Videodrome
Senior Member
I wouldn't be upset if Crisanti won and we had a Ford free council.
Such a hypocrite.
lol...I'm sorry, what is you point again? Are you Dougie's man in hiding? Here's a test question for you: 'Build in the Greenbelt, yeah or nay?'How great that he wants my tax dollars to go to subsidizing housing for the bottom 5% of the population, while fighting every development in the neighbourhood that is looking to supply housing for the remaining 95% of us.
https://www.thestar.com/news/city_h...-review-definition-of-affordable-housing.htmlToronto to review definition of ‘affordable’ housing
By JENNIFER PAGLIAROCity Hall Bureau
Thu., July 26, 2018
The city of Toronto will review how it defines “affordable” housing in its next term after a debate on Mayor John Tory’s signature housing program, which has been criticized by housing advocates.
A successful motion from Councillor Josh Matlow at a council meeting this week asked the new city manager to review what the city considers affordable housing under its official plan.
“The definition of affordability according to our official plan doesn’t actually reflect the reality of affordability for many Torontonians,” said Matlow, who chairs the city’s tenant issues committee. “More and more people in our city don’t consider market rent affordable.”
The vote came as council approved 606 new rental units secured through the Open Door program, which offers land, tax and other incentives to developers in order to secure certain rents over several years. In 2017, when 1,224 rental units were approved, those incentives totalled at least $128 million.
The city currently defines affordable housing as anything at or below average market rent. That average market rent comes from an annual survey by the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, which looks at all occupied units. In 2018, the average market rent for a one-bedroom was $1,202 a month and $1,426 for a two-bedroom unit. The Open Door program secures a rent level for a period of time, typically ranging from 25 to 50 years.
Because the CMHC survey scans units that have been off the market for several years rather than the current asking price, setting rents at average market rent provides a modest discount. For example, in September 2017, the city reported that average market rent for a one-bedroom unit was $1,137, compared to the average asking rent, which was $1,614, meaning the difference in rent for a one-bedroom “affordable” unit in 2017 was $477. The different was $911 for a two-bedroom unit. [...]
https://tvo.org/article/current-aff...lection-could-be-all-about-affordable-housingWhy the Toronto municipal election could be all about affordable housing
OPINION: Transit politics have consumed Toronto city hall for the past eight years. It may be housing’s turn, writes John Michael McGrath
Published on Aug 08, 2018
by John Michael McGrath
John Tory’s four years in office have been pretty calm — at least relative to the four that preceded his election as mayor. Under the pugnacious (and scandal-plagued) Rob Ford, city council was frequently the scene of unfriendly fire. Under the more sedate Tory, many formerly acrimonious disputes have subsided, and we now have something more like a cold war.
When it comes to the transit file, for example, Tory’s critics (most notably, Ward 22 councillor Josh Matlow) have repeatedly used what little leverage they have to remind people that the Scarborough subway extension is bad policy — but they’ve done nothing to substantially reverse or even delay the project. So what’s the lightning-rod issue going to be as Tory heads into an election he’s heavily favoured to win?
If Jennifer Keesmaat gets her wish, it’s housing affordability.
At her first formal campaign event, on Tuesday, the former chief city planner — who jumped into the mayoral race at the last minute not quite two weeks ago — made housing affordability the centerpiece of her campaign.
“Rental housing in Toronto is at a crisis point,” she said. “The issue of affordability is too important to ignore for another four years.”
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https://www.thestar.com/business/20...ashes-sidewalk-signs-littering-sidewalks.htmlBy TESS KALINOWSKIReal Estate Reporter
Mon., Oct. 3, 2016
They are just one of the downsides to growing the city up, but Councillor Josh Matlow is so fed up with those A-frame sidewalk signs advertising condos, he folds them up and stacks them beside the nearest garbage bin.
“I find it cathartic,” said Matlow (Ward 22, St. Paul’s), who posts pictures on social media showing the signs he has collected.
He says that sometimes other pedestrians, fed up with jostling for sidewalk space, cheer him on, high-five him or have what Matlow calls “guerilla activist moments when people come and help me pick them up.”
“The development industry has so much power in this city and this province, where they are routinely having the Ontario Municipal Board ignoring the city’s official plan. (The signs are) disrespectful to local residents and the community,” he said.
“It sure feels good to pick up one of their signs and pitch them in the garbage.”
The signs are legal in Toronto, but developers have to apply for a permit and pay a fee to stand them on public space.
Developers can receive a permit for up to 10 signs per project. They pay $218 per sign. Only five signs, no higher than 1.2 metres, can be displayed in a 10-metre area at any given intersection. If it’s a busy corner for building, developers get that space on a first-come, first-served basis.
The city doesn’t issue fines for signs that violate the rules. But it does seize them. Sign owners have to pay a fee to get them back, but they are seldom retrieved, said Mark Sraga, director of Investigation Service for Municipal Licensing and Standards.
Condo signs can be a problem, but increasingly, realtor open house signs are drawing complaints, he said.
[...]
But pedestrian advocates agree with Matlow.
John Fischer, a member of the Walk Toronto steering committee, has called the city with specific complaints about signs in his Chinatown neighbourhood and been told that enforcement must be triggered by complaints.
Fischer said he was told that a city official would then explain the rules to the offending business and they would be given a few weeks to comply with the sign bylaw. Seeing no enforcement, Fischer said he called the city again and left a message but received no response.
“As Toronto city staff seem unwilling or unable to properly enforce the bylaw, Toronto should follow the lead of Mississauga and let citizens enforce it,” said Fischer, referring to a 2008 bylaw in that city that permits residents to remove “litter” from hydro posts and other city surfaces.
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https://www.cp24.com/news/former-rob-ford-associate-sandro-lisi-running-for-tdsb-trustee-1.4105399
This is for the TDSB, but Sandro Lisi!
Do you hold Kismet to the same test of pulling the sword from the cured concrete?
Then post some actual reference or links. At some point, your personal view, or anyone else's counts for nought, save your personal vote.@steveintoronto Matlow is a known quality around here,.
What an odd contention. I work with architects, some very noted ones...and her views may be contentious, but none of them make claims anywhere near as reactionary as yours.Keesmaat? Her affordable housing strategy is an absolute farce and any urban planner or person involved in development industry knows it is an empty election promise.
No kidding. Glad you got it. It's a literary licence, somewhat poetic, but with a dash of lemon juice for the acidic afterbite:Her name is not 'Kismet'.
Then post some actual reference or links. At some point, your personal view, or anyone else's counts for nought, save your personal vote.
I've Googled, evidence of your claims may exist, they're not showing, so the onus is on you to find them and link them.
Evidence based discussion.
Keesmaat has neither the land nor the money to build 100,000 units of affordable housing. If she even manages to build 1/10th of that, I would consider it a success.What an odd contention. I work with architects, some very noted ones...and her views may be contentious, but none of them make claims anywhere near as reactionary as yours.
I'll ignore the personal jab and merely point out that just because university curriculum in the liberal arts may not be what they used to be, it does not mean that young minds are left idle.But then again, you didn't (gist) "hear of the Notwithstanding Clause until third year university". I leave it at that, I guess I'm a lot older and more worldly...
And so he should. Almost every municipality in Ontario did, for good reasons that seem to escape you.
A process that neighbourhood community groups have been fighting against for years is finally changing Tuesday, as the province officially replaces the Ontario Municipal Board (OMB) with a less powerful body to hear appeals from developers.
https://www.amo.on.ca/AMO-Content/Policy-Updates/2016/OMBReviewOctober 14, 2016
The Association of Municipalities of Ontario welcomes the upcoming OMB review. Municipalities across Ontario have passed resolutions calling for substantial reform of the OMB. Ontario’s land use planning system has evolved dramatically over the past thirty years, and municipalities have matured substantially to keep pace with the regulatory regime. However, the OMB retains significant power to overturn the decisions of elected officials. Now is the opportunity to transform the OMB to align its role and its powers with the capacity and maturity that Ontario’s municipalities have developed.
The OMB Reform: Maturing Roles Discussion paper serves as a discussion paper and provides brief history of the OMB, a brief description of its present-day form, a decision review of 195 OMB appeals between 2013-2015, and a jurisdictional scan of land use appellate bodies in Oregon, England and Wales, and New Zealand. The paper then provides some recommendations informed by the decision review, the jurisdictional scan, and municipal resolutions received by AMO to improve and reform the OMB.
The OMB Reform: AMO Recommendations outlines recommendations below for the five different provincial themes:
AMO recommends that the OMB also review these and consult back with AMO for more information. We hope these recommendations will lead to more efficient and improved municipal management and planning, and thriving municipal cities, towns and communities.
- The OMB’s Jurisdiction and Powers
- Citizen Participation and Local Perspective
- Clear and Predictable Decision Making
- Modern Procedures and Faster Decisions
- Alternative Dispute Resolutions and Fewer Hearings
AMO has also developed a OMB Review Quick Guide for responding to the Provincial Review of the Ontario Municipal Board for download.
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I wouldn't be upset if Crisanti won and we had a Ford free council.