Toronto Star

Rising rent outpacing incomes in city

Renters are forced to spend higher percentage of their pay on housing

- TAMAR HARRIS STAFF REPORTER

Nearly a quarter of renters in Toronto are spending more than 50 per cent of their household income on rent and utilities, creating a “crisis of affordabil­ity,” according to the 2018 Canadian Rental Housing Index.

The findings, released Tuesday and based off 2016 census informatio­n, paint a picture of worsening affordabil­ity as rising rents outpace incomes, forcing renters to spend a larger percentage of their pay on housing.

“Simply put, too many Canadians are paying too much of their incomes towards rent,” Jill Atkey, acting CEO of the BC Non-Profit Housing Associatio­n, told reporters Tuesday morning.

Spending 30 per cent of a household’s gross income on rent is considered the threshold of affordabil­ity, Atkey said.

Nationwide, the index found 40 per cent of renters in Canada are spending over that threshold, with 18 per cent spending more than half their income on rent and utilities. In Toronto, 47 per cent of households are spending more than 30 per cent of their income on rent and utilities, and 23 per cent are spending more than 50 per cent.

“Spending more than you can afford on rent is becoming the new normal in Canada,” Atkey said. “If you’re spending more than half of your income on rent, how are you paying for food, transporta­tion, child care, soccer and music classes for the kids?”

Steven Love, a renter who lives in Parkdale, estimates about 60 per cent of his income goes toward rent. Love receives disability benefits and pays $722 a month for a bachelor apartment.

“As far as little things in life, like going to a movie or going out for a coffee, these things are impossible,” Love said. “They’re not part of my reality.”

Love, an affordable housing advocate and one of the organizers of the successful Parkdale rent strike, says he sees affordable housing as an issue throughout his community and other parts of the GTA.

“I went online once and I looked (at rental properties) in Brampton,” he said. “Even in Brampton, the rents are very high.”

The index also identified that housing affordabil­ity has become an issue outside of downtown cores.

“What was once a problem in the urban core has now spread … as renters move further and further out in search of affordabil­ity,” Atkey said.

“But the data that we’re releasing today shows that they’re not finding it there.”

The index also found that, for the first time in a generation, the rate of Canadian renters has outpaced the number of people buying a home.

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