Where have all the houses gone? There is talk of a turnaround as Elliot Lake realtors sell houses faster and more often.

AuthorGilbert, Craig
PositionSpecial Report: Elliot Lake & North shore

Elliot Lake Mayor George Farkouh has done a lot of work in the past couple of decades to keep his city from disappearing.

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The veteran chairman of the committee of the whole has given presentations on how Elliot Lake defied the odds at the request of government and other officials in Miramichi, New Brunwick, Chicago, Boston, Cincinnati, and Lethbridge and Drummondville, Alberta.

He has also addressed United Nations officials in New York, and travelled to Sweden to speak to an assembly of the Canadian Swedish Business Association in May.

When he goes, he talks about diversification, armed with statistics illustrating the bust that began with the closure of the mines at the start of the 1990s. He talks about the balancing out of the economy since, precipitated by the raging success of the retirement living initiative.

This story is not a new one, but what has happened to the real estate market since October 2003 is.

Farkouh may have to add a few paragraphs to the script if it keeps up.

City Councillor and Re/Max broker Clarence Baarda came to the city in 1996.

He describes the real estate market then as not completely stagnant, but flat and stale.

He has no facts or figures to explain why the market has turned around since fall 2003, but it doesn't take a master's thesis to dissect what is going on.

Whether the turnaround has anything to do with the success of the cottage lots pilot program (the city was able to get permission from the province to sell off some nearby waterfront lots on Crown land for cottage development) is anyone's guess, but the timing is impeccable.

The cottage lots program launched a few months prior, in early summer. On the first day tenders were opened, city officials had stacks of printed e-mails expressing interest half a foot high.

But as far as Baarda can tell, the majority of property buyers coming to the city are still retirees looking for an alternative to the rat race and urban sprawl that is southern Ontario.

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