Waterloo Region Record

Ford announces funding to help cut housing red tape

Plan will help larger municipalities get approvals quickly

Ontario’s largest communities will get new funding to help speed up development approvals, Premier Doug Ford announced Wednesday as he met with municipal leaders to discuss ways to address the housing crisis.

Ford said his goal for the summit was to come up with concrete ways to allow more families to buy a home.

“While the solutions may seem obvious, implementing them takes a lot of hard work and determination,” he said in opening the virtual summit.

“We know we need to better standardize processes and procedures across regions, and we know we need to improve data collection and reporting so we can better track progress where we can do better.”

A new $45-million Streamline Development Approval Fund will help the 39 largest municipalities approve housing applications more quickly, Ford said. As well, the province said it will work with municipalities to develop a data standard for planning and development applications that should speed up the processes.

The housing crisis in Ontario won’t be solved overnight, said Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark, but removing red tape can help get more homes built faster.

“There is no silver bullet,” Clark said after the summit. “Addressing Ontario’s housing supply crisis is a long-term strategy that requires long-term commitment, collaboration and coordination.”

The Progressive Conservative government is expecting a report early this year from a housing affordability task force, which was appointed to look into measures to boost the supply of rental and ownership housing, reduce red tape, and other options to address housing issues.

Clark said changes to zoning rules to allow for more density are among many suggestions under consideration.

“We need housing of all types,” he said. “We need missing middle, we need that purpose built rental, yes, we need single family as well. But we also need that mixture of homes that really reflects local communities.”

Jeff Lehman, the mayor of Barrie and the chair of the Ontario’s Big City Mayors caucus, said the new development approval fund is appreciated, but more action is needed.

“The run-up in prices is so steep and the rise in rent is so high we’re going to need more substantive solutions to solve the problem,” he said after the summit.

“We can always make the processes better or faster, I think, but we’re going to have to be bolder than that if we’re going to make a substantive difference in the actual cost of housing.”

Ontario could change tax policy to create incentives to build rental apartments, Lehman said as one example.

Ontario’s Opposition New Democrats say they want to see more rent controls and measures to help people buy their first home, as well as stricter rules for speculators.

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2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-01-20T08:00:00.0000000Z

https://waterloorecord.pressreader.com/article/281633898611317

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