HomeArchitecture/planningOntario moves to fast-track housing and infrastructure projects with new legislation

Ontario moves to fast-track housing and infrastructure projects with new legislation

Ontario Construction News staff writer

The Ontario government is introducing new legislation aimed at accelerating construction of homes, roads, and public transit with greater control over municipal planning.

The proposed Protecting Ontario by Building Faster and Smarter Act also prevents municipalities from requiring additional development studies or imposing construction standards that exceed the provincial building code. It further allows school boards to bypass local approval processes to add portable classrooms or plan new school buildings.

“It takes too long and costs too much to build homes in Ontario,” Housing Minister Rob Flack said at a press conference in Vaughan, joined by several cabinet ministers and mayors. “Demand far exceeds supply, and families are losing hope of home ownership. That has to change.”

Designed to deliver “bold and innovative solutions” to speed up construction, the legislation introduces several measures with wide-ranging implications:

  • Development charges: Builders will now pay these fees at the end of construction (at occupancy) rather than upfront.
  • Expanded use of MZOs: Both the housing and infrastructure ministers will have the authority to override local planning rules, particularly for transit-oriented developments, including GO Transit and LRT projects.
  • Municipal limitations: Local governments will be restricted from imposing additional building studies or higher construction standards.
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©PHOTO BY APCHANNEL

Several mayors reacted to the changes, including Richmond Hill’s David West who warned municipalities could struggle to fund infrastructure like parks and libraries if DCs are reduced or delayed.

“Development charges pay for growth. If we’re not collecting them, the burden shifts to taxpayers — and that’s not acceptable,” West said.

However, the Ontario Home Builders’ Association supports the new rules that target permitting delays and upfront fees.

“In many cases, these add hundreds of thousands of dollars to the cost of a new home,” the association said in a statement.

Infrastructure Minister Kinga Surma defended the move as a necessary step in addressing sluggish housing growth.

“We’re doing everything we can to help our builders and municipalities,” she said. “The numbers aren’t looking good, and we need to prioritize the next 12 to 24 months.”

Robin MacLennan, Editor, Ontario Construction News
Robin MacLennan, Editor, Ontario Construction News
Robin MacLennan has been a reporter, photographer and editor at newspapers and magazines in Barrie, Toronto and across Canada for more than three decades. She lives in North Bay. After venturing into corporate communications and promoting hospitals and healthcare, she happily returned to journalism full-time in 2020, joining Ontario Construction News as Writer and Editor. Robin can be reached at rmaclennan@ontarioconstructionnews.com
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