Income Averaging


Book Description







Rental and Rooming House Residential Rehabilitation Assistance Program


Book Description

Standards for the Rehabilitation of Rental and Rooming House Properties (RRAP Standards) identifies the type and extent of work that is eligible for funding under the Rental and Rooming House Residential Rehabilitation Assistance Programs (RRAP). Rental RRAP and Rooming House RRAP provide financial assistance to owners of existing rental accommodation which needs major repair. Assistance is for mandatory repairs to bring the dwelling up to a minimum level of health and safety. To be eligible for Rental and Rooming House RRAP, the project must be deficient and require major repair, or lack basic facilities, in one of the following categories: (1) Structural soundness; (2) Electrical system; (3) Plumbing system; (4) Heating system; (5) Fire safety. Basic and standard maintenance items are not major repairs and are not eligible for RRAP funding.




Task Force on Rental Housing


Book Description




The History of Canada's Residential Rehabilitation Assistance Program (RRAP)


Book Description

The Residential Rehabilitation Assistance Program (RRAP) was announced by the Government of Canada in the spring of 1973 and became operational the following year. It came about because of the dual recognition that the existing housing stock represented an important national asset that needed to be preserved, and that a significant portion of this stock was substandard and occupied by households unable to afford necessary repairs. Over the following 26 years, more than 600 000 dwellings, mostly comprised of self-contained homeowner and rental units, but also a good number of beds in hostels, dormitories, special care facilities and rooming houses, were repaired with RRAP assistance across all regions and areas of the country. During this time, RRAP demonstrated great versatility in adapting to the priorities of the day in achieving a broad range of public objectives from improving the housing conditions of low-income Canadians, neighourhood improvement and employment generation, to meeting the special needs of persons with disabilities and the homeless. This history is divided into two main parts. The first recounts the evolution of RRAP from its inception to the present day. The second part explores the evolution of critical aspects of RRAP related to need, its design, management and accomplishments, and concludes with an epilogue which reviews reasons for RRAP's durability and explores the need for targeted housing rehabilitation programs in the future.













The Promise of Investment in Community-Led Renewal: State of the Inner City Report 2005. Part I: Policy Considerations


Book Description

Under the leadership of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives-Mani- toba, the Working Group was comprised of the Community Education Development Association (CEDA); Inner-City Aboriginal Neighbours (I- CAN); the Ma Mawi Wi Chi Itata Centre; the North End Community Renewal Corporation; the Prairie Women's Health Centre of Excellence; the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg; the Spence Neighbo [...] The Promise of Investment in Community-Led Renewal State of the Inner City Report: 2005 Part I Policy Considerations Why a report on the state of the inner Most of us working in the inner city believe that city? [...] It is our hope that the State of the Inner This is the first time a State of the Inner City Re- City Report can assist in developing the most ef- port has been published in Winnipeg. [...] When we refer to the 'inner city' we mean the Third, we want to identify gaps in the work that geographic area originally defined by the 1980s is being done in the inner city. [...] The labour-force participation rate for 38.5% of adults (15 years of age and over) in the Winnipeg as a whole is still higher than for the inner city had less than a high-school education, inner city, at 68%, but unlike the case in the inner down significantly from 49% ten years earlier.