'I will never own a home': Moncton artist highlights barriers to housing
Moncton artist Natt Cann would like to own a home, but at the age of 35, he's come to the conclusion that will probably never happen.
His latest work, a series of nearly 300 prints of beautiful doors, was inspired by that realization. Cann was walking in downtown Fredericton one day, and noticed "pretty doors everywhere."
His next thought was, "I'll never afford any of this."
The doors may be beautiful, but for Cann, they symbolize more.
"The door is sort of like a barrier," he said. "You're not coming in."
Not all of the doors Cann prints are picture-perfect. Some are boarded up or have eviction notices on them.
"I want people to understand that beneath this collection of doors, there's ... a whole lot of anger and annoyance."
WATCH
| 'My frustration with the Canadian housing markets':
He calls his exhibit, Knock Knock! - I will never own a home, and describes it as his "frustration with the Canadian housing markets and predatory investment."
"It's mostly born from just being priced out of houses and priced out of basically everything — and I was like, 'Well at least I can own a door.'"
According to the Bank of Canada, the average price of a home in the province rose from just under $180,000 in 2019 to $297,520 in 2023, driven in part by record international and interprovincial migration after the pandemic.
There has also been an increase in the number of homes purchased by investors, and a decline in first-time buyers. Investor purchases climbed from 20 per cent of all mortgaged homes in Canada in 2014, to 30 per cent in the first quarter of 2023.
Cann wonders why government policy doesn't prevent investment firms from buying housing.
"Why is that allowed to exist in Canada?" he said. "A group of people can put their money together and buy a home as an investment and not as a thing of shelter…it prices out individuals from having shelter in this day and age."
According to Statistics Canada, more than one in five Canadian households live in unaffordable housing — meaning they spend more than 30 per cent of their income on housing.
One-of-a-kind prints
Cann grew up drawing on his bedroom walls, but now he uses more sophisticated techniques in his studio to create his art.
His collection of prints starts with taking pictures of the doors and includes doors from Fredericton, Saint John and Charlottetown.
Once he has the pictures, he digitally crops out the house.
"Then they get printed on a laser printer with a very specific toner and a very specific additive in that toner," Cann said. "Then you can use adhesive remover to transfer them onto a different piece of paper with some pretty aggressive application."
"The prints are one-of-a-kind and that texture that he gets is unique," said Kathryn Basham, who owns the Bright & Brine Fine Art Gallery.
She recently displayed Cann's exhibit in her Moncton gallery for three months, and is now working with him to get the prints made into a book.
"It'll be a conversation about not just his process, but his original idea behind the series," Basham said.
On the exhibit's opening night, Basham said about 50 to 60 people attended.
"The messaging behind Knock Knock! is extremely important," Basham said. "We are losing this housing here locally and we are losing a lot of what, not just architecturally we've had, but the opportunities for housing."
The project started in spring of 2023, but Cann is still adding doors to his collection.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
37 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Donald Trump says he's cutting off trade talks with Canada over Ottawa's digital tax
OTTAWA — U.S. President Donald Trump said Friday that he is cutting off all trade talks with Canada over the federal government's digital services tax that would impact American tech giants, calling it a 'blatant attack' on the United States. Trump announced his plan to end trade talks in a social media post Friday afternoon, less than two weeks after he agreed with Prime Minister Mark Carney at the G7 summit on June 16 to work toward a deal to end the ongoing trade war within 30 days . 'Based on this egregious Tax, we are hereby terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada, effective immediately,' Trump's post said. 'We will let Canada know the Tariff that they will be paying to do business with the United States of America within the next seven day period.' The Prime Minister's Office responded later Friday afternoon with a short statement that did not mention the digital services tax and expressed Canada's desire to continue the trade talks. 'The Canadian government will continue to engage in these complex negotiations with the United States in the best interest of Canadian workers and businesses,' the statement said. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said as recently as two weeks ago that Ottawa would press ahead with the tax, which is set to start collecting money on Monday. Prime Minister Mark Carney comments moments after U.S. President Donald Trump said that he was "terminating all discussions on trade with Canada" and threatened new tariffs over Ottawa's plans to push ahead with a digital services tax. Carney called the negotiations "complex." (June 27, 2025 / The Canadian Press) On social media, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said he was disappointed to hear that trade talks have halted, and that he hopes they resume quickly. He also did not name the digital services tax, but pointed to changes his party has long argued will improve the Canadian economy, including the repeal of the existing federal project assessment regime and industrial carbon pricing. 'As always, Conservatives are ready to help get a good deal for Canada,' Poilievre's statement said. 'We must put Canada first.' Under Trump, the U.S. has imposed a series of tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, autos and other goods that Canada views as illegal and unjustified. Ottawa has responded with a raft of counter-tariffs in a trade war that Carney vowed during the spring campaign to 'win.' The prime minister has since embarked on talks with Trump, which Carney said are designed to renegotiate Canada's trade and security relationship with the economic and military juggernaut to the south. Flavio Volpe, president of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers' Association, was part of the prime minister's Canada-U.S. council that met virtually on Friday, just as Trump declared he would terminate trade talks. In an interview with the Star, Volpe said he remains cautiously optimistic, and that surprising twists have become an expectation since Trump returned to the White House in January. 'Is this a pressure moment in a negotiation, or is it really the end of the conversation? I don't know. But you know who does know? Donald Trump, who is, in this style of negotiation, a master,' Volpe said. 'Because the prime minister and the president are in direct communication, and have been for the last couple months, I will save my panic for … if the PM suggests we should panic.' Brian Clow, a former deputy chief of staff and senior adviser to prime minister Justin Trudeau, told the Star that it's not surprising Trump would target the tax, which was a trade irritant when Joe Biden was president as well. He urged the Carney government to stay calm and keep trying to talk to its American counterparts. He also said the government should not consider dropping the digital services tax unless the move is part of a broader trade deal with the Trump administration. 'To a certain extent, what we just saw from Donald Trump is exactly from his playbook. We've seen it so many times before,' Clow said. 'This is how he negotiates. He negotiates by threat, attempting to intimidate to yield more concessions from Canada. This is just a part of how it works and they've got to keep talking and hopefully come to some sort of deal.' The trade war has rattled businesses and workers across the country, with layoffs at auto plants and steel factory shutdowns in recent weeks. Trump doubled his steel and aluminum tariffs to 50 per cent against Canada on June 4, arguing the tariffs are needed to protect and promote a key American industry, as his broader policy of tariffs is designed to raise government revenues and overcome what the U.S. president argues is unfair commercial relations for his country. The Liberal government has long planned to impose a tax on digital services, which Trump views as an unfair trade practice that will hit American companies like Google and Meta. In his social media post Friday, Trump alluded to how the European Union is planning a similar digital services tax, and said Canada was 'copying' the bloc of states with 'a direct and blatant attack on our Country.' On Thursday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced that the G7 — a group of rich democracies that includes Canada — agreed to exempt American companies from certain taxes. In return, the Trump administration would remove a so-called 'revenge tax' from a sweeping bill in the U.S. Congress, which would have imposed taxes on investments from countries the U.S. deemed to be treating American firms unfairly. President Donald Trump said he's immediately suspending trade talks with Canada over its plans to continue with its tax on technology firms. Trump said the Canadians was sticking to its plan to impose the tax set to take effect Monday. (AP Video / June 27, 2025) Neither the PMO nor Champagne's office responded Friday when asked if that deal impacted Canada's digital services tax. The policy, enacted in 2024's Digital Services Tax Act , imposed a three per cent tax on revenue earned from online marketing and advertising, social media and some sales of user data. The tax applies to domestic and foreign businesses that reap more than $1.1 billion in global revenue and earn more than $20 million of revenue within Canada in a given year. The Liberals promised to introduce the tax in 2019, and argued hiking tax on big companies could help pay for social services and other public investments to spur the economy. The independent Parliamentary Budget Officer reported in 2023 that the tax would raise about $1.2 billion per year in government revenues. In a written statement Friday, the head of the Business Council of Canada said it has warned the government for the past three years that the digital services tax 'could risk undermining' Canada's economic relationship with the U.S. Goldy Hyder called on Canada to immediately propose to eliminate the tax, in exchange for the removal of American tariffs on Canadian goods. Catherine Cobden, president and chief executive officer of the Canadian Steel Producers Association, said Friday that trade relations are so unpredictable and uncertain with the U.S. that even a new deal to remove current tariffs can no longer be seen as a guarantee. She called for stronger measures to encourage using domestically produced steel in Canada, and other steps to protect the sector. 'We are really under attack by the United States, so we are rapidly pivoting away from that market,' she said. Another business group that has opposed the digital services tax, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said Friday that 'surprises' should be expected in negotiations. 'The tone and tenor of talks has improved in recent months, and we hope to see progress continue,' said the chamber's president, Candace Laing. 'We respect that Team Canada is conducting these negotiations at the table, and we need to give them the space to navigate.'

Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
After Lahaina burned, an experiment in housing the most vulnerable
LAHAINA, Hawaii — The Matson shipping container had traveled 10,000 miles by the time it arrived on this Maui hillside. Inch by inch, a towering crane lifted a nearly 20,000 pound structure of galvanized steel and glass out of the container, the newest home in a town stricken by disaster. Almost two years after wildfires ripped through Lahaina, this is where global supply chains, disaster relief and a novel solution to America's housing crisis come together. On track for full occupancy this summer, the 57-acre development is part of Hawaii's attempt to house some of its most vulnerable residents, using hundreds of prefab homes in a way that has never been tried elsewhere. It's also a test of how quickly the government and private companies can work together to prop up housing when there are few options — and whether other places will do the same.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
I spent way too much in my first 4 years of retirement and I worry I'll never get back on track. What do I do?
Retirees usually have bucket lists and dream vacations they want to go on while they're still healthy and fit. But after trips and maybe a few too many dinners out over the past four years, it sounds like you're suffering buyer's remorse. The good news is you realized you're jeopardizing your ability to fund the rest of your retirement, and you can take steps to protect your financial well-being before it's too late. Want an extra $1,300,000 when you retire? Dave Ramsey says this 7-step plan 'works every single time' to kill debt, get rich — and 'anyone' can do it 5 essential money moves to help boost your net worth today — here's how to up your money game in 2025 (and you can complete each step within minutes) Are you rich enough to join the top 1%? Here's the net worth you need to rank among Canada's wealthiest — plus a few strategies to build that first-class portfolio About a third of retirees (32%) say their monthly expenses in retirement are higher than they expected, according to the 2024 Profiles of Retirement conducted by the Ontario Securities Commission (OCS), with sustained high inflation topping Canadians' list of concerns. Despite this, 70% of retirees are say their standard of living is similar to or better than what it was pre-retirement. Does this mean that most retirees are planning to indulge in more leisure activities now that they have the freedom? Well, it's actually the opposite. When comparing the spending objectives of retirees and pre-retirees, only 35% of Canadians in retirement are prioritizing recreational travel during their golden years. In comparison, 55% of their non-retired counterparts intend to become frequent flyers. This isn't necessarily a bad thing. Because our health will inevitably decline as we age, we may have more energy, mobility and strength to pursue leisure activities and travel in our early years of retirement. Doing so, however, will require careful planning to ensure you remain comfortable throughout retirement and are able to fund a potential increase in medical expenses in later years. To ensure you have income throughout your retirement, determine a sustainable rate at which you can withdraw from your retirement savings. A common rule of thumb is the 4% rule. It says if you withdraw 4% of your investment portfolio in the first year and then this same amount plus an adjustment for inflation in each subsequent year you have a low probability of running out of money for 30 years. In the case of spending too much in the early years of retirement, you could determine today how much of your savings remain and begin employing the 4% rule from this point forward. This will likely mean you have to cut back on spending, but it could help ensure you remain comfortable going forward. This rule can be a useful starting point, but that doesn't mean it's a one-size-fits-all solution since each person's situation is different. Instead, you may find that a different withdrawal strategy works better for you. For instance, you might want to use the percentage of portfolio strategy, where you withdraw a fixed percentage of your portfolio's value each year. This means your income will fluctuate each year with the market value of your portfolio. If you follow a fixed-dollar withdrawal strategy, you'd withdraw a fixed dollar amount every year for a set time and then re-evaluate. Read more: Here are — and very quickly regret. How many are hurting you? You want to make sure your portfolio asset allocation reflects your investing horizon and risk tolerance. You may want to consider speaking with a financial advisor about your situation. Many advisors today have modeling tools at their disposal that allow them to run personalized economic and life scenarios to help determine the best withdrawal strategy. An advisor can also help with other retirement income withdrawal considerations, such as the amount of income you'll be receiving from the Canada Pension Plan, your required minimum distributions from your RRSP and/or TFSA and how and when to take from each type of account and asset class to be as tax-efficient as possible. As you get serious about spending responsibly, you may want to reevaluate your lifestyle and earn some additional income. Creating a budget and tracking expenses can be valuable tools in determining where expenses could be cut back. To earn additional income, you could take on a side hustle or part-time job. If major changes are needed, you may want to consider renting out a room, sharing a place with a friend or even moving to a less expensive area. Other options you might consider are accessing your home equity and borrowing against the cash value of a life insurance policy or even selling it. There's nothing wrong with taking advantage of your good health early in retirement to live a little. But if you get off track financially, acknowledging the issue and tackling it right away can help to ensure a comfortable retirement in your later years, too. 1. Ontario Securities Commission: Profiles of Retirement (Jan 10, 2024) I'm almost 50 and don't have enough retirement savings. What should I do? Don't panic. Here are 6 solid ways you can catch up Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought nearly 26 million shares of this Canadian company in 2024 — here are 3 ways to help you invest like the Oracle of Omaha What would you do if you had an emergency vet bill worth $5,000 tomorrow? Here's how to protect your furry friend (and keep your wallet intact) Billionaires like Mark Zuckerberg and Jay-Z have taken out mortgages for homes they can easily afford — here's why This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data