Toronto Star

Will GTA homes become affordable?

Curbs to flipping and foreign-ownership ban among ways government aims to tackle housing crisis

- VICTORIA GIBSON, TESS KALINOWSKI AND DONOVAN VINCENT

There is no silver bullet for Canada’s housing woes, federal Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland cautioned while delivering the federal budget this week — a road map that includes an array of pitches to build more homes, stifle flippers, and overhaul housing programs that have faced scrutiny.

In the Toronto area, milliondol­lar home prices have forced would-be buyers to stay in the rental market, as soaring rent costs squeeze out the city’s essential workers. With thousands relying on the city’s shelter network, the number one reason for homelessne­ss cited during last spring ’s street needs assessment was that Toronto housing costs were just too high.

While many details are yet to come, here’s a look at what this budget could mean for residents of the GTA.

Market-priced home supply

Will the budget’s $8.8 billion to build 100,000 more Canadian homes in the next five years make GTA housing more affordable?

Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper says the injection of supply will help, particular­ly as the budget’s intent aligns with that of the Ontario government and the city of Toronto. The problem, he said, is the tidal wave of demand — millennial­s are aging out of their condos to raise their families and a record 400,000 immigrants landed last year.

The budget “is not quite enough,” said Karen Chapple, director of the School of Cities at the University of Toronto.

“It’s not really addressing the structural issues in the GTA — the declining population in some of the inner ring suburbs and the unevenness of growth. We have so much low-density housing and it’s very hard to move that stock because it’s inhabited by middle-class, longterm homeowners,” she said.

Chapple says Toronto is doomed to keep building “tall and sprawl” — ultradense towers and exurbs that require people to commute long distances to work, unless it removes some of the existing barriers. Among them, she said, are zoning that makes it easier to rebuild monster homes than multiple units; urban design regulation­s, and appeals and delays at the Ontario Land Tribunal.

Foreign buyers

The government’s two-year ban on foreign home buying made for great headlines, but it won’t contribute to housing affordabil­ity in Canada and certainly not in the Toronto region, said Royal LePage’s Soper.

He says the issue of foreign buyers probably registers with people who have misconstru­ed immigratio­n for investment.

In 2017, such a ban might have had more effect but now the run-up in GTA home prices is higher at the tail end of a pandemic when the borders have been effectivel­y sealed for nearly two years. “This time it’s a made-in-Canada problem. The 2020 to 2022 rise in home prices includes virtually no foreign investment,” Soper said.

In Vancouver, which has a more concentrat­ed population, it could mean a decrease in competitio­n for extravagan­t homes among the super rich. But it will have less impact in Ontario, he said.

Soper notes the ban includes some significan­t exemptions, such as recreation­al properties that are popular with Americans in places such as Muskoka.

“We have 850,000 foreign students (in Canada). A small portion will live in homes they own and they’re exempt,” he said.

The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board says land registry data shows an average of 200 transactio­ns a month by foreign buyers in the Greater Golden Horseshoe. But for the last two years that number has been about half or about 1 per cent of total real estate sales. There were about 11,000 sales in the real estate board’s territory in March.

House flipping

Experts differ on the effectiven­ess of a new measure announced to curb house flipping. The step, which impacts residentia­l properties sold on or after Jan. 1 next year, would see individual­s paying “full taxation on their profits as business income,” for properties held for less than a year (excluding homes sold under extenuatin­g circumstan­ces such as a death or divorce.)

The measure would see Ottawa reaping an additional $15 million a year.

The move is a switch from current legislatio­n that permits a capital-gains tax exemption on all principal residences.

Frank Clayton, senior research fellow in the Centre for Urban Research and Land Developmen­t at Ryerson University, believes the policy is aimed at a problem that “will solve itself.”

He argues that when the housing market peaks, which he says it is going to or has already, due to interest rate hikes, “if we wait until 2023 (house flipping) is not going to be a problem because the market will be softer and people won’t be (doing it).”

Rental housing

What’s in it for renters? For one, a reform of the federal government’s multibilli­on-dollar Rental Constructi­on Financing Initiative, which was introduced in 2016 to create more rental units, but has faced criticism over its formula — which currently lets some above-market-rent units be labelled “affordable housing.”

The rules are based on median family incomes. Using Toronto’s 2019 median, that would mean any rental could be affordable if it cost $2,228.75 or less — a rate that falls above this year’s average market rate for even a three-bedroom apartment. The new target Ottawa is pledging would ensure at least 40 per cent of the units fall at, or below, 80 per cent of local market rate.

“It was something that really needed a second look and we’re glad that they are taking a stronger approach,” said Douglas Kwan, a lawyer with the Advocacy Centre for Tenants Ontario.

He was encouraged, too, by a vow to federally review “housing as an asset class,” including the way corporate players in residentia­l real estate are taxed. While Kwan was hoping for more immediate steps, pointing to the trend of rental buildings being bought by the likes of real estate investment trusts, the budget hints at “potential early actions” by year’s end.

Also on the horizon: a strategy that tackles the specific challenges faced by Indigenous households in cities such as Toronto. The budget grants a $300-million ask from the National Housing Council to develop an Indigenous housing strategy for urban, rural and northern settings.

Deeply affordable housing

With the promise of $4 billion to accelerate housing efforts by municipali­ties, Kwan is looking for detail — namely, how much deeply affordable versus market housing would be boosted, and if there would be any marked increase in undersuppl­ied rent-geared-to-income homes.

As of late 2021, more than 78,800 households in Toronto were waiting for rent-geared-to-income housing, with just 2,821 housed off that list last year. Tens of thousands are also waiting for units with support services. For those residents, Coun. Ana Bailão — Mayor John Tory’s designated housing advocate — said she was pleased to see a two-year, $1.5-billion extension of the federal Rapid Housing Initiative, which supports deeply affordable projects in the city.

By year’s end, Bailão says Toronto is expecting to have 1,000 RHI-funded units opened up.

While awaiting details, she’s hoping the accelerate­d effort offers supports that could be layered on top of city initiative­s to further lower the cost of its resulting units.

Also well-received: a promise to keep up the higher levels of funding to combat homelessne­ss allocated during the pandemic, and a pledge to issue a one-time $500 payment to those struggling with affordabil­ity.

“Even as fast as we’re building our modular housing, it’s still taking six months, nine months, a year,” Bailão said.

Co-operative housing

More co-op housing appears to be on the horizon, with the federal government promising a new developmen­t program with a target of 6,000 units countrywid­e, and $1 billion in loans to support co-op projects, reallocate­d from the existing Rental Constructi­on Financing Initiative coffers.

Toronto has a diverse co-op market, with some requiring buy-in, but others operating similarly to a rental — though without a traditiona­l landlord or profit incentive, with residents becoming members of the co-op that can vote on decisions like when to raise housing bills.

But while co-ops provide affordable housing to some citydwelle­rs, advocates and elected officials alike have said federal funding doesn’t compare to what it’s been in the past — meaning building a co-op today is much harder, and available units have become a rarity.

Tom Clement, the executive director of the Co-operative Housing Federation of Toronto, said the budget vow was “significan­t,” though details are still being ironed out. He’s hoping to see some grants available along with the promised loans, arguing that especially in expensive markets such as Toronto, loans may help secure the brick-andmortar building, but that further assistance would likely be needed to offer rentals at an affordable rate.

 ?? ?? Coun. Ana Bailão was pleased to see an extension of the federal Rapid Housing Initiative.
Coun. Ana Bailão was pleased to see an extension of the federal Rapid Housing Initiative.

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