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Home Builders welcome approval of Ottawa’s Official Plan with changes that address local housing affordability and supply crisis

 

November 4, 2022 — The Greater Ottawa Home Builder’s Association (GOHBA) today welcomed provincial government approval of Ottawa’s Official Plan, along with prescribed changes to help address the local housing affordability and supply crisis.

 

“Reversing Council’s decision to limit minor corridors across the City to 4 storeys and expanding the urban boundary by an additional 550 hectares are necessary and welcome moves to increase Ottawa’s housing supply,” said Jason Burggraaf, GOHBA’s Executive Director.

 

In October 2021, Ottawa City Council reduced height limits for minor corridors in the downtown and inner urban transects to 4 storeys (they were originally 9 and 6 storeys respectively). That decision was made without any consideration of the number of homes that the Official Plan relied on to be built on those wider roads as part of its intensification strategy. These homes, which would have been served directly by transit, were summarily removed without discussion about how or where they would be made up elsewhere.

 

Increasing Ottawa’s planned urban boundary expansion by 550 hectares is a natural outcome of increasing its population and housing forecast.

 

“The Official Plan population projections not only give us a snapshot into the future, but they also cause the future, in terms of supply and demand for housing,” said David Renfroe, GOHBA’s President. “By giving Ottawa a housing target of 151,000 new homes over the next decade, the provincial government has made it clear that the City’s modelling provided unrealistically low projections of future population and household growth. That low population projection ensured that planning policies and growth boundaries were also unsustainably low.”

 

Ottawa’s Official Plan was originally built on the assumption of Ottawa gaining 400,000 new residents by 2046. The Ontario Ministry of Finance’s projection for Ottawa’s population growth is 560,000 new people.

 

“We are absolutely in a housing supply crisis, which is making housing less affordable every day,” said Renfroe. “It is critical that the City of Ottawa reduce red tape to speed up approvals, accelerate the City’s zoning bylaw review, and use appropriate immigration and population projections to ensure we have a sufficient supply of all forms of housing.”

 

“These changes, along with those from the More Homes Built Faster Act, have put Ottawa in a better position than it was a week ago to have enough housing for its residents in the future,” said Burggraaf. “We need to remain focused on having enough homes.”

 

For additional information or to schedule an interview, contact Jason Burggraaf at jason@gohba.ca.

 

The Greater Ottawa Home Builders’ Association has been the proud voice for excellence in the home building community since 1951. Builders, developers, renovators, trade contractors, suppliers, and manufacturers make up the core of the Association’s membership of over 370 companies. New home construction and professional renovation account for 37,000 jobs across Ottawa, with $2.5 billion in wages and $5.0 billion in economic investment.

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