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Housing minister calls on municipalities to be more 'ambitious' with funding applications

Housing Minister Sean Fraser is challenging municipalities to provide their "best offer" when applying for federal housing funding, saying that he is prioritizing “the most ambitious” applicants. Housing Minister Sean Fraser has challenged municipalities to provide their "best offer" when applying for federal housing funding, stating that he is prioritizing "the most ambitious" applicants. The Housing Accelerator Fund, which allocates $4 billion until 2026-27, aims to build 100,000 housing units beyond what would have been built without the fund by streamlining land-use planning and development approvals. The guidelines for applying for the fund include suggestions to end density exclusionary zones, make municipal lands available for housing construction and eliminate building height restrictions. Fraser suggested that cities can put forward their own proposals to achieve these goals. Other municipalities, including Toronto, St. John's and Charlottetown, are still negotiating their applications with the federal government.

Housing minister calls on municipalities to be more 'ambitious' with funding applications

Published : 2 years ago by Darren Major in Politics

Housing Minister Sean Fraser is challenging municipalities to provide their "best offer" when applying for federal housing funding, saying that he is prioritizing "the most ambitious" applicants.

"Not every city is guaranteed approval just because they've submitted an application. We're looking for the best of the best," he told a press conference Monday.

"If cities decide to do something less than their best offer, they will be competing for what's left in the fund after we've addressed the most ambitious applications."

On Monday, the government published a municipalities can follow to apply for the Housing Accelerator Fund. Those guidelines include suggestions to end density exclusionary zones, make municipal lands available for housing construction and eliminate building height restrictions.

Fraser said the list isn't a strict code for municipalities to follow. He suggested that cities can put forward their own proposals to achieve the goals the guidelines are set out to address.

"We don't want to be dogmatic. We want to be good partners," Fraser said.

The Housing Accelerator Fund, first announced during the 2021 election campaign and introduced in the 2022 federal budget, allocates $4 billion until 2026-27 to prompt more homebuilding in cities.

The Liberal government says the Housing Accelerator Fund's objective is to build 100,000 housing units beyond what would have been built without the fund by streamlining land-use planning and development approvals.

Municipal governments with populations of more than 10,000 can apply by pitching initiatives that would increase the annual rate of homebuilding in their cities by at least 10 per cent.

Fraser said that more than 500 municipalities have submitted applications and warned that the fund doesn't have an unlimited amount of cash.

Ottawa has approved a number of municipal applicants through the accelerator program already, including Halifax, Hamilton and London, Ont.

But other municipalities, including provincial capitals like Toronto, St. John's and Charlottetown, are still negotiating their applications with the federal government.

Fraser suggested that municipalities should look at what their counterparts are doing to get their funding applications approved.

"If you see your neighbour stepping up their ambition and getting a successful agreement with the federal government, know that that's who you're competing against," he said.

Just last week, Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie reversed a council vote that initially rejected a proposal to allow more fourplexes to be built across the city. Crombie said accessing federal funding was a main driver behind that decision.

"Issuing this directive will ensure that Mississauga continues to be eligible for $120 million in important federal funding for housing and community infrastructure while allowing for much-needed housing to be built in our neighbourhoods for the next generation," Crombie said in a news release.

Fraser said the government will reveal more housing measures in the fall budget update and in the coming months.

"You should expect to see additional measures on housing in the fall economic statement. You should expect to see additional measures more broadly in the months ahead as they are ready. I'm not going to wait and hold them for some magic date, where we suddenly release all of the policies at once," Fraser said.

Some of the anticipated measures would tie federal infrastructure spending to housing outcomes in local communities. Fraser also said there will be more policies geared toward increasing the stock of social housing, and increasing workers' skills and innovation in the construction industry.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has not announced a date for this year's fall economic statement but it is expected in the coming weeks.

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