Waterloo Region Record

Ontario lost 1,000 planned rental units

Housing providers warn of a supply crunch if the issue isn’t addressed

- Shawn Jeffords

TORONTO — At least 1,000 planned rental units in Ontario have been cancelled or converted to condominiu­ms since the province introduced new rent control rules, a report released by a group representi­ng rental-housing providers said.

The group also warned of a supply crunch if the issue isn’t addressed.

The report, commission­ed by the Federation of Rental-Housing Providers of Ontario and released Monday, said the Liberal government’s Fair Housing Plan has negatively impacted the province’s rental housing supply.

Before the introducti­on of the government legislatio­n, 28,000 rental units were in the planning pipeline, but since the new rules were introduced 1,000 of those units have been cancelled or converted to condominiu­ms, the report said.

The federation’s president, Jim Murphy, said Ontario needs 34,000 rental units built a year to keep pace with demand and it is currently falling 6,250 short each year.

“We need more supply, full stop,” Murphy said.

“And we’ve got to encourage everyone, the industry included but also government­s to come to the table with policies that will create the environmen­t for new rental units”

In April, the Ontario government announced what it called a comprehens­ive housing package aimed at cooling a red-hot real estate market.

Among the 16 measures were a 15 per cent nonresiden­t speculatio­n tax to be imposed on buyers in the Greater Golden Horseshoe area who are not citizens, permanent residents or Canadian corporatio­ns and expanded rent control that will applied to all private rental units, including those built after 1991, which were previously excluded.

According to Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n data in the report, vacancy rates in the province have already fallen to 2.1 per cent across the province.

Murphy said both provincial and municipal government­s could make policy and tax changes to help encourage developers to deliver more purpose-built rentals.

“The problem right now is that there has been uncertaint­y created because of that change and we’re starting to see cancellati­ons of projects at a time when we need more supply,” he explained.

Housing Minister Peter Milczyn said the province does not plan to change rules which cap annual rent increases.

“I am listening to the industry, monitoring the situation, but we’re taking our action, which was to ensure there’s fair rental policies for tenants and releasing surplus provincial lands to build more rental supply,” Milczyn said.

Milczyn said he is skeptical about the findings of the report, adding that over the past decade only about six per cent of housing starts in Ontario were for rental housing.

“Under the old rent control regime that wasn’t generating lots of purpose-built rental housing,” he said.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? It is estimated that Ontario has lost 1,000 planned rental units since new rent control rules were brought in by the province.
FILE PHOTO It is estimated that Ontario has lost 1,000 planned rental units since new rent control rules were brought in by the province.

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