this post was submitted on 26 Nov 2024
76 points (98.7% liked)

Ontario

2395 readers
152 users here now

A place to discuss all the news and events taking place in the province of Ontario, Canada.

Rules

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Ford has really ramped up the showmanship lately, calling for a bike lane witch hunt and making magical announcements about beer, highway tunnels and $200 cheques. Much of it, it seems, is being done in the service of getting us to look away from the reality of how things are going in Ford’s Ontario.

In particular, he’d really like us to pay no attention to the housing policy failure behind the curtain. But by the numbers, Ford’s failure on housing should be way too big to hide.

A report released last week by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation revealed that housing starts in Ontario are down 18 per cent so far this year. That stat, which measures the number of new housing units that saw construction get started, should set off loud alarm bells. Because housing, more than any other issue, has been Ford’s signature issue — the subject of lots of legislation. He’s styled himself as a builder-in-chief who will “get it done.”

This isn’t a case of Ontario’s large population skewing the numbers, either. For his excellent Data Shows newsletter, analyst Tom Parkin recently crunched the per-capita numbers for housing starts and found Ontario ranked eighth out of Canada’s 10 provinces. According to Parkin’s numbers, with just 34 new starts for every 100,000 people, Ontario’s rate of per-capita building was well below that of provincial peers like Manitoba (47), Quebec (47.8), B.C. (58.8) and Alberta (89.9).

With numbers like that, it’s no surprise that the province has dim hopes of hitting its much-ballyhooed goal of building 1.5 million homes by the end of 2031.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The housing crisis has been decades in the making and the biggest things influencing it are suburban developements and car centric planning. If we could build dense cities like we were 100 years ago, we coild fit more people in less space, which saves a massive amoint of money in infrastructure and shortens peoples commutes.

But its a forced dream that you will own your own acre of land with a 7 bedroom house and 3 car garage. Your municipality can change this dream. Your municipality can start building denser again, they don't have to keep expanding outwards into the farm fields every year to build new mcmansions that no one can afford.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 months ago

You're correct the housing issue precedes Trudeau or most other politicians. But that being said Trudeau went into an agreement with the provinces stipulating that they must build more housing to handle the influx of people Canada needed and even said that the Federal government would help subsidize costs. Premiers like Ford ignored this and came nowhere near the targeted goal and are now blaming Trudeau for a problem they neglected to address and knew was coming.