Ottawa Now - Why it's getting tougher for today's tenants to afford rent | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: CFRA - 580 - Ottawa
Publication Date: September 4, 2025 - 18:25

Ottawa Now - Why it's getting tougher for today's tenants to afford rent

September 4, 2025

A new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is examining how much someone would need to earn on an hourly basis in order to rent an apartment. In other words, ‘rental wage’. 62 cities were the focus of this study, with Toronto and Vancouver topping the crowd when it comes to unaffordable housing. So where does Canada’s Capital rank? For Q1 of 2025, the average asking rent for vacant rental units was $2,010 for a 1-bedroom apartment. If you’re looking for a 2-bedroom unit, the average asking rent was $2,490 back then. The CCPA says the average hourly wage required to afford a vacant unit in Ottawa is $39 for a 1-bedroom apartment and $48 for a 2-bedroom apartment. And with the minimum wage currently sitting at $17.20 per hour, you would need to work multiple minimum-wage jobs just to live there. Kristy Cameron digs through the data with Dean Tester on today’s Ottawa Now. He is an advocate for Make Housing Affordable, a non-profit organization.



Unpublished Newswire

 
An Ottawa man was among the tourists killed when a streetcar crashed in Lisbon earlier this month.Aziz Benharref, a Canadian who lived in the Orleans neighbourhood, was on vacation in Portugal with his wife, Hind Iguernane, when the derailment happened. 
September 9, 2025 - 18:58 | Catherine Morrison | The Globe and Mail
Repairing a WestJet Airlines Ltd. plane that landed roughly in St. Maarten on the weekend and shut down the Caribbean island’s airport for a day will be a challenge, say aviation experts.Videos of WestJet Flight WS2276 from Toronto flooded social media earlier this week, depicting the moments of the aircraft’s final descent over bright blue waters near Maho Beach before it landed roughly on its right landing gear and came to a stop on the runway of Princess Juliana International Airport on Sunday afternoon.
September 9, 2025 - 18:55 | Vanessa Tiberio | The Globe and Mail
A condominium corporation in Toronto has filed a multi-million-dollar lawsuit against a neighbouring church, alleging it has become a “free-for-all haven” for illegal activity, including drug use, trafficking and violent altercations. “Despite its representations as providing community services to marginalized persons, the Sanctuary has routinely engaged in and/or permitted illegal, illicit, disruptive, interfering and egregious conduct to occur on its property,” alleges the statement of claim, which was filed on behalf of CASA Condos in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice last week...
September 9, 2025 - 18:36 | Ari David Blaff | National Post