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this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2023
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This argument would make sense if it were primarily a market-created problem, but the reality is we made constructing housing basically illegal while stepping up immigration. The combination of municipal NIMBYist anti-densification policies and hyper-elaborate guidelines with the provincial Green Belt (which is a good idea if densification is permitted but it wasn't) and the Federal canceling of subsidies on market-rate purpose-built rental housing, and climbing immigration (something that's otherwise excellent) are what created the problem. Not "markets".
It should not be a surprise that housing prices -- both rental and ownership -- skyrocket when building housing is de jure illegal. Every new build requires one-off hearings and multi-year permission processes to get exceptions made to the "guidelines" that are actually rules. If something is legal only with a special government executive decision, then it's not legal, unless you consider murder to be legal in the USA because they have pardons.
If you listen to below-market-rent subsidized home builders, you'll hear the same complaints. They want to build, but can't.
Don't take my word for it, see this video of deposition by Mark Richardson of Housing Now TO:
https://mastodon.social/@Pxtl/110300343308877005
I loathe the Poilievre conservatives, but they're right about this. First step to stopping the housing crisis is to kick some municipal government ass. Trudeau is trying to do it with carrots through the Housing Accelerator Fund, but it's long-since time for sticks and not carrots.
Honestly, it's more than just the municipal governments, but all the homeowner associantions. They're the ones who lobbied for such things, and they're the ones blocking positive changes on the rare occasion when the councils actually try to improve things.
NiMBY is a menace for land usage of all forms, not just housing.