed rail line connecting Toronto to Quebec City, as well as Canada’s first major offshore wind project, off the coast of Nova Scotia.

Tomorrow, the Minister of Finance will release our first spring update, and it will show how Canada’s new government is combining responsible fiscal management with new measures to ensure that all Canadians can participate in building a more independent and a more resilient Canadian economy. Building Canada strong means building a Canada where everyone has a stake, where growth is shared, and where prosperity reaches every region, every community, and every family. So today, we’re proud to announce a new pillar of our plan, the Canada Strong Fund, Canada’s first national sovereign wealth fund. This will be a Government of Canada fund, but more importantly, this will be a people’s fund. It will be your fund.

Canada’s new government is creating a new sovereign wealth fund that will invest in major, ambitious Canadian projects including initiatives in the energy, infrastructure, mining, agriculture, and technology sectors, alongside private investors. And for the first time in Canada’s history, Canadians will not only be helping to bring these projects to fruition—they will also benefit directly from their economic returns. The Canada Strong Fund will enable us to build strategically, in partnership with Canadians.

So, here is how it works. The Sovereign wealth fund is essentially a national savings and investment account. It’s designed to grow wealth for future generations of Canadians. Many countries, many countries that are blessed with natural resources, like Norway, have sovereign wealth funds. Canada hasn’t had one until now. The new Canada Strong Fund will give all Canadians a direct stake in building Canada strong. Now, to be clear, just like with the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway 150 years ago, Canada’s major projects will mostly be built by private companies. And just as in the 1870s, the federal government will support these projects through loans, grants and other incentives. And we do this because these projects have wider benefits to our economies, benefits that exceed the private returns. Give you an example. Expanding the Port of Montreal Contrecoeur will unlock new markets for thousands of Canadian businesses and create hundreds of thousands of jobs for Canadian workers. So, until now, well, those wider benefits flow to the Canadian economy, flow to our country. The financial returns of the projects themselves flowed only to those who built and ran them. That changes today. When the CPR was built, the government of the day granted a private monopoly to the company. Today, to create wealth for Canadians today and our kids tomorrow, the Canada Strong Fund will invest alongside the private sector in nation building projects on a fully commercial basis. We will begin with an initial endowment of $25 billion. Over time, the fund will grow through asset recycling and reinvestment, creating even greater opportunities for future generations.

We will also do something, something else that’s new and important. For those Canadians who want to participate in an even more direct way, we will make it easy for individual Canadians to invest in the fund and therefore own a small piece of nation building projects and sharing their returns. The fund will be professionally managed and operate as an arm’s length, independent Crown corporation. And we’ll will consult over the coming months on the specific aspects of the fund. But one thing is sure, it will be accessible to everyone, not just a few, because the Canada Strong Fund is about solidarity amongst Canadians no matter where they live. So, whether a project is in Alberta, Quebec or in the far north, high north, all Canadians will have a stake, because this is about ensuring that you and your children and your children’s children benefit from the prosperity that we are creating today. You know, in many ways, we’re walking today the same path as our predecessors did. We have the same conviction that ambition and drive can change the course of a nation. We have the same catalytic role for government to make nation building projects happen. We have the same reliance on private enterprise to build and run these businesses, but at the same time, we’ve also learned from our past. The Canadian Pacific Railway transformed Canada, but it did so in a way that also left deep scars. Indigenous peoples were displaced from their lands. Thousands of workers toiled in appalling conditions, and the wealth that was created accrue to the few, not the many. Three things are different this time. This time, we are building with indigenous peoples as full partners, ensuring meaningful indigenous ownership and major economic benefits. This time, we are building in solidarity with Canadian workers, creating hundreds of thousands of high paying union jobs. And this time, for the first time in our history, every Canadian will hold a direct stake in what’s built, because we know that nation building is not just about what we build, it’s also about how we build. We are building together with all Canadians, for all Canadians.

We are building a stronger, more independent, and more resilient economy for everyone.A future that is not just strong, but promising as well.A Canada that is not only prosperous, but fair.A Canada that’s not just reserved for a few, but is for everyone, at all times. Jean Lesage, the father of modern Quebec, said: “Our historical and geographical situation has forced us to become what we are: we now want to be what we can become.”It’s this same philosophy that inspires us today to create the Canada Strong Fund.Thanks to this fund, every Canadian will share in the benefits of these major projects.These are our natural resources, our workforce, and our wealth.This is the best way to be masters in our own home.We are building Canada strong, for everyone.A Canada where everyone benefits.Where everyone can participate.

It’s our country. It’s your future. We’re building by Canadians for all Canadians. We are building Canada strong for all. Thank you very much.

Canada has always been a nation of risk takers and builders. The country was originally forged by Indigenous peoples and voyagers, who mapped the continent, built vast trading networks from coast to coast to coast before the Americans had even left St. Louis. And by the early 1870s, the young Canada was a vast land of provinces bound together, has to be said mainly in name, a mere geographical expression in Sir John A. Macdonald’s memorable phrase. Facing at that time an economic depression and threats to our sovereignty from our southern neighbour, Canadians chose to build. And the Canadian Pacific Railway became the connective tissue of a new country. The Iron Spine from east to west, expanding Canada and bringing British Columbia into Confederation. Our resources were unlocked, our trade increased, our industries grew in a stronger, more united and more prosperous Canada emerged. The CPR itself, Canadian Pacific Railway, became one of the most profitable enterprises in the British Empire, and its founders, Lord Mount Stephen and Lord Strathcona, numbered amongst its wealthiest people.

Now today, Canada faces new challenges from a world that’s changing, not gradually but suddenly. Technological change is accelerating. The foundations of the international order, the order which Canada helped to build and from which we have long benefited, that order is crumbling, and many of our former strengths, built on our close ties to the United States have become our weaknesses. The U.S. has changed. That’s their right. And we are responding, that is our imperative. We are responding with speed and ambition, focusing on what we can control, which is to build our strength at home and diversify our partnerships abroad. Abroad, we’ve secured more than 20 economic and security partnerships across four continents in less than a year. We’re reengaging with global giants like India, China and Brazil. And we’re deepening our partnerships with our closest allies, including the European Union, the Nordic countries and Australia. As a result, we’re attracting the strongest investment in the G7, and we’re on track to double our non-U.S. exports within a decade. That’s $300 billion new orders for Canadian resources, goods and expertise. At home, we’re catalyzing a series of nation building projects in energy, trade, critical minerals, transport, data and beyond. We’ve announced 21 nation building initiatives that will connect, diversify and propel our economy through over $125 billion of new investment. We’re realizing Canada’s full potential in clean and conventional energies to power Canadian homes, build Canadian businesses, and reinforce Canadian sovereignty. We’re building a strong economy where everyone has a chance to get ahead, where we can take care of the vulnerable in our society, where we pull together to make life more affordable today and better tomorrow. These are still early days, but we’re already delivering results.

We have already submitted 21 projects and strategies to the Major Projects Office: ports, highways, mines, and trade and energy corridors. Last year, construction began on the new Darlington nuclear power plant in Ontario. Earlier this month, we kicked off the Contrecœur Terminal expansion project at the Port of Montreal. A project that has been debated for more than four decades is finally under construction. And we have just approved the Sunrise Expansion Program. By increasing the capacity of British Columbia’s main natural gas transmission system, the $4-billion project will help meet the province’s growing energy demand. This summer, we will launch the Mackenzie Valley Highway Project in the Northwest Territories, a project I’ve been hearing about since I was a child. We have signed 56 agreements on critical minerals with more than 10 countries. These agreements will help unlock $18.5 billion for critical minerals projects in Canada. And we’re just getting started. We’re building projects across our vast country, from LNG facilities in British Columbia to mines in Saskatchewan and New Brunswick, to a new high-speed rail line connecting Toronto to Quebec City, as well as Canada’s first major offshore wind project, off the coast of Nova Scotia.

Tomorrow, the Minister of Finance will release our first spring update, and it will show how Canada’s new government is combining responsible fiscal management with new measures to ensure that all Canadians can participate in building a more independent and a more resilient Canadian economy. Building Canada strong means building a Canada where everyone has a stake, where growth is shared, and where prosperity reaches every region, every community, and every family. So today, we’re proud to announce a new pillar of our plan, the Canada Strong Fund, Canada’s first national sovereign wealth fund. This will be a Government of Canada fund, but more importantly, this will be a people’s fund. It will be your fund.

Canada’s new government is creating a new sovereign wealth fund that will invest in major, ambitious Canadian projects including initiatives in the energy, infrastructure, mining, agriculture, and technology sectors, alongside private investors. And for the first time in Canada’s history, Canadians will not only be helping to bring these projects to fruition—they will also benefit directly from their economic returns. The Canada Strong Fund will enable us to build strategically, in partnership with Canadians.

So, here is how it works. The Sovereign wealth fund is essentially a national savings and investment account. It’s designed to grow wealth for future generations of Canadians. Many countries, many countries that are blessed with natural resources, like Norway, have sovereign wealth funds. Canada hasn’t had one until now. The new Canada Strong Fund will give all Canadians a direct stake in building Canada strong. Now, to be clear, just like with the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway 150 years ago, Canada’s major projects will mostly be built by private companies. And just as in the 1870s, the federal government will support these projects through loans, grants and other incentives. And we do this because these projects have wider benefits to our economies, benefits that exceed the private returns. Give you an example. Expanding the Port of Montreal Contrecoeur will unlock new markets for thousands of Canadian businesses and create hundreds of thousands of jobs for Canadian workers. So, until now, well, those wider benefits flow to the Canadian economy, flow to our country. The financial returns of the projects themselves flowed only to those who built and ran them. That changes today. When the CPR was built, the government of the day granted a private monopoly to the company. Today, to create wealth for Canadians today and our kids tomorrow, the Canada Strong Fund will invest alongside the private sector in nation building projects on a fully commercial basis. We will begin with an initial endowment of $25 billion. Over time, the fund will grow through asset recycling and reinvestment, creating even greater opportunities for future generations.

We will also do something, something else that’s new and important. For those Canadians who want to participate in an even more direct way, we will make it easy for individual Canadians to invest in the fund and therefore own a small piece of nation building projects and sharing their returns. The fund will be professionally managed and operate as an arm’s length, independent Crown corporation. And we’ll will consult over the coming months on the specific aspects of the fund. But one thing is sure, it will be accessible to everyone, not just a few, because the Canada Strong Fund is about solidarity amongst Canadians no matter where they live. So, whether a project is in Alberta, Quebec or in the far north, high north, all Canadians will have a stake, because this is about ensuring that you and your children and your children’s children benefit from the prosperity that we are creating today. You know, in many ways, we’re walking today the same path as our predecessors did. We have the same conviction that ambition and drive can change the course of a nation. We have the same catalytic role for government to make nation building projects happen. We have the same reliance on private enterprise to build and run these businesses, but at the same time, we’ve also learned from our past. The Canadian Pacific Railway transformed Canada, but it did so in a way that also left deep scars. Indigenous peoples were displaced from their lands. Thousands of workers toiled in appalling conditions, and the wealth that was created accrue to the few, not the many. Three things are different this time. This time, we are building with indigenous peoples as full partners, ensuring meaningful indigenous ownership and major economic benefits. This time, we are building in solidarity with Canadian workers, creating hundreds of thousands of high paying union jobs. And this time, for the first time in our history, every Canadian will hold a direct stake in what’s built, because we know that nation building is not just about what we build, it’s also about how we build. We are building together with all Canadians, for all Canadians.

We are building a stronger, more independent, and more resilient economy for everyone.A future that is not just strong, but promising as well.A Canada that is not only prosperous, but fair.A Canada that’s not just reserved for a few, but is for everyone, at all times. Jean Lesage, the father of modern Quebec, said: “Our historical and geographical situation has forced us to become what we are: we now want to be what we can become.”It’s this same philosophy that inspires us today to create the Canada Strong Fund.Thanks to this fund, every Canadian will share in the benefits of these major projects.These are our natural resources, our workforce, and our wealth.This is the best way to be masters in our own home.We are building Canada strong, for everyone.A Canada where everyone benefits.Where everyone can participate.

It’s our country. It’s your future. We’re building by Canadians for all Canadians. We are building Canada strong for all. Thank you very much.

Continue Reading

PM office canada

Prime Minister Carney announces members of the Independent Advisory Board to help select the next judge of the Supreme Court of Canada

Today, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, announced the Chair and members of the Independent Advisory Board for Supreme Court of Canada Judicial Appointments. These individuals willidentify candidates to fill the upcoming Supreme Court of Canada vacancy created by the upcoming retirement of Justice Sheilah L.Martin on May30,2026.

The Independent Advisory Board includes:

  • Maureen McTeer (Chair)
  • Riel Bellegarde
  • Aimée Craft
  • Justin E. Kingston
  • Marie-Pierre Lavoie
  • The Honourable J.Michael MacDonald
  • Justin Robichaud, K.C.
  • Laura Spitz

The members of the Independent Advisory Board were selected for their expertise, integrity, and distinguished service across Canada’s legal, academic, and public institutions. Together, they bring diverse perspectives and experiences – including regional and linguistic representation – that will support a rigorous, transparent, and merit-based process for identifying the most qualified candidates for appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada.

The Independent Advisory Board will review applications received through the Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs to identify candidates who are jurists of the highest calibre, bilingual, and representative of the diversity of our country. They will then submit a shortlist of candidates to the Prime Minister for consideration.

Applications from qualified candidates were accepted until Monday, April27, 2026. They were open toall qualified applicants from Western Canada and Northern Canada, in recognition of the convention of regional representation.

Quote

“A strong and independent judiciary is fundamental to our democracy. The members of theIndependent Advisory Board will help ensure we identify outstanding candidatesto serve on the Supreme Court of Canada – candidates with the experience and judgment required to serve on our highest court.”

Quick facts

  • The Supreme Court of Canada consists of nine judges, including a chief justice. They are all appointed by the Governor in Council and must have been either a judge of a superior court or a member of at least 10 years’ standing of the bar of a province or territory.
  • The Independent Advisory Board for Supreme Court of Canada Judicial Appointments is an independent and non-partisan body that is convened for judicial appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada to provide merit-based recommendations to the Prime Minister.

Biographical notes

Related product

Associated links

Today, the Prime Minister, Mark Carney, announced the Chair and members of the Independent Advisory Board for Supreme Court of Canada Judicial Appointments. These individuals willidentify candidates to fill the upcoming Supreme Court of Canada vacancy created by the upcoming retirement of Justice Sheilah L.Martin on May30,2026.

The Independent Advisory Board includes:

  • Maureen McTeer (Chair)
  • Riel Bellegarde
  • Aimée Craft
  • Justin E. Kingston
  • Marie-Pierre Lavoie
  • The Honourable J.Michael MacDonald
  • Justin Robichaud, K.C.
  • Laura Spitz

The members of the Independent Advisory Board were selected for their expertise, integrity, and distinguished service across Canada’s legal, academic, and public institutions. Together, they bring diverse perspectives and experiences – including regional and linguistic representation – that will support a rigorous, transparent, and merit-based process for identifying the most qualified candidates for appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada.

The Independent Advisory Board will review applications received through the Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs to identify candidates who are jurists of the highest calibre, bilingual, and representative of the diversity of our country. They will then submit a shortlist of candidates to the Prime Minister for consideration.

Applications from qualified candidates were accepted until Monday, April27, 2026. They were open toall qualified applicants from Western Canada and Northern Canada, in recognition of the convention of regional representation.

Quote

“A strong and independent judiciary is fundamental to our democracy. The members of theIndependent Advisory Board will help ensure we identify outstanding candidatesto serve on the Supreme Court of Canada – candidates with the experience and judgment required to serve on our highest court.”

Quick facts

  • The Supreme Court of Canada consists of nine judges, including a chief justice. They are all appointed by the Governor in Council and must have been either a judge of a superior court or a member of at least 10 years’ standing of the bar of a province or territory.
  • The Independent Advisory Board for Supreme Court of Canada Judicial Appointments is an independent and non-partisan body that is convened for judicial appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada to provide merit-based recommendations to the Prime Minister.

Biographical notes

Related product

Associated links

Continue Reading

PM office canada

Prime Minister Carney delivers on commitment to accelerate homebuilding in Ottawa

Today is truly about partnership, working for the people of Ottawa and the people of Canada. An example of what gets done when there’s focus and partnership.

The Mayor and I, I would say, have been partners from the very beginning. Literally, my first day as prime minister, the first thing I did after I got up was to go have breakfast at John’s Diner in Wellington West with the mayor to talk about shared priorities. Yours as mayor, mine as prime minister. And the first thing on both of our list was affordable housing, getting affordable housing, how we can build housing faster, more efficiently, more sustainably, and of course, at lower cost. Lower cost purchase, but also lower run cost for people in housing here in Ottawa and across Canada. Because when we build a stronger Ottawa, we build a stronger Canada, and our objective is a stronger Canada for all. And that foundation is the home. The home is the foundation of a good life. And yet, for too many Canadians, housing has remained out of reach for too long. Now, there has been some progress over the course of the past year. I think it’s important to recognize, to track where we are and whether we’re making progress.

By the end of last year, at the start of this year, housing affordability in Canada had begun to improve from very unaffordable levels, but had begun to improve and in fact had improved over the course of the last 24 months, the longest streak recorded. The percentage of income that Canadians are spending on mortgage payments is now at their lowest level in four years. Asking rents are down to a 35-month low. The rent income ratio its lowest level in over six years. So, some encouraging signs, but starting from very high levels or, put it a different way, levels of unaffordability. So, there’s still much, much work to do. The reality is that for decades, Canada has just not built enough affordable housing, and now Canadians are paying the price, particularly young Canadians. And what has been built over decades often has, the overall costs have been driven up by development charges, taxes, high construction costs. And the average Canadian household is still spending more than half of their income on mortgage payments. So, those mortgage payments are starting to come down. But it’s still, as I said a moment ago, high levels.

We need all hands on deck to address these challenges. That’s why, back in September, our government launched Build Canada Homes – a new federal entity that will supercharge housing construction across Canada. It is doing that in threeways. First, by partnering with the private sector to plan, manage and construct new affordable housing and to fast-track large-scale housing projects across the country. Second, by providing predictable, low-cost financing to support non-marketand Indigenous housing providers to grow affordable and community housing in Canada. And third, by catalysing the creation of an entirely new Canadian housing industry that uses modern building methods like factory-built and prefabricated construction.

So, since its launch in September of last year, just September of last year, Build Canada Homes has already committed to more than 10,000 new units through 13 partnerships across Canada, with over 1400 homes already under construction or breaking ground in the next two months. That means new affordable homes in Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Gatineau and Halifax. And to build on this momentum and to further lower the cost of building affordable homes, Canada’s new government tabled legislation to unlock $1.7 billion in federal funding for the provinces and territories. Through the Build Communities Strong Fund, we’re investing billions to build housing-enabling infrastructure and reduce municipal development charges, charges that the buyers of new homes ultimately pay.

Last month, we put that funding to work through a new agreement with Ontario, and this agreement will enable municipalities to cut development charges in half for three years, reducing the upfront costs of homebuilding and giving builders the certainty that they need to build. So, here in Ottawa, this measure alone, one measure alone, could bring down the cost of building a two-bedroom apartment by more than $15,000 and a new average single-family home by more than $28,000. And to further bring down costs for the Canadians who are buying those homes or who are renting those homes, we’ve eliminated GST on homes for up to $1 million for first-time home buyers, saving Canadians up to $50,000 on the purchase of their first home. That tax cut now passed officially came into place last month. And we’re working with the provinces and territories to further multiply those savings. With the help of new federal funding, the government of Ontario is matching the government’s GST cut with a provincial HST relief on all new homes valued at up to $1 million. So, what does that mean here in Ottawa? It means saving buyers in Ottawa as much as $130,000 on the purchase of their new home. If you combine that with the development charge reduction, that could mean as much as $158,000 in savings. Real money back in the pockets of Canadians. It’s a clear example of what governments can do when they focus and when they work together.

In December, as the mayor just said, Mayor Sutcliffe and I announced an ambitious new partnership between Build Canada Homes and the City of Ottawa. A partnership to accelerate the construction of up to 3,000 affordable and mixed-income homes in Ottawa through a joint investment of $400 million. Under this agreement, the City of Ottawa will reduce or waive development charges, permit fees, and property taxes on priority projects for 2,000 new housing units. And through Build Canada Homes, our government will deploy financing to help unlock an additional 1,000 housing units in the City’s portfolio.

So, in December, the mayor and I made a commitment to build more homes faster for the people of Ottawa. Today, we’re proud to announce that Build Canada Homes has approved eight new housing projects that will build more than 1100 new rental homes in the city of Ottawa, already exceeding our original target by 10%. We’re fast-tracking these projects to get shovels in the ground in the next few months, shovel in the ground over there. And I want to thank Ottawa City Council for their unanimous vote of confidence in this work last evening. Construction right here on Geyser Place… Geyser Place will begin later this year. And this project… I covered them both, it’s Geyser. You say Geyser, I say Geyser. Tomato, tomato… This project will build more than… Well, it says 100 new rental units. Actually, I think Stephane, it’s closer to 118. 118 new apartments, homes for middle-class Canadians, for middle-class Canadians. Now, beyond here in Nepean, we’re building in Centretown, in Sandy Hill, in Overbrook, and Lincoln Heights. Homes across the city built by Canadians for Canadians.

It’s not just what we build. It’s how we build. We are building inclusively, in full partnership with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis. We are building in solidarity with workers, creating good union jobs. We are building sustainably, because reducing emissions is not just a moral duty, it’s an economic imperative. For example, this project will benefit from… What is it? Geothermal. Yeah. Heating and cooling. It’s dramatically lowering the costs for the residents. And above all, with our Buy Canadian Policy, we are building Canadian – with Canadian steel, Canadian lumber, and Canadian workers. That is how we build Canada strong. Through Build Canada Homes, our government is building at scale and speed so all Canadians have a safe and affordable place to call home. This is part of our larger economic plan to build a stronger, more sustainable, more resilient economy – one that delivers more certainty, security, and prosperity for all Canadians.

Now, it’s early days but our plan is working. Despite all the shocks, Canada is expected to have the second fastest growing economy in the G7 this year and next. Wages overall are growing now at twice the rate of overall inflation. But at the same time, we know that the cost of living is still high and we know that some of the biggest payoffs of our plan will take time. So, we’re supporting Canadians who are under pressure from everyday expenses with a boost today and a bridge to that better tomorrow. And that’s why we temporarily cut the federal fuel excise tax this week, bringing down costs at the pump by up to $0.10 per liter. Combined with our earlier elimination of the consumer carbon tax on day one of our government, we’ve lowered the price of gas by up to $0.28 per liter. We’ve cut income taxes for 22 million Canadians, saving families up to $840 each year. We’ve launched the Groceries and Essentials Benefit, which will deliver direct payments to more than 12 million Canadians, up to $1890 per family. That’s money deposited directly into bank accounts starting with the first cheques on the 5th of June. That’s how we’re building a Canada that’s not just strong, but good. A Canada that’s not just prosperous, but fair. Canada that’s not just for some most of the time, but for all, all of the time. A Canada where everyone can get ahead. We’re building Nepean strong, Ottawa strong, and Canada strong for everyone.

Thank you.

Today is truly about partnership, working for the people of Ottawa and the people of Canada. An example of what gets done when there’s focus and partnership.

The Mayor and I, I would say, have been partners from the very beginning. Literally, my first day as prime minister, the first thing I did after I got up was to go have breakfast at John’s Diner in Wellington West with the mayor to talk about shared priorities. Yours as mayor, mine as prime minister. And the first thing on both of our list was affordable housing, getting affordable housing, how we can build housing faster, more efficiently, more sustainably, and of course, at lower cost. Lower cost purchase, but also lower run cost for people in housing here in Ottawa and across Canada. Because when we build a stronger Ottawa, we build a stronger Canada, and our objective is a stronger Canada for all. And that foundation is the home. The home is the foundation of a good life. And yet, for too many Canadians, housing has remained out of reach for too long. Now, there has been some progress over the course of the past year. I think it’s important to recognize, to track where we are and whether we’re making progress.

By the end of last year, at the start of this year, housing affordability in Canada had begun to improve from very unaffordable levels, but had begun to improve and in fact had improved over the course of the last 24 months, the longest streak recorded. The percentage of income that Canadians are spending on mortgage payments is now at their lowest level in four years. Asking rents are down to a 35-month low. The rent income ratio its lowest level in over six years. So, some encouraging signs, but starting from very high levels or, put it a different way, levels of unaffordability. So, there’s still much, much work to do. The reality is that for decades, Canada has just not built enough affordable housing, and now Canadians are paying the price, particularly young Canadians. And what has been built over decades often has, the overall costs have been driven up by development charges, taxes, high construction costs. And the average Canadian household is still spending more than half of their income on mortgage payments. So, those mortgage payments are starting to come down. But it’s still, as I said a moment ago, high levels.

We need all hands on deck to address these challenges. That’s why, back in September, our government launched Build Canada Homes – a new federal entity that will supercharge housing construction across Canada. It is doing that in threeways. First, by partnering with the private sector to plan, manage and construct new affordable housing and to fast-track large-scale housing projects across the country. Second, by providing predictable, low-cost financing to support non-marketand Indigenous housing providers to grow affordable and community housing in Canada. And third, by catalysing the creation of an entirely new Canadian housing industry that uses modern building methods like factory-built and prefabricated construction.

So, since its launch in September of last year, just September of last year, Build Canada Homes has already committed to more than 10,000 new units through 13 partnerships across Canada, with over 1400 homes already under construction or breaking ground in the next two months. That means new affordable homes in Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Gatineau and Halifax. And to build on this momentum and to further lower the cost of building affordable homes, Canada’s new government tabled legislation to unlock $1.7 billion in federal funding for the provinces and territories. Through the Build Communities Strong Fund, we’re investing billions to build housing-enabling infrastructure and reduce municipal development charges, charges that the buyers of new homes ultimately pay.

Last month, we put that funding to work through a new agreement with Ontario, and this agreement will enable municipalities to cut development charges in half for three years, reducing the upfront costs of homebuilding and giving builders the certainty that they need to build. So, here in Ottawa, this measure alone, one measure alone, could bring down the cost of building a two-bedroom apartment by more than $15,000 and a new average single-family home by more than $28,000. And to further bring down costs for the Canadians who are buying those homes or who are renting those homes, we’ve eliminated GST on homes for up to $1 million for first-time home buyers, saving Canadians up to $50,000 on the purchase of their first home. That tax cut now passed officially came into place last month. And we’re working with the provinces and territories to further multiply those savings. With the help of new federal funding, the government of Ontario is matching the government’s GST cut with a provincial HST relief on all new homes valued at up to $1 million. So, what does that mean here in Ottawa? It means saving buyers in Ottawa as much as $130,000 on the purchase of their new home. If you combine that with the development charge reduction, that could mean as much as $158,000 in savings. Real money back in the pockets of Canadians. It’s a clear example of what governments can do when they focus and when they work together.

In December, as the mayor just said, Mayor Sutcliffe and I announced an ambitious new partnership between Build Canada Homes and the City of Ottawa. A partnership to accelerate the construction of up to 3,000 affordable and mixed-income homes in Ottawa through a joint investment of $400 million. Under this agreement, the City of Ottawa will reduce or waive development charges, permit fees, and property taxes on priority projects for 2,000 new housing units. And through Build Canada Homes, our government will deploy financing to help unlock an additional 1,000 housing units in the City’s portfolio.

So, in December, the mayor and I made a commitment to build more homes faster for the people of Ottawa. Today, we’re proud to announce that Build Canada Homes has approved eight new housing projects that will build more than 1100 new rental homes in the city of Ottawa, already exceeding our original target by 10%. We’re fast-tracking these projects to get shovels in the ground in the next few months, shovel in the ground over there. And I want to thank Ottawa City Council for their unanimous vote of confidence in this work last evening. Construction right here on Geyser Place… Geyser Place will begin later this year. And this project… I covered them both, it’s Geyser. You say Geyser, I say Geyser. Tomato, tomato… This project will build more than… Well, it says 100 new rental units. Actually, I think Stephane, it’s closer to 118. 118 new apartments, homes for middle-class Canadians, for middle-class Canadians. Now, beyond here in Nepean, we’re building in Centretown, in Sandy Hill, in Overbrook, and Lincoln Heights. Homes across the city built by Canadians for Canadians.

It’s not just what we build. It’s how we build. We are building inclusively, in full partnership with First Nations, Inuit, and Métis. We are building in solidarity with workers, creating good union jobs. We are building sustainably, because reducing emissions is not just a moral duty, it’s an economic imperative. For example, this project will benefit from… What is it? Geothermal. Yeah. Heating and cooling. It’s dramatically lowering the costs for the residents. And above all, with our Buy Canadian Policy, we are building Canadian – with Canadian steel, Canadian lumber, and Canadian workers. That is how we build Canada strong. Through Build Canada Homes, our government is building at scale and speed so all Canadians have a safe and affordable place to call home. This is part of our larger economic plan to build a stronger, more sustainable, more resilient economy – one that delivers more certainty, security, and prosperity for all Canadians.

Now, it’s early days but our plan is working. Despite all the shocks, Canada is expected to have the second fastest growing economy in the G7 this year and next. Wages overall are growing now at twice the rate of overall inflation. But at the same time, we know that the cost of living is still high and we know that some of the biggest payoffs of our plan will take time. So, we’re supporting Canadians who are under pressure from everyday expenses with a boost today and a bridge to that better tomorrow. And that’s why we temporarily cut the federal fuel excise tax this week, bringing down costs at the pump by up to $0.10 per liter. Combined with our earlier elimination of the consumer carbon tax on day one of our government, we’ve lowered the price of gas by up to $0.28 per liter. We’ve cut income taxes for 22 million Canadians, saving families up to $840 each year. We’ve launched the Groceries and Essentials Benefit, which will deliver direct payments to more than 12 million Canadians, up to $1890 per family. That’s money deposited directly into bank accounts starting with the first cheques on the 5th of June. That’s how we’re building a Canada that’s not just strong, but good. A Canada that’s not just prosperous, but fair. Canada that’s not just for some most of the time, but for all, all of the time. A Canada where everyone can get ahead. We’re building Nepean strong, Ottawa strong, and Canada strong for everyone.

Thank you.

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