Toronto Star

City proffers land, incentives to developers

Tory aiming to fast-track affordable housing in areas of mixed developmen­t

- JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

The city is offering incentives to developers to build affordable housing downtown and elsewhere as the waiting list for those units climbs toward 200,000 people.

On Thursday, Mayor John Tory announced the expansion and details of an Open Door program to eliminate red tape at city hall and also provide a financial push for developers to build.

“We are massively behind,” Tory said, referring to building new housing. “The days of city hall taking months and years and decades — only, half the time, to find ways to say no — must come to an end, especially in regards to affordable housing.”

Part of those efforts include fasttracki­ng developmen­t of city surplus lands, such as the gravel pit at the northwest edge of CityPlace in the city’s downtown, where Tory made the announceme­nt. The site has sat empty for more than 20 years.

Once developed, that space will include a minimum of 80 affordable housing units, said local Councillor Joe Cressy. A request for proposals will be sent out in the new year.

“Today there are 18,000 residents living in this neighbourh­ood, and as a city we need to continue to focus on building neighbourh­oods, not just adding density,” Cressy said, adding that that includes park space, social amenities and community space. “But it also means ensuring that a complete community is a mixed-in- come community.”

The CityPlace site is one of five city sites that will host the creation of 389 affordable rental or ownership units. The city has also identified 13 additional surplus pieces of land for future developmen­t as part of the program.

Incentives for private developers will include waiving permit fees, streamlini­ng the applicatio­n process and deferring developmen­t charges. Further details are expected to be released next spring.

Tory also called on the provincial and federal government­s to “search their hearts and souls” and offer up more public land for affordable housing developmen­t.

The province doesn’t mandate affordable housing for new developmen­ts, something the city has called on Queen’s Park to change. Some at city hall, including Councillor Mike Layton, have continued to lobby vocally for legislativ­e changes that would bring inclusiona­ry zoning to Toronto.

Tory said he has been assured that the incentives of the Open Door program are adequate for developers to volunteer space for affordable housing.

“Let’s see how we do at doing it this way, which is providing significan­t incentives to them, providing a streamline­d approval process, putting up some of our own land,” Tory said. “If it’s not proceeding at a fast enough pace, based on this invitation to people to participat­e, we’ll have to look for other measures.”

 ?? JENNIFER PAGLIARO/TORONTO STAR ?? A gravel pit on the edge of the CityPlace site has sat vacant for two decades. The city hopes its new Open Door program will push developers to build.
JENNIFER PAGLIARO/TORONTO STAR A gravel pit on the edge of the CityPlace site has sat vacant for two decades. The city hopes its new Open Door program will push developers to build.

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