Experts say Ottawa’s role in housing sector has grown (Richard Raycraft · CBC News)

  • end single family exclusionary zoning, incentivize and fast-track new developments to start gently densifying into missing middle townhouses and multiplexes

    Why do we even need to do this? The population didn’t magically triple in the last 5 years. We should not have run out of housing this fast, so where did it all go?

    • Because its a limitation of personal property rights and freedom. Why can’t I as a property owner turn my single family home into a ground level cafe/bakery with 4 units above if I have the capital? It’s a government overstep that limits our supply, artificially increasing demand and cost, and gets in the way of entrepreneurship. Having relative freedom over property usage was only something recently taken away in the last 80 or so years due to racist white flight to the suburbs.

      While populations hasn’t tripled in the last 5 or so years, we are experiencing growth pains that investors and speculators are taking advantage of limited supply, and relying on the fact we will have limited supply for some time to come as long as the zoning stays as the status quo.

      • Cramming people into tiny apartments is not a solution to this problem. Clawing back all the property that’s been gobbled up by “investors” over the last few years, and then selling it at a reasonable price to people who will actually live in it, is a solution to this problem.

        And spare me your complaints about “entrepreneurship” and “government overstep”. There’s nothing innovative about house hoarding and rent seeking.

        Every working family should have the ability to own a house with a yard for the kids to play in, as my family did when I was young. That’s the minimum acceptable standard of living for a developed nation. Not being packed like sardines into tiny apartments. This is not the Soviet Union.