Toronto Star

Affordable housing a key issue for voters

Former PC leader Tim Hudak says Liberals’ Fair Housing Plan taken some steam out of market

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

The Ontario government’s new foreign buyer tax may be popular with the public, but housing remains a key political issue among more than a third of voters, especially first-time buyers and millennial­s.

Research for the Ontario Real Estate Associatio­n (OREA) showed 37 per cent of Ontarians strongly believe housing affordabil­ity belongs on the upcoming provincial election agenda, with 30 per cent saying they would be more likely to vote for a party that takes on the issue.

Nearly 60 per cent of prospectiv­e firsttime buyers — many who would fall in the millennial age group — strongly agreed they would be more likely to support a political party that promotes housing affordabil­ity.

Twenty-eight per cent of millennial­s identified housing as the fifth most important issue. Only jobs, health care, taxes and hydro rates come ahead of housing, according to an Ipsos poll of 2,003 residents, presented at OREA’s Ontario Housing Summit in Toronto on Tuesday.

“An affordable place to call home,” is one of the most important topics in the province, said OREA chief executive officer Tim Hudak.

He credited the Liberal government’s Fair Housing Plan, which includes a 15per-cent foreign buyers tax, with taking “some steam out of the market.”

“The best long-term solution — let’s increase housing supply and housing choice. That way we can ensure millennial­s will be able to get a place of their own,” said Hudak, former leader of the Ontario Progressiv­e Conservati­ve party.

The meeting of about 120 government officials and academics devoted an entire panel to the millennial­s’ struggle to afford a down payment and mortgage.

Called “Generation Screwed?” the panel focused on the disconnect between the kind of houses Torontoare­a buyers want to purchase and the choices available to entry-level consumers.

While initially millennial­s are happy to live in highrises downtown, once they have children and want more space they need to adjust their expectatio­ns, said Ben Myers, senior vice-president of Fortress Real Developmen­ts.

“That’s one of the things that is making people angry,” he said. “They’ve lived in their parental home and their parent bought in a very different market than exists today. A lot of them want that 2,000 sq. ft. single-family home and it’s just not available. It’s $1 million, $1.5 million and they’re kind of stuck. Maybe they don’t want to live in the box in the sky.”

Meanwhile, new home buyers are making bigger monthly mortgage payments, according to Canada’s federal housing agency.

The average payment has climbed to $1,328 in the fourth quarter of 2016, up 4.6 per cent from $1,269 a year ago, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Tuesday.

In Toronto, the average payment was $1,826 during the fourth quarter of last year, up 11.5 per cent from $1,638 a year prior.

The Ipsos online research conducted May 29 and 31, is considered accurate within 2.5 per cent, 19 times out of 20.

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Only jobs, health care, taxes and hydro rates come ahead of housing in terms of importance for millennial voters, according to a new Ipsos poll.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Only jobs, health care, taxes and hydro rates come ahead of housing in terms of importance for millennial voters, according to a new Ipsos poll.

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