AlvinofDiaspar
Moderator
The availability of land isn't limited. That's a fallacy. The availability of land along major streets where the City won't go ballistic if one proposes more than 2 or 3 storeys (even there, there are no guarantees) is limited. The availability of land where the City talks about midrise development, and actually means it, is limited. The availability of land along major streets in the most desirable locations near good transit and amenities, because Council has repeatedly failed to build higher level transit elsewhere, is limited. And the availability of land where there already is higher level transit, but Council hasn't sought to impose crazy Official Plan policies unreasonably restricting growth along the corridor, is limited. So we get tower proposals downtown. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing. But it's naive to think we can avoid the 40+ FSI proposals without blockbusting.
So, you are faulting others for not enacting the right policies (oddly enough, because other councillors are just as interested in preserving the status quo) just so that development can be dumped in the core? Okay. In other words, they aren't acting all that differently - I mean, are those OP policies any more crazy than the ones restricting growth in neighbourhoods?
And if we would not be doing this for affordability, why would we be doing it? To get more high end housing? We not facing a shortage in that regard.
If you think that not having an added supply of something will not translate into prices going from merely high to stratospheric, we've got news for you. Besides, what is it that you are suggesting - that we should preserve DROs so that they can remain high-end housing - and eventually become stratospheric-end housing in the city? That is exactly what is happening - what kind of policy outcome is THAT? Who are we making these DRO neighbourhoods immutable for? The upper-middle (increasingly upper) class with Rosedale-esque aspirations?
AoD
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