Tax breaks for developing polluted land are back - Action News
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Ottawa

Tax breaks for developing polluted land are back

A program that provides grants to developers who build on contaminated land is back on, sparking disappointment from Ottawa Mayor Mark Sutcliffe, who campaigned against it.

Council rejected staff recommendations to change the brownfields grant program

A politician looks down at his lectern while speaking.
Mayor Mark Sutcliffe campaigned against the brownfields program. He says he's 'disappointed' that councillors opted not to accept proposed changes. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

UPDATE| The City of Ottawa's legal department identified a "possible issue" with the decisionsreached by council on the brownfields program, according to a memo to councillors which also recommended a public meeting. City Council passed a motion on Jan. 24, 2024, to further debatethe program's future at an April meeting of the finance committee.


A program that provides grants to developers who build on contaminated land is back on, sparking disappointment fromMayor MarkSutcliffewhocampaigned on his opposition to thetax breaks.

Thebrownfieldsprogram is meant to encourage development of derelict or vacant properties onland in Ottawa that has to beremediated, often because the sites were home to polluting businesses like gas stations.

It's been paused since shortly after the last election, so staff could review the program and provide recommendations on how to improve it.

What they came up with was a revamped plan that imposed new limits on the grant a plan that earned Sutcliffe's stamp of approval.

But when it came time to decideWednesday, councillors rejected the proposed revamp by a vote of 14-8 and effectively resurrected the program that caused commotion on the campaign trail.

"I'm disappointed,"Sutcliffesaid after the meeting. "I heard over and over again from Ottawa residents during the campaign last year, andfranklysince I became mayor, that they don't want to see big tax handouts going to developers to build on contaminated lands."

Key to the program is spurring projects that developers would otherwise pass on.

But the application process does not and cannot ensure that's the case, according to Don Herweyer, interim general manager of planning, real estate and economic development.

"I don't know how they would prove it," he told councillors.

The staff suggestions punted by council would have tiedthe program to a new affordable housing incentive, eliminated the deferral of development charges, and capped projectgrants at $5 million, or 50 per cent of eligible costs.

$161M in approved grants, so far

Ottawa was an early adopter of this form of grant, introducing the program in 2007.

Since then, the cityhas approved more than $161 millionin grants for 69 projects, although the actual funding provided is far less.

Dozens of municipalities now have similar programs,all of which cover significantlylarger shares of the project costs.

While staff say it's impossible to know whether projects will move forward without a tax break, information provided to councillors suggested it's likely the grants at least speed up projects.

At a finance committee meeting held earlier this month, three members of the public including a retired Ottawa staffer who helped develop the program spoke in its defence.

Weeks later, councillors are echoingtheir words of protest.

"It is, and can be, and has proven to be, a benefitto cities. Other cities are more aggressive than we are in doing this, and for a reason," Kanata North Coun. Cathy Curry said.

"In the long run, this is a really good investment for the city."

She, and others, said it's inconceivable that staff could have written that the program has "prompted the creation of 120,000 square metres of office space, 180,000 square metres of commercial space, and thousands of permanent employment opportunities" andrecommend its restructuring just a few paragraphs later.

A politician puts her hand on her chin as she listens at her desk.
Kanata North Coun. Cathy Curry, seen here last month, called the brownfields grant a 'really good investment for the city.' (Francis Ferland/CBC)

Creating a funding gap

Funding the brownfields grant relies on something called property tax uplift.

When developments go ahead, they provide the city with tax revenues that are higher than what it could have otherwise collected.

Many councillors drew on this, arguing they bring in a lot of revenue.

But staff and the mayor characterized that as an oversimplification.While taxes go up, so do the costs incurred by the city to provide services, explained chief financial officerCyril Rogers.

In other words,it's not free money.

"Our core mandate is to recover our costs for the services we provide," Rogers said. "We're not in the business of creating margin on our development."

Rogers said the proposed program changes would havebetter protected the city's finances.

Man in a suit in front of a row of microphones gestures with his hand
Cyril Rogers, Ottawa's chief financial officer, said every time the city provides a grant to developers it creates a funding gap, no matter how much the developer eventually pays in property taxes. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

Political dimensions

George Darouze also spoke in favour of restoring the existing brownfields program, despite the fact that his rural ward isn't affected by it. He argued councillors were inappropriately "politicizing" a business issue.

But the politics of the issue of these sorts of tax breaks are well established.

While brownfieldsgrants focus on contaminated land, other grants in the same family are used to kickstart development in economically depressed areas.

Sutcliffe campaigned against both, at a time when the voting public was frustrated with the approval of a controversial $2.9 million tax break for a Porsche dealership in Vanier.

"This is something that the public really wants reigned in," Capital Coun. Shawn Menardalso argued. "We are offside on this."

Another part of the staff review focused on revising these community improvement programs. They all passed.

Councillors also followed staff advice to pause the grant program for development near the airport.It was the only one of these programs that saw council reject an application a $13-million grant for a hotel on the premise it would be built regardless.

As it turns out, council was right.Germain Hotels recently announced it will move ahead with building the airport hotel, without the municipality's help.

A view of a building
The city's finance committee will now review proposals for developments like the 21-storey Rideau Registry project, Cadillac Fairviews first residential rental development in Canada, which were submitted right before the program was paused. (Commonwealth Historic Resource Management and Barry Padolsky Associates Inc.)

Going forward, Sutcliffe said he will do what he's been doing since he was elected: voting against grant applications for projects that do not include affordable housing.

"I plan to focus my energy on advancing brownfields that have an affordable housing component to them, and not supporting anything that doesn't."

Council did support staff recommendations to massage thecriteria for other development programs and create a new tax break for developments that include affordable housing components.

Rideau-VanierCoun. Stphanie Plante also persuaded councillors to support her motion to go against staff recommendations and grandfather applications submitted before the brownfields grant was paused.