Ontario housing bill weakens Ottawa's zoning plan for affordable units - Action News
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Ottawa

Ontario housing bill weakens Ottawa's zoning plan for affordable units

The City of Ottawa's long-awaited planto makedevelopers put some affordable housing units in their buildings could be diluted by a controversial new housing bill at Queen's Park, according to housing advocates and city officials.

No hearing dates scheduled in Ottawa to debate controversial, wide-reaching bill

The advocacy group ACORN left flyers on vehicles on Nov. 3, 2022, calling on the Ontario government to abandon its More Homes Built Faster Act. The group says the housing it will create won't be affordable for the people who need it. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

The City of Ottawa's long-awaited plan to makedevelopers includesome affordable housing units in their buildings could be diluted by a controversial new housing bill at Queen's Park, according to housing advocates and city officials.

City staff are in the midst of crafting a bylawbased on goals set by city council just this past June,afterpublic debate. Now, the Ford government's proposedMore Homes Built Faster Act would standardize such lawsto require fewer units,using a more lenient definition of "affordable,"and guaranteed for fewer years than Ottawa had planned.

Ottawa has been intending to create an "inclusionary zoning" bylawsince the former Ontario Liberal government created that new power several years ago.

Coun. Glen Gower, who co-chairs the planning committee, said Ottawa wants torequire 10 per cent of newcondounits near transit stations be offered atpricesbelow market rates, guaranteed for 99 years. City staff were unsure if the same could be required of new rental buildings, but councillors asked them to try.

Instead, the Ford government would limit affordable units or floor spaceto five per cent of new condo and rental buildings, guaranteed for25 years, which Gower says Ottawa heard should bethe "bare minimum."

"If it's just five units there,and seven units here, that's really not making much of a dent in our affordability crisis," he said.

Advocacy group rallies

Everyone has a role to play in dealing with the thousands of people needing a home they can afford, Gowersaid, especially those who have seen aspike in land values because of Ottawa's investment in new light rail lines.

"Those landowners have already realized aprofit or a benefit to their own bottom line," he said."We just want to make sure that, close to transit stations, there are affordable units alongside market rate units."

An advocacy group that fought for even higher proportions of affordable units in new buildings is dismayed by the bill, and wants itscrapped. The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) in Ottawa helda rally outside the offices of PC MPP Lisa Macleod Thursday, but no one from her office met the group.

ACORN Ottawa held a rally on Nov. 3, 2022 in front of a local MPP's office to protest against Ontario's latest housing bill. Norma Jean Quibell, centre, argues it will weaken municipal bylaws aimed at requiring affordable units in new developments, and protecting tenants if their units are demolished. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

"Doug Ford has decided that the way we get out of this housing crisis is building houses.Unfortunately, he has given all these incentives to the developers," saidNorma Jean Quibell, co-chair of one of the group's local chapters.

"Yeah, we'll get more houses, but they won't be affordable to anyone."

Quibellsaid she's been tryingto find an apartment for her family in Barrhaven, near her new job, but rents are all above$2,100.

"We had gotten a big victory with city council making those pledges," she said of Ottawa's debate in June."Now it's just ripped all the way from us."

No consultation hearings in Ottawa

CBC News asked the office of the minister of municipal affairs and housing why the government had set inclusionary zoningcriteria moreconservatively than Ottawa planned, given housing affordability was its stated aim.

An emailed statement said only that the government was "proposing to make inclusionary zoning rules more consistent" as part of its effort to streamline municipal planning approvals.

It pointed to howsuchunits would be exempt from development charges, parkland dedication fees and community benefits charges.

Gower said the City of Ottawa is discovering new implications inthe housing bill every day, even as it's still trying to roll out changes from the last Ontario housing bill in the spring.

The latest wrinkle sees Ottawa left off the list of locations that will hostpublic hearings aboutthe bill, which is moving quickly through Queen's Park. The provincial standing committee on heritage, infrastructure and cultural policy announced dates onlyin Markham, Brampton and Toronto.

Gower said the city wants to be able to weigh in on the important changes without travelling to Toronto, and has officially asked thatan Ottawa session be added.