After grim housing affordability report, critics look to Doug Ford's government for a plan - Action News
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After grim housing affordability report, critics look to Doug Ford's government for a plan

By 2030, if construction continues at current levels, Canada's housing agency says Ontario will be 1.85 million homes short the number needed to get prices down to affordable levels. Experts say the Ford government needs to do something quickly to solve the problem.

Ontario needs 1.85 million additional homes to achieve affordability by 2030, CMHC warns

Exterior shot of townhomes under construction
A recent report by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation says Ontario and British Columbia are two of the most unaffordable provinces for housing in Canada, and need to build millions more homes to achieve affordability by 2030. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Critics say a recent report from the federal government's housing agency is another grim sign that Ontario politicians are not only dropping the ball on affordability, but at a level that they didn't anticipate.

Last Thursday, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. (CMHC) released forecasts that suggest the province's goal of building 1.5 million homes in the next decade isn't nearly enough to keep up with the rate of population growth.

By 2030, if construction continues at current levels, CMHC says Ontario will be 1.85 million homes short of the numberneeded to get prices down to 2003-04 levels, when the average house cost $500,000. CMHC says as of 2021, the average price of a home in Ontario was $871,000.

For Jacob Dawang, a housing advocate with the organization More Neighbours Toronto, the report was a tough pill to swallow.

"I felt a bit of despair just knowing how fast and how much action we need to take today to actually make housing affordable again," Dawang said.

He wants politicians to do more and to do it far faster.

"They're either moving too slowly or many municipalities and local politicians are in denial of the housing supply crisis and do not want to take action," he said.

In response to the report, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Monday that lack of supply is one of the main reasons for the housing crisis and wants to focus on finding vacant or surplus government property to alleviate it. Speaking alongside Toronto Mayor John Tory, Ford said all governments need to do more and work together.

But critics say many of thesolutions, ranging from ending exclusionary zoning to allowing "as of right" developments, liein reforming the NIMBYism housing culture and implementing the recommendations released by the Housing Affordability Task Force (HATF) in February. The political will to act on those is needed, they say.

"We don't need more reports," saidMark Richardson, the technical lead for volunteer group Housing NowTO.

"We need more housing, and there's a bureaucratic and political preference to kick the can just a little bit further down the road."

Improving at too slow a pace

Both Richardson and Dawangsay residents' associations that campaign againstbig projects that would add density to single-family neighbourhoods, and politicianswho cater tothose groups for votes, are stillsome of the biggest obstacles tohousing reform in Ontario.

"We need to make difficult choices. We need to make them now and we need to be willing to upset the neighbours," saidRichardson.

Housing legislation the government enacted shortly before the election containsmeasures to streamline approval processes, but lackskey measures such as zoning changes to allow more density in certain neighbourhoods something that advocates and experts have long urged.Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark justifies the absence of those measures in the bill by saying municipalities have told the government they're not ready for them.

Mayor John Tory and Premier Doug Ford are seen here speaking at a news conference on Monday after a closed-door meeting at Queens Park in Toronto. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Tory says with the support of the Ontario government, the City of Toronto hasno choice but to find new solutions toaccommodate the 70,000 people whomove to Toronto each year.

"We're not trying to upset stable neighbourhoods," said Tory.

"We are simply trying to say the status quo is not going to be an option for us in a city that is growing as fast as Toronto."

Ford says the government will introduce a "very, very aggressive plan" to tackle the housing crisis.

The premierhas introduceda new associate minister of housing positionand has givenInfrastructure Minister Kinga Surma an additional mandate for government real estate, charged with finding land on which to build housing.

"I'm confident if we can standardize the process, speed up the process, get shovels in the ground, supply some of the land be it municipal or provincial and federal we can really move forward," said Ford.

Getting to the heart of the problem

The report, CMHC says, falls short on delving intosocial housing, income distribution's impact on the problemand what types of housing are needed for urban centres. It states more research into these areas is needed.

David Hulchanski,a housing and community development professor at the University of Toronto, says these types of analysesand acknowledgements are more important than ever to get to the root of the housing crisis especially if governments and experts insist on tackling this issue by mainly increasing supply.

But he says the report fails to address the underpinnings of the marketsuch as housing speculation, lost supply due to short-term rentals, multiple property ownership, tax evasion and money laundering in real estate, and the financing structure inhousing.

"Reality is much more complex than what is being presented here."

With files from the Canadian Press