Governments building residential units is our only viable path to affordable housing. Builders can’t be incentivized enough to make it worth their while vs premium builds
Affordable groceries my also require a government-run chain to bring food prices into a reasonable range again
Tax incentives for co-ops, housing and food, may be viable alternatives. But I’m not exactly sure what their success conditions look like.
You and I have different definitions of viable.
Unless the government starts seizing property they will run out of money long before they can house a meaningful number of people in useful locations.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
In a report released Tuesday that is scheduled to go before executive committee next week, the deputy city manager of development and growth services lays out a look at the proposal, and highlights that Toronto is experiencing a “financial crisis” in both the short and long term.
The city has already had to push for increased funding from both the federal and provincial governments this year, after asylum seekers were forced to sleep on the streets due to an overburdened shelter system.
“A new fiscal deal to support the structural changes that will put Toronto on a path to long-term financial sustainability plus a commitment from the federal and provincial governments to invest in the HousingTO Plan,” the report notes.
Mayor Olivia Chow also appears to be making good on one of her key campaign promises: to have the city work as its own property developer.
The report recommends the city lead the development of five sites throughout the downtown — 405 Sherbourne St., 150 Queen’s Wharf Rd., 1113-1117 Dundas St. W., 11 Brock Ave. and 25 Bellevue Ave.
Chow’s idea of making the city a “public builder,” as the report calls it, was criticized by some rivals on the campaign trail, including Ana Bailão and Coun.
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