Thank you, Chair and members of the committee.
Thank you for the invitation to appear before you today.
My name is Mike Collins-Williams, and I'm the chief executive officer of the West End Home Builders' Association. WE HBA represents more than 300 companies involved in the residential construction, land development and renovation industry in Hamilton, Burlington and Grimsby. Our members build the homes, communities and neighbourhoods where Canadians live, work, raise families and build their futures.
I appreciate the opportunity to participate in your study examining housing starts in relation to federal programs. Today, I want to leave the committee with a simple message: If buyers cannot buy, builders cannot build.
Over the past several years, governments across Canada have rightly focused on increasing housing supply, yet despite this attention, housing starts for ownership have declined significantly while new home sales in many markets have fallen to historic lows.
Housing starts are often discussed as a single number, but the composition of these starts matters. Purpose-built rental construction has increased, supported by important federal initiatives and financing programs. This additional rental supply is needed and welcomed.
However, rental housing should not be replacing home ownership opportunities. Most Canadians still aspire to own a home. They want the stability, security and wealth-building opportunities that home ownership provides, yet for many young families, that dream continues to be further out of reach.
The challenge is not a lack of builders willing to build. Our members have land, skilled workers, supply chains and shovel-ready projects. The challenge is that the economics of housing no longer work.
It is important to remember that housing starts do not occur in isolation. They are ultimately driven by consumer confidence and the ability of families to purchase a home. Across Ontario and much of Canada, many prospective buyers have moved to the sidelines. High housing costs, taxation, mortgage qualification barriers and economic uncertainty have reduced demand for new homes. When sales slow, housing starts inevitably follow. This is why policies that improve affordability and help qualified buyers re-enter the market are every bit as important as policies that support housing production itself.
Development charges, taxes, government fees, approval delays, financing costs, long-term labour shortages and escalating construction costs have combined to create a situation where many projects simply do not proceed. Too often, housing policy discussions focus exclusively on unit targets.
Housing is also an economic development strategy. Every new home built supports construction workers, tradespeople, planners, manufacturers, suppliers and local businesses throughout the supply chain. When housing starts decline, the impacts ripple throughout the economy. Increasing housing starts is not only about creating homes. It's about protecting jobs and strengthening local communities.
In Ontario, taxes, fees and charges imposed by governments can account for approximately 25% to 30% of the cost of a new home. At the same time, approval timelines continue to grow longer. In Hamilton, for example, a recent national benchmarking study ranked the city dead last among major Canadian municipalities for development approval timelines. Every month of delay adds costs and ultimately results in fewer homes being built.
When housing construction slows, the consequences extend far beyond the housing sector itself. Construction workers lose jobs. Manufacturers receive fewer orders. Municipalities collect less revenue, and economic growth slows.
In Ontario alone, industry forecasts have warned that tens of thousands of residential construction jobs are at risk if market conditions do not improve. That's why recent federal actions are encouraging. Measures to reduce the tax burden on new housing, support infrastructure investment and expand construction financing represent important steps in the right direction. These policies recognize a simple reality: Governments do not build homes; builders build homes.
The role of government is to create the conditions that allow for housing to be delivered faster, more efficiently and at greater scale. Federal programs are most successful when they unlock private sector investment, improve project viability, reduce unnecessary costs and create certainty.
What our industry needs right now is continued collaboration between all three levels of government. We need policies that support both ownership and rental housing. We need predictable and streamlined approvals. We need continued efforts to reduce taxes and development charges, and we need mortgage policies that help qualified buyers access the market. We need a coordinated national housing strategy that recognizes housing as both a social priority and an economic imperative.
The good news is that the solutions are known. Canada has the builders. We have the workforce. What we need is a policy environment that allows the industry to do what we do best: build homes.
Thank you for your time. I look forward to your questions.