Instead of focusing on supply, why not address demand, but on a provincial scale. For starters, if you’re not employed in the city, there is no reason for TCHC tenants to reside in city units. Instead, build public housing outside the GTA, in order to clear inventory for those who need to live in the city. Next, force Ottawa to push new immigrants to live elsewhere. We have a huge country, there’s no reason for everyone to move to Toronto, especially for those who don’t work here.
A similar chat on supply and demand on housing here
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outl...cates-reject-law-supply-demand/?noredirect=on
Our premier sees himself as both the super mayor and the city’s saviour on the housing issue. So, let’s see what he does on this file. Hopefully he’s not just tweaking the supply side of the equation.
There can be some rational discussion about this..........but this is not a material solution.
Mobility rights for Citizens are in the Charter.
A new immigrant can be a Citizen inside three years.
Most new immigrants have to show they either have a job offer in place or a can fill and in-demand occupation.
Those jobs are overwhelmingly in larger (higher cost) centres.
There are no jobs for neurosurgeons in Kenora.
A great number of supplementary services required by low-income earners are also located in Cities and you would have to (expensively) duplicate these in other areas if you want to implement large scale migration.
Getting people to volunteer to move away from their friends, families and familiar surroundings is no easy task.
Further, as with immigrants, if you assume that most TCHC residents are employed (true) or would like to be (true), then you can only seriously consider sending them where employment opportunities exist in large numbers.
As a purely practical matter, reducing demand in the market by focusing either on TCHC residents or on new immigrants simply isn't practical at scale, and wouldn't produce large scale savings.
That doesn't mean there isn't room to tinker around the edges (providing inducements to new immigrants who settle in less expensive, rural areas where there ARE jobs that they could fill; or likewise, helping those
who may have moved to the City but been trapped by its high costs move back to a town they are from.
But this will never be a large part of the answer.
They key on supply is obvious; on demand, its about raising income levels from both private and public sources. (ie. higher minimum wages, and higher benefits payments under EI, Social Assistance and CPP/OAS/GIS)