Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to share some ideas with the standing committee. I'll briefly touch on some initiatives that I think are working, ones that might be expanded, and other novel approaches. My comments are generally directed towards purpose-built apartment buildings in major urban centres, but they may apply to other locales.
The Rose Corporation is a private developer that currently involved in the development of more than 600 units in York Region, 150 of which fit into some level or definition of “affordable”. In 2017, we completed the first purpose-built rental development in the region, literally, in generations. That's a problem. Our observation is that all purpose-built rental housing is good for the community and remains the least expensive form of conventional housing.
CMHC's commitment to shelter every Canadian in a home they can afford by 2030 is laudable, and their programs are forward-thinking, but they cannot accomplish this alone. Affordable housing will require all levels of government to buy in and do their part.
Fundamental changes of perspective need to be made to confront the challenges head-on, first by beginning to recognize that this is a crisis that has been generations in the making, and it will take generations to get it right. It follows that we must collectively recognize that affordable housing is a long-term investment whose benefits are also realized over an extended time frame. Using measurements that overemphasize short-term metrics in early years will lead to a suboptimal result.
Second, government policy impacting affordable housing needs to be well-coordinated. Currently, federal, provincial, regional and municipal governments are largely acting as independent agents. The result, from what I've recognized and seen, is a mishmash of incentives that literally don't speak to each other. Even same word, “affordability”, is defined by each government agency very differently.
While CMHC's programs are far and away the most cohesive and well-thought-through, enlisting the other levels of government on a set of consistent values, flexibly applied would result in expansive and cost-effective programs.
The following are some recommendations.
Given the current circumstance, CMHC should establish a liaison office to coordinate the various government initiatives and stimulate others. A sliver of the $4 billion would help accelerate this, and I can't overemphasize the value of doing so.
Another suggestion is to eliminate CMHC's requirement to retire mortgage debt for the duration of affordability. What that effectively means is having interest-only loans on certain qualified buildings.
Third, develop new market-priced apartment buildings that are immediately placed under rent control. We saw the experiment in Ontario effectively by accident when Ontario, really in a haphazard manner, threw on rent control from the 1970s on. When the industry changed, it turned to condominiums, but in the meantime, paradoxically, it formed a whole category of affordable homes that many people are living in now, which provide, basically, the affordable rental stock that we see. So, if we put them immediately under rent control now at market prices, we'll find that this solves a longer term problem.
I have some simple examples of cost or risk reductions.
Remove the requirement to assess HST on all new rental developments. That would reduce rents by about five per cent. Property taxes, although a provincial matter, are the single largest component of operating costs of an apartment building—about 10%. The province, working with the federal government and coordinating with them, could encourage the creation of lower property tax assessment classifications for new apartment buildings. There's a compelling rationale, which I can't go through here, for the assessment to run about 50% of the normal rate. A 50% reduction in property taxes would reduce rent by five per cent.
Interest rate fluctuations are the single greatest constraint in underwriting new apartment developments. Currently, CMHC goes a long way in mitigating that risk through its RCFI program. Nonetheless, the debt service payments change wildly as rates change. I suggest that, to qualified buildings and qualified developers, the payments be fixed even as the rate may vary. Development charges are about 10% of cost. If they were deferred, then rents could be reduced by approximately seven per cent. This has been a very effective policy in York Region, and the program should be expanded.
Land values are more variable, but as a percentage of cost, for the purpose of discussion, they can be pegged at around 10%. If the federal...provided grants, that would provide 7% of reductions.
In the last five points, I've identified cumulatively how rents could be reduced in an entire building by 25%, and by simple math it would be 50% if it were half the building.
Stepping out of my area of expertise, I would suggest that a negative income tax directed at subsidies to individual low-income families strikes me as a very efficient way to do it. Subsidies as low as $500 per month would dig deeply into the affordability crisis, and $1,000 per month would have an immediate, overwhelming impact.
My observations, though anecdotal, I believe would be backed up by research. Creating a sinking fund with the $4 billion, or part of it, to direct it that way would have a very ameliorative effect and could be part of a going forward program.
I know that I'm at six minutes, so I'll stop there.