Ottawa Citizen

Bill aims to speed up stalled housing plans

- ALLISON JONES

Ontario is proposing to speed up the creation of student housing and allow municipali­ties to enact “use it or lose it” policies to force movement on stalled developmen­ts in a new bill aimed at cutting so-called red tape in the home building system.

Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Paul Calandra introduced an omnibus bill Wednesday tackling rules and regulation­s across several ministries, but the largest sections are on housing and seek to help see 1.5 million homes built in 10 years.

Ontario's spring budget shows the pace of new home constructi­on is picking up in Ontario, with 88,000 housing starts projected in 2024, but is still far off the levels needed to get to the government's target by 2031.

Calandra has previously indicated that Ontario needed to be building at least 125,000 homes this year, ramping up to at least 175,000 per year in the near future.

The new bill would eliminate a requiremen­t to have a minimum amount of parking for developmen­ts near major transit stations, limit third-party appeals to the Ontario Land Tribunal and allow municipali­ties to more quickly increase developmen­t charges that builders pay on market housing that doesn't qualify as affordable housing.

Calandra says the measures in the bill speak to challenges municipali­ties have faced in the homebuildi­ng process and are aimed at removing those obstacles.

“We're not going to micromanag­e and dictate a one-size-fits-all approach across the province,” he wrote in a statement. “Municipali­ties know their communitie­s best — they know where it makes sense to build homes.”

Calandra and Premier Doug Ford have repeated that sentiment often in recent days as fourplexes have become a flashpoint in Ontario politics and housing policy.

The opposition parties as well as housing advocates want to see the province create a rule that would automatica­lly allow up to four units on a residentia­l property anywhere in the province, but Ford has said he is not in favour of that even as the federal government ties $5 billion in new funding for the provinces to implementi­ng a similar policy.

Calandra's new bill does seek to remove barriers to building additional housing such as garden and laneway suites, such as restrictio­ns on the number of bedrooms per lot.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Paul Calandra says a new bill would reduce required minimum parking near major transit stations and limit third-party appeals of housing projects.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing Paul Calandra says a new bill would reduce required minimum parking near major transit stations and limit third-party appeals of housing projects.

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