Waterloo Region Record

Anti-sprawl restrictio­ns not a factor in housing shortage: government

- Jessica Smith Cross

TORONTO — The Ontario government is dismissing suggestion­s that the province’s anti-sprawl policies are contributi­ng to a housing supply shortage and soaring home prices in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area.

Developers argue that easing restrictio­ns on constructi­on of detached homes and townhouses on “greenfield” land — areas set aside by municipali­ties for developmen­t as part of Ontario’s growth plan a decade ago — could help boost supply.

The province is expected to release its updated growth plan this spring after years of consultati­ons, but preliminar­y recommenda­tions suggest it will be more restrictiv­e of low-rise homes, with higher intensific­ation and density targets aimed at limiting urban sprawl.

The Liberals have promised to bring forward a package of housing affordabil­ity measures, with at least some of them to be included in the spring budget.

The Building Industry and Land Developmen­t Associatio­n (BILD) would like the province to make changes to its growth plan that will allow developers to build more low-rise detached homes and townhouses on unbuilt land in the GTHA. BILD and other industry groups note they aren’t proposing venturing into the Greenbelt — an 800,000-hectare area of government-protected swaths of farmland, green space and wetlands around the GTHA. Instead they’re suggesting targeting the “greenfield” lands on the outskirts of the region’s cities.

The associatio­n’s president and CEO Bryan Tuckey says the restrictiv­e growth plan policy that’s been in place for the last decade — known as Places to Grow — has contribute­d to the housing shortage and soaring home prices.

In 2002, there were 53,660 homes sold in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), 72 per cent of which were low-rise, according to BILD. Last year, there were 47,161 homes sold in the GTA — 38 per cent were low-rise and 62 per cent were condo apartments.

Municipal Affairs Minister Bill Mauro wouldn’t comment on the updated growth plan — but he disagreed with the BILD’s premise that the growth plan is tied the hot housing market.

“That line of thinking is looking to create a link between housing pricing and the growth plans and Greenbelt policies,” he said last week. “We don’t think that’s the situation.”

Mauro said the government doesn’t see the availabili­ty of land as an issue because there is enough serviced land to accommodat­e three to four years’ worth of developmen­t.

The Neptis Foundation, a charitable foundation that does urban planning research, released a report last month that found there is a significan­t amount “unbuilt” land in the GTHA still available for developmen­t. It calculated there is more than 45,000 hectares of “greenfield” land that remains unbuilt.

Most of it is located on the outskirts of built-up areas, for instance in Brampton, Vaughan, and East Gwillimbur­y — but none in Toronto or Mississaug­a, said executive director Marcy Burchfield.

The land is enough to accommodat­e housing and job growth to 2031, if not beyond, she said.

To speed up developmen­t of that land, the provincial government could “play a more active role,” in making sure that municipal zoning aligns with the Ontario’s growth plan and the developmen­t approval process works swiftly, Burchfield said.

The developmen­t industry is also calling for the government to find ways to expedite the planning approval and appeals process, to allow for faster building.

 ?? HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? The average selling price for all residentia­l properties in the Greater Toronto Area was $916,567 last month.
HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO The average selling price for all residentia­l properties in the Greater Toronto Area was $916,567 last month.

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