torontohomesite.com

torontohomesite.com 25 Years of Exceptional Real Estate services in York region and the Greater Toronto area

Toronto's number one stop for information about what's new in real estate and market updates, financing, new building projects, insights on the market.

04/20/2025
10/14/2024
LEGAL CORNER  Buyer doesn’t close, liable for property value loss of over $330,000
08/27/2024

LEGAL CORNER

Buyer doesn’t close, liable for property value loss of over $330,000

Discover the risks of negotiation missteps in property transactions. Find out how making certain demands can result in financial losses.

Toronto Market stats for June
07/05/2024

Toronto Market stats for June

May Toronto market stats
06/12/2024

May Toronto market stats

04/03/2024

Trudeau offers billions to boost homebuilding – with strings attached

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is pressuring Canada’s provinces to remove barriers to building more housing, including requiring them to freeze municipal development charges and allow up to four units on every lot.

Trudeau announced his government will provide CA$5 billion ($3.7 billion) in new infrastructure funding for provinces, but only if they sign an agreement by Jan. 1, 2025, to make certain reforms to allow for increased housing supply.

The move puts Trudeau’s government squarely in conflict with Ontario Premier Doug Ford, who recently ruled out allowing fourplexes as-of-right across Canada’s most populous province. Ford argued that putting larger buildings into communities of single-family homes would create “a lot of shouting and screaming,” calling it “a massive mistake.”

But as Trudeau’s government sinks in the polls, the prime minister is attempting to relieve Canada’s sky-high housing prices by boosting construction — and to put the spotlight back on provincial and municipal governments, which control most of the direct policy levers on housing.

Trudeau also announced the government will tie federal transit funding to municipal rules such as eliminating minimum parking requirements near a mass transit line, and allowing high-density housing near both transit systems and post-secondary institutions.

“One of the biggest pressures on young people right now is housing,” said Trudeau’s office in a news release. “We need to bring home prices back within reach by increasing housing supply right across the board – and quickly.”

The new provincial infrastructure money will be earmarked for “critical housing infrastructure” such as water, wastewater, stormwater, and solid waste infrastructure, the news release said.

To qualify for the federal funding, provinces will have to agree to “key actions” that include requiring cities to approve four units as-of-right, implementing a three-year freeze on increasing development charges in larger cities, and adopting changes to the national building code to support more housing options.

The news release also said provinces would have to adopt measures from the federal government’s planned “bill of rights” for both renters and homeowners, but it did not specify what those measures would be.

Ontario Housing Minister Paul Calandra’s office said the provincial government needs to see the details of the proposal. “However, we know that local municipalities know their communities best and don’t believe in forcing them to build where it doesn’t make sense,” a spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

The federal government will make a further CA$1 billion available in infrastructure funding directly to municipalities, Trudeau said.

The federal Housing Accelerator Fund will also get a CA$400 million top-up, bringing it to a total of CA$4.4 billion. That fund has been used by Housing Minister Sean Fraser to push cities to loosen their zoning rules and allow for denser housing construction.

The Conservative Party — which is currently far ahead of Trudeau’s Liberals in the polls — criticized the new measures as ineffective. “Today’s announcement shows that the Liberals have no solutions to the crisis they created,” said a statement from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre’s office. “Under Trudeau, Canada is building fewer homes than we did in the 1970s when Canada had half the population, yet the Liberals continue to double down on their failed policies.”

Tuesday’s announcement follows a pledge last week to boost renters’ rights, and other recent announcements on expanding child-care spaces and creating a school food program.

The measures are all to be included in the April 16 federal budget, and are aimed mostly at voters aged 40 and younger, a cohort that has increasingly turned against Trudeau over the past couple years, according to public opinion polls.

My take on this: City zoning and bylaws would have to be changed on a provincial and city level, in order for this to happen. I am wondering if the prime minister is aware of this. As zoning is an integral part of our communities. I am sure the prime minister was advised, and this is all a hoax to make Canadians believe that he is addressing the issue. When in fact the liberals are not.

Address

8000 Yonge Street
Markham, ON
L4J1W3

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when torontohomesite.com posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to torontohomesite.com:

Featured

Share

Category

Our Story

Want to know what’s going on in the city? We cover the great entertainment hot spots, and fun things to do around the city.

We love TORONTO.