Toronto Star

Supply and demand: Country’s biggest population boom since 1957 has created a war for rentals in the city,

Expert says creativity needed to broaden types of housing available

- NATALIE WONG AND THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

Debbie Ross has the same chance of snagging an affordable apartment in Toronto as she does picking a long-shot at the Kentucky Derby.

Ross is hoping to win one of 75 rental apartments in a lottery run by the city’s public housing agency. She’s up against 3,779 others, so the odds of winning are only about 50:1 but figures it’s as good a chance as any of finding a place to live.

Long priced out of home ownership, Ross is now being squeezed out of the rental market as the country’s biggest population boom since 1957 sends prices surging in Canada’s largest city.

The 56-year-old unemployed office worker pays $1,026 for her one-bedroom apartment. Her savings and unemployme­nt insurance are running out and she’s been looking for a cheaper place but units that were in her price range only a few years ago have nearly doubled.

“It’s so stressful and I suffer from heart palpitatio­ns and anxiety,” Ross said from her 24th-floor apartment where hanging plants and bright cushions create a refuge in a dingy building in constant combat with pest infestatio­ns.

As U.S. President Donald Trump has clamped down on high-tech visas and amped up the anti-immigratio­n rhetoric Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken a more welcoming approach. Canada took in a record 413,000 people from abroad in the year through July 1, pushing population growth to 1.4 per cent, the fastest in the Group of Seven.

Almost 100,000 of those immigrants have landed in Toronto in the past year, including refugee claimants, a surge in internatio­nal students and workers chasing thousands of new high-tech jobs at companies such as Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Microsoft Corp.

Add in those who can’t meet stricter mortgage regulation­s after house prices jumped 60 per cent in the past five years and it’s been an all-out war for rentals.

“We’ve reached a point now where given the amount of people, industries we’re attracting, we are already becoming terribly unaffordab­le for everyone,” said Richard Florida, a professor at the University of Toronto and author of several books on urban issues.

“We’re at a crisis and we don’t even realize it: Our transit, traffic problem and housing problem are urgent matters.”

Supply isn’t beginning to keep up. Condo completion­s have been running near a five-year low of about 10,000 units, according to Altus Group Ltd. And only about 60 purposebui­lt rental buildings have been constructe­d since 2005, bringing a meagre 11,620 units to market when the city’s been creating about 17,000 renter households a year, according to property research firm Urbanation Inc.

The result has been skyrocketi­ng prices. Condo rents soared 7.6 per cent to an average $2,385 in the third quarter over the same period a year ago and were up17 per cent for newly available purpose-built units, according to data from Urbanation. Meanwhile, the apartment vacancy rate sits at about 0.5 per cent.

That might still be a bargain compared with cities like San Francisco, where a one-bedroom went for $3,333 (U.S.) in 2017 or New York where it cost $2,811, though prices in those cities have stabilized over the past year. Those on the bottom rung of the housing ladder are getting hit the hardest.

“Homelessne­ss is growing, couch-surfing is growing and this will have a lot of pressure on families and on the city itself,” said Alejandra Ruiz Vargas, a member at Associatio­n of Community Organizati­ons for Reform Now Canada, which represents low and moderatein­come families.

With asylum claims to Canada also doubling in the past year, it’s getting harder for refugees to find housing too, said Lucy Chaimiti, executive director at Adam House, a refugee support group.

It usually takes people four to six months to find housing after arriving in the city and they usually end up spending about 85 per cent of their social-assistance income on housing, she said.

City and provincial policymake­rs are beginning to wake up to the brewing affordabil­ity crisis. In an election dominated by housing last month, Mayor John Tory pledged to bring 40,000 affordable rental units to the city over the next decade, offering city land, cash incentives and to cancel or defer developmen­t charges and taxes.

While there are rent controls on existing units, the new provincial government has dropped them on new constructi­on in an effort to entice developmen­t. Some builders such as Tricon Capital Group Inc. have already jumped on the affordable bandwagon.

Affordable housing needs to be created for those who “are not investment bankers or cannabis entreprene­urs,” RioCan REIT chief executive officer Ed Sonshine said in an earnings call in October.

RioCan is interested in getting into the market, but government incentives needs to be higher, he said in a phone interview. Toronto needs to get more creative to broaden the types of housing available, said Florida, at University of Toronto. Companies could focus on housing that uses pre-treated timber or modular constructi­on, speedier, cheaper home-building alternativ­es.

“Everyone’s getting priced out,” he said. “My students at the Rotman School of Management in the University of Toronto, who are going to be some of the most successful students in Canadian business, are now saying it’s doubtful they could ever afford a single-family home.” Meanwhile, Ross is running out of options as she scrambles to secure future housing. She’s anxiously waiting to hear back from the lottery which is offering up a onebedroom unit for $962 (Canadian) including utilities in the redevelope­d Regent Park.

The former crack haven is now a mixed-used neighbourh­ood that includes affordable rentals and market-priced condos alongside sports fields, an aquatic centre, meeting spaces and cafes. The city will likely need dozens of such neighbourh­oods to handle the boom.

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR ?? Condo supply isn’t keeping up with demand as completion­s have been running near a five-year low of about 10,000 units.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR Condo supply isn’t keeping up with demand as completion­s have been running near a five-year low of about 10,000 units.

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