“A Death Sentence for the Greenbelt”: Experts Weigh in on Housing Plan

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Late last week, amidst an uproar around Ontario's impending education strike, a bomb dropped concerning the fate of the Greenbelt.

3:22 PM Nov 8, 2022

“Like the rest of the country, Ontario is in a housing supply crisis, and our government is acting decisively to fix it. We are considering every possible option to get more homes built faster so more Ontarians can find a home that meets their needs and budget,” Minister Clark’s office told STOREYS. “The proposed changes to the Greenbelt would lead to the creation of at least 50,000 new homes, while leading to an overall expansion of the Greenbelt.

Pothen highlights how we have a vast area of unbuilt Greenfield land — nearly 350 sq. km — already within our existing settlement boundaries. “As long as we build new housing in compact, environmentally-friendly forms, at public transit-supporting densities, there’s absolutely no reason why we wouldneed to expand beyond our existing settlement area boundaries, let alone into Greenbelt,” says Pothen.

“There’s a lot in there — there’s 15 proposed either re-designations or take-outs, as well a proposal of the addition of the urban river valleys and an area adjacent to the existing adjacent Greenbelt geography, which is tied to the idea of addressing protection of the Paris Galt Moraine, which was the subject of a consultation starting in 2021, by the government,” McDonnell tells STOREYS.

Like the others, McDonnell stressed the importance of existing infrastructure when it comes to building new homes. “There is a lot of concern about housing supply and homes and we need to be encouraging to building within existing urban areas,” he says. “We’d like to see housing supply focused on housing supply in the existing hamlets, towns, and villages in the Greenbelt within those community boundaries; and the type of housing that supports people working and living in those communities.

Source: Real Estate Daily Report (realestatedailyreport.net)

 

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