Good for Cities

Are Financial Landlords Good for Cities?

38 min · 24. mar. 2026
episode Are Financial Landlords Good for Cities? cover

Beskrivelse

Financial landlords claim to contribute to the housing stock, but they also have higher rates of eviction and above guideline rent increases than other housing providers. Since the 1990’s, ownership of rental housing by financial firms has drastically increased, with more financial landlords, such as investment trusts and asset managers owning more apartment buildings than before. This has contributed to a shift that’s turned housing into an investment product for third-party investors, who have increasingly consolidated ownership of rental properties across the country. In this episode, Martine August, affordable housing advocate and financial landlord researcher, explains how financial firms are changing the rental landscape, often at the expense of low-income communities. We unpack data on rent increases, eviction rates, and maintenance issues, and discuss why rent control and non-market housing are crucial tools for protecting tenants.

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12 episoder

episode Are Financial Landlords Good for Cities? cover

Are Financial Landlords Good for Cities?

Financial landlords claim to contribute to the housing stock, but they also have higher rates of eviction and above guideline rent increases than other housing providers. Since the 1990’s, ownership of rental housing by financial firms has drastically increased, with more financial landlords, such as investment trusts and asset managers owning more apartment buildings than before. This has contributed to a shift that’s turned housing into an investment product for third-party investors, who have increasingly consolidated ownership of rental properties across the country. In this episode, Martine August, affordable housing advocate and financial landlord researcher, explains how financial firms are changing the rental landscape, often at the expense of low-income communities. We unpack data on rent increases, eviction rates, and maintenance issues, and discuss why rent control and non-market housing are crucial tools for protecting tenants.

24. mar. 202638 min
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Autonomous vehicles, or self-driving cars, are often seen as the future of urban mobility, promising safer streets, smoother traffic, and more efficient transportation. But how autonomous vehicles are governed and regulated will ultimately determine their impact on cities. In this episode of Good for Cities, Matti Siemiatycki speaks with Andrew Miller about autonomous vehicles policy, safety regulation, and the evolving frameworks shaping self-driving cars in urban environments. They examine how automated driving systems operate in complex conditions, and what accountability looks like when technology replaces human drivers. The conversation also touches on mobility data governance and data privacy concerns, as autonomous vehicles generate and rely on large-scale transportation data. Andrew reflects on the broader transportation system impacts: will autonomous vehicles reduce congestion and complement public transit, or increase vehicle kilometres travelled and intensify gridlock? As cities across Canada and beyond prepare for greater automation, the episode considers how today’s regulatory and infrastructure decisions could shape urban transportation systems for decades. Tune in to explore the intersection of self-driving cars and urban policy and the question of whether this technology will actually make our cities better.

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episode Is Canada's Water Infrastructure in Crisis? cover

Is Canada's Water Infrastructure in Crisis?

Water is essential, but our infrastructure to deliver it is often invisible until it fails. In this episode of Good for Cities, Matti Siemiatycki speaks with Kerry Black, Canada Research Chair at the University of Calgary, about the challenges, trade-offs, and innovations shaping water systems in Canada. They discuss the 2026 Calgary water main rupture, why governments prioritize new projects over maintenance, and how decisions about growth, pipe sizing, and asset management lock in risk for decades. Kerry shares insights on cutting-edge monitoring technologies, including robots that inspect pipes from the inside, and explains the persistent water infrastructure challenges facing Indigenous communities. Tune in to explore the hidden systems we all depend on, and ask the question: are we investing in the infrastructure we really need?

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