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Subjects: POLITICS, GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, LIFESTYLE, MISCELLANEOUS, MISCELLANEOUS

Municipalities hold billions in new home revenues and continually seek more, further eroding housing affordability


Toronto, Dec. 01, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Greater Toronto Area, December 1, 2021 ? A study of 16 municipalities across the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) found that there is over $5 billion in cash reserves currently on hand (as of year-end 2019) collected from taxes on new housing. The study was conducted by Altus Group for the Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD).

 

The City of Toronto alone has amassed $2.6 billion in reserves (including development charges, parkland cash-in-lieu and section 37 cash contributions) by collecting significantly more in fees on new housing and commercial space development than it has spent, yet it continues to look to increase rates and add more costs to new housing.

 

"This is a story of missed opportunity for the City of Toronto, and in fact any city in the GTA that has accumulated large development charge, parkland cash-in-lieu or section 37 charge surpluses," said Dave Wilkes, BILD President & CEO. "Either municipalities should deploy these funds for the purposes they were collected?more infrastructure, services, affordable housing and parks?or they could make a meaningful dent in the housing affordability challenge the region is facing by reducing, or at least capping, charges on new homes. There is a clear opportunity to right-size reserves and in doing so help solve the housing affordability challenge facing the entire region."

 

The study, entitled New Homeowner Money in the Government?s Bank: How Unspent Municipal Reserves are Impacting Building Livable, Affordable Communities in the GTA, reviews trends in the collection and usage of various government housing charges in the GTA. The study examined 16 municipalities, including a mix of upper?tier, single?tier and lower?tier municipalities, and found that:

 

 

"Municipal fees and charges are by far the largest component of the government-imposed taxes and fees that make up 22 to 24 per cent of the cost of a new home," said Mr. Wilkes. "Within the City of Toronto, this percentage rises to nearly 27 per cent with the introduction of the new inclusionary zoning tax passed earlier this month. Overall taxes and other charges applied on new homes in Toronto have risen much faster than property taxes. Development charges have risen by 606 per cent since 2009 while property taxes have only increased by 22 per cent."

 

BILD is calling on municipalities across the GTA to invest the funds they have already amassed to facilitate growth and support the building of housing the region needs for both current residents and some four million new residents who will call the GTA home in the next 30 years, before raising taxes and charges on new homes further.

 

With more than 1,300 member companies, BILD is the voice of the home building, land development and professional renovation industry in the Greater Toronto Area. The building and renovation industry provides more than 230,000 jobs in the region and $26.9 billion in investment value. BILD is proudly affiliated with the Ontario and Canadian Home Builders' Associations.

 

 

 

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For additional information or to schedule an interview, contact Justin Sherwood at [email protected] or 416-371-6005.

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