City of Ottawa to pledge to help build 151,000 homes in next decade - Action News
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Ottawa

City of Ottawa to pledge to help build 151,000 homes in next decade

Ottawa's mayor is settosign a pledge this week thatlaysout how the citywill helpthe Ontario government hit itsambitious targets for home construction in the coming decade.

Provincial funding tied to signing a municipal pledge by March 22 deadline

Two workers stand in front of a two-storey duplex under construction in the southwest community of Shaganappi.
The City of Ottawa has been assigned a target of building 151,000 new housing units over the coming decade. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

UPDATE: Council unanimously approved the housing pledge at its meeting on March22, 2023.

Ottawa's mayor is settosign a pledge layingout how the citywill helpthe Ontario government hit itsambitious targets for home construction in the coming decade.

Not doing so could affect whether the City of Ottawareceives funding to deal with the financial impacts of last fall'ssweeping provincial housing legislation.City staff estimatethe changes,such as waiving development fees on triplexes and affordable housing,could cost Ottawa$60 million a year by2025.

The Ontariogovernment announced last October it intended to build1.5 millionhomes by the end of 2031, and assigned individualtargets to 29 of thelargest and fastest-growing cities and towns.

Ottawa was told to hit 151,000 units a figure that isdouble the 76,000 homes the cityitself had calculated it would need when it projected population growth for the recently approved official plan.

Municipal affairs and housing minister Steve Clark then sent mayors letters last month outlining what actions they could put into their housing pledges, and said they were due by March 22.

Building permits down after record year

Ottawa's planning and housing committee endorsed a document on Monday that showshow policies in the new official plan will promote higher buildings along many busier corridors and near transit stations. The city also intends to boost affordable housing on surplus city-owned and federallands, and create a team to work onconverting downtown offices.

A photo of a new home in Ottawa getting its shingles intalled.
Staff confirmed building permits havefallen off considerably from 2022, when the City of Ottawa issueda record-setting 12,600 permits. (Kate Porter/CBC)

Councillorswholly supportedcreating morehousing of all types, but weren't convinced Ottawa could meet thetarget.So much dependson the development industry deciding to put shovels in the ground, at a time when labour is short and borrowing rates are high, they pointed out.

Staff confirmed building permits havefallen off considerably from 2022, when the City of Ottawa issueda record-setting 12,600 permits.

In order to meet the Progressive Conservative government's target, however,the municipality would need to consistently hand out15,100 building permits in each of the coming years.

That's theoretically possible, said Royce Fu, the city's acting manager of policyplanning. Tens of thousands of unitsare already under construction,approved, or in the queue for zoning approval.

Manyfactors outside the city's control would need to align in the housing market, he said.

Developers 'control supply'

The Greater Ottawa Home Builders Association signed a letter promising to support the City of Ottawa as it pledges to boost housing supply.

But Coun. Riley Brockingtonsaid the private development industry itselfcontrols housing supply.

"They could triple, quadruple their units if they wanted to because they have the land," Brockington said. Instead, developers assess the prices at which they can sell homes and try to maximize profit, he said.

Coun. Catherine Kitts, who represents OrlansSouth-Navan, was concernedthe pledge was a way tohave cities agree to the contents of last fall's controversial Bill 23 or risk not getting funding.

"I am uneasy about how this pledge might get used against us," she said.

The committee nonetheless approved the pledge unanimously and sent it on to city council for approval this Wednesday.

Committee chair Jeff Leiperagreed it might be hard to hit Ontario's target onehe said could turn out to be "arbitrary" but said he was "very comfortable" the actions laid out in the city's own pledgewould create housing of all types.

Reviewing the city's zoning across the city, and making sure red tape doesn't affect housing permits, are the right steps for building a more sustainable and affordable city, Leiper said.

Thecity will doits part to create the conditions to boost housing, Leiper said, and now expects the province to followthrough with money for the infrastructure for those extra homes.