Shane Hewitt and The Nightshift

NEW - Who Actually Benefits From the Vancouver Condo Deal?

17 min · 30. juni 2026
episode NEW - Who Actually Benefits From the Vancouver Condo Deal? cover

Beskrivelse

Federal housing policy rarely produces a clean answer, and the BC condo buyback program is no exception. The Monday study panel works through what the numbers actually mean: ten percent federal funding, ninety percent BC, and units that still price out the people the program claims to help. The Bailout Question Jimmy Zoubris flags the political optics for a Conservative party historically opposed to government market intervention, then makes the case that this situation is different from aviation or auto bailouts in one important way. Lesley Kelly draws on agriculture to explain why broad programs with transparent rules feel different from a targeted purchase of one developer's unsold inventory, and why the precedent troubles her more than the price tag. 24 Sussex in 30 Seconds Years of neglect, prime ministers who wouldn't touch it, and a building that reportedly became unsalvageable under the last government. The panel gets thirty seconds each. Jimmy says save it. Lesley wouldn't rule out a teardown. Both agree it stopped being optional. Topics: federal housing policy Canada, BC condo buyback, developer bailout, 24 Sussex Drive, housing affordability GUEST: Lesley Kelly | highheelsandcanolafields.com GUEST: Jimmy Zoubris Originally aired on 2026-06-29

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Moving in together has a moment nobody warns you about. It's not the argument or the negotiation. It's a glance at a bookshelf. Ryan O'Donnell spotted that moment on Laura's face during unpacking, and everything that followed is a more honest account of cohabitation than most people will admit to out loud. Ryan had filled his living space with decades of Lego. A Star Destroyer. A castle. Twelve Batmobiles. When he got his own place, it was all on display. Then Laura moved in, and the bookshelf that had no Laura on it said everything without a word being said. What followed wasn't a loss. It was a recalibration. Three sets on the desk. A Viking village that matches the bookcase. A Darth Vader bust that still holds the line. And a working theory that the pillow count is the real measure of whether the war is won or lost. Topics: moving in together, relationship compromise, shared living space, cohabitation, Lego Originally aired on 2026-06-29

30. juni 20269 min
episode NEW - Who Actually Benefits From the Vancouver Condo Deal? cover

NEW - Who Actually Benefits From the Vancouver Condo Deal?

Federal housing policy rarely produces a clean answer, and the BC condo buyback program is no exception. The Monday study panel works through what the numbers actually mean: ten percent federal funding, ninety percent BC, and units that still price out the people the program claims to help. The Bailout Question Jimmy Zoubris flags the political optics for a Conservative party historically opposed to government market intervention, then makes the case that this situation is different from aviation or auto bailouts in one important way. Lesley Kelly draws on agriculture to explain why broad programs with transparent rules feel different from a targeted purchase of one developer's unsold inventory, and why the precedent troubles her more than the price tag. 24 Sussex in 30 Seconds Years of neglect, prime ministers who wouldn't touch it, and a building that reportedly became unsalvageable under the last government. The panel gets thirty seconds each. Jimmy says save it. Lesley wouldn't rule out a teardown. Both agree it stopped being optional. Topics: federal housing policy Canada, BC condo buyback, developer bailout, 24 Sussex Drive, housing affordability GUEST: Lesley Kelly | highheelsandcanolafields.com GUEST: Jimmy Zoubris Originally aired on 2026-06-29

30. juni 202617 min
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episode ICYMI - The $40 Million Gift and What It Actually Builds cover

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Simon Fraser University just received a $40 million donation from the Stevens family to support its new medical school, opening this August. Erin Morantz, SFU's Vice-President of Advancement and Alumni Engagement, joins to explain what a gift that size actually does — and why the name on the building is the smallest part of the story. The Stevens family has been part of the SFU community for years. During the pandemic they delivered Nature's Path products to make sure students were fed. Their $40 million gift now supports capital construction, research with a focus on prevention and healthy living, student funding, and lectureships — the kind of infrastructure that government grants and tuition alone cannot cover. More than 70% of SFU donors are alumni, and Erin makes the case that alumni show up in ways that go far beyond cheques. She also makes it plain that a five dollar a month contribution to the food security fund helps someone. The scale of the gift changes. The principle behind it doesn't. Topics: SFU medical school, university philanthropy, alumni giving, Stevens family donation, charitable giving Canada GUEST: Erin Morantz | http://give.sfu.ca [http://give.sfu.ca] Originally aired on 2026-06-29

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