
Ford government pausing its own affordable housing policy, calling it âred tapeâ
The Ford government is delaying its own affordable housing measures in several major Ontario cities, calling the rules it wrote âunnecessary red tape and requirementsâ that make it more expensive to build. The pause will affect inclusionary zoning rules in Toronto, Kitchener and Mississauga, a policy that requires developers to provide a minimum number of affordable housing units in certain situations. Legislation introduced by the government in May 2025 said municipalities could mandate new projects near transit stations to include five per cent affordable units for a maximum of 25 years after their construction. It was a provincial compromise that Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow said came nowhere near what she had hoped she could ask for from developers, but which she grudgingly accepted in a meeting with Premier Doug Ford. âI went in and said, âGive us 20 per cent.â In fact, I appealed for 30 per cent. I said to the premier, âWe need to build housing - not all of it, but 20, 30 per cent people can afford. Itâs a perfect opportunity,'â Chow said at a news conference on Tuesday. âHe said no and now itâs five per cent. I had no choice, I said, âOK, five per cent, all right. At least itâs five per cent.'â Now, the government is pausing its own plan, saying requiring developers to build even five per cent of their units at affordable rates will hurt the construction of new homes. âWe need to get more shovels in the ground to build homes for families across the province - now is not the time to be adding unnecessary red tape and requirements that only increase the cost of building a home,â a spokesperson for Housing Minister Rob Flack, who introduced the legislation less than a year ago, said. Get breaking National news Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy . âThese temporary measures will help to ensure project viability so more people can call the city of Toronto home.â The regulation posted by the provincial government proposes pausing the five per cent inclusionary zoning until July 1, 2027. It said Kitchener had already opted to pause its program. âMMAH has heard from stakeholders expressing concerns that implementing IZ at this juncture, particularly in Toronto, could have a negative impact on overall housing supply and could result in the cancellation or pause of projects,â the regulation said. Chow, however, said she didnât believe the requirement was slowing development in her city. She said most builders had stopped working in current conditions, and the few that were still in construction were doing so because of financial incentives from city hall. âPeople need homes they can afford,â she said. âRight here, in Toronto, seven out of 10 homes that are being built, if you see a crane, most likely itâs made possible, the building is made possible, because the city has put in financial incentives.â The Building Industry and Land Development Association said in a statement that the delay was a âprudentâ move. âThis will...
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