Toronto Star

New housing minister waiting for TCHC plan

Former Toronto councillor Peter Milczyn willing to give ‘the right support’ to city

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Ontario will not be handing Mayor John Tory a “blank cheque” to deal with a backlog of repairs needed in crumbling Toronto Community Housing units, says the new minister of housing.

The province is waiting to see Toronto’s plan to reconfigur­e the agency before any money is forked over, Etobicoke-Lakeshore MPP Peter Milczyn said Monday as Premier Kathleen Wynne promoted him to her cabinet.

“The city allowed our community housing to lose its focus,” said Milczyn, a former city councillor first elected to the legislatur­e in 2014.

“That plan is crucial as to how we move forward. Because simply writing a blank cheque is not going to improve the quality of housing for the tenants,” he added.

“The province will certainly be a partner with the city in helping that move forward with investment and the right support.”

Tory, who has warned hundreds of community housing units are at risk of closure within two years because $1.73 billion in repairs are needed, has been pressing Wynne and Toronto MPPs to step up with cash in an escalating war of words that began in the spring.

“This is an urgent situation,” he wrote to them in open letters in June, citing a “critical” state of disrepair and blaming the province for passing the responsibi­lity for social housing to the city. Toronto Community Housing Corp. (TCHC) manages almost 60,000 units in 2,100 buildings, from apartments to houses.

The long list of needed housing repairs includes roofs, structural problems, elevators and substandar­d plumbing.

If units are closed, their residents must be housed on other TCHC properties while another 181,000 people are stuck on waiting lists.

Milcyzn’s predecesso­r, Chris Ballard, who was moved to the environmen­t and climate change portfolio Monday to replace the retiring Glen Murray, has told Tory the province has repeatedly invested in affordable housing stock but the money hasn’t filtered down to TCHC.

“I appreciate that Mayor Tory is a strong advocate for the city — that’s his job,” said Milczyn. “I’ve been happy to point out to him, though, where sometimes the rhetoric doesn’t line up with reality.”

Milczyn, an architect who trained at the University of Toronto, was raised in the Mimico neighbourh­ood of his riding and won his first election in 1994 for the former borough of Etobicoke.

He served17 years in municipal politics.

He got the call about the cabinet post on Saturday evening as he was finishing dinner with his wife and daughter, who attended his swearing-in and subsequent news conference Monday.

Since being elected to the legislatur­e three years ago, he has served as parliament­ary assistant to the ministers of labour, infrastruc­ture and francophon­e affairs.

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