John Sewell Recent Political Initiatives
 

Working to redevelop public housing

  1. Early days

    John Sewell has had a strong interest in redeveloping public housing since he chaired the Metro Toronto Housing Authority in 1986-88. At that time he initiated three studies of redevelopment opportunities which are fully described in Chapter 8 of his book The Shape of the City: Toronto Struggles with Modern Planning.

    In the 1990s he served on a committee that looked at redeveloping the north west corner of Regent Park although, unfortunately, the proposal was never implemented. In 1995, with planner Alan Littlewood, he initiated a plan to redevelop the north east corner of Regent Park and replace 163 units with about 400 units of housing. This was presented to a meeting of Regent residents in the fall of 1995. There were very supportive and a steering committee was formed to refine and amend the ideas into a firm plan for redevelopment that was presented to municipal and provincial governments in 1996. Although the province expressed great interest in proceeding with the redevelopment and held two requests for proposals to seek out developer interest, it eventually abandoned the developers and residents, and did nothing.

    As a result of this experience John published a booklet with the Caledon Institute in 1999 titled Redeveloping Public Housing Projects.

  2. Don Mount

    In 2001 the Toronto Community Housing Company, an organization established by the City of Toronto, assumed responsibility for public housing in Toronto. It very quickly learned that the Don Mount project, between Dundas and Queen Streets just east of the Don River, was structurally unsound and required either demolition or replacement. In February 2002 John began knocking on doors in Don Mount to help tenants organize into a group to protect their interests. With tenants (and again with the help of Alan Littlewood) he created a plan which called for the demolition of all 232 public housing units, the re-establishment of city streets, the replacement of all rent-geared-to-income units, and the addition of about 250 units of market housing, all in a form that complimented the existing neighbourhood. Tenants successfully convinced the board of the Toronto Community Housing Company in May 2002 to proceed with redevelopment as they had proposed.

    John continued to work with residents helping them to redevelop a relocation plan, adopted by TCHC, and to proceed with redevelopment in phases so that 75 units in the south part of the project would remain until new replacement housing had been built in the north section of the project. John worked with the residents throughout 2002 and 2003 to ensure that they had some kind of voice in the plan of redevelopment, although TCHC has done much to exclude them.

    TCHC created a redevelopment company for Don Mount which in early 2003 received four bids for redevelopment. It has refused to reveal any of these four bids. Tenants have seen sketches for the bid that the redevelopment company prefers: it consists of about 530 units, of which 232 replace the rent-geared-to-income units. These RGI units would be located in four-storey structures on the new streets, and the majority of the market units would be in a 25-storey condominium tower. TCHC has refused to reveal the terms of this bid or its financial implications. Tenants have asked for two modifications - an elevatored building serving one and two bedroom units, and basement storage space for tenants living in three, four or five bedroom units, but these request have not been met.

    Redevelopment is taking an extraordinary long time. When tenants made their proposal for redevelopment in May 2002 they secured the decision of the TCHC board that construction be under way by the end of 2002. But TCHC has proceeded very slowly. It was clear throughout 2003 that planning permission for the 25-storey tower was going to be difficult to obtain. Nearby residents felt the tower was inappropriate and even the City's planners said they would have difficulty recommending it. Paula Fletcher had been elected councillor for the area in November 2003 (replacing Jack Layton who had gone on to become the leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada) and she set her mind to getting the redevelopment moving. The first step was to have TCHC officials reconsider the tower.

    In late spring 2004 the TCHC appointed redevelopment board came forward with a new proposal which deleted the 25-storey tower in favour a four-storey structure. The new development would contain not 530 units but 487 units – 232 rent-geared-to-income housing units to replace those demolished, and 255 new market units. The new proposal also included a rent-geared-to-income apartment building with an elevator to accommodate seniors and people with disabilities - this had been a strong demand of Don Mount residents and one of their criticisms with the earlier plan. Also included in the redevelopment was a very underused park at the south west corner of Broadview and Thompson Streets, where 14 market town houses would be built.

    This new plan was recommended to City Council in the fall of 2004. I provided a letter of support since, in spite of the long delay, city staff had finally got this one almost right. The plan was approved by Council, although the Ontario Municipal Board has yet to schedule a hearing of objections to the plan by neighbours, and until that is successfully completed new construction cannot begin.

    Demolition of the north portion of Don Mount was begun in early December, and by Christmas about two-thirds of the north section was demolished. It is reasonable to assume that the OMB hearing will be completed within the first few months of 2005 so that construction can proceed sometime during 2005.

    One concern is that the developer TCHC has signed a contract with has yet to establish a sales office to market his 255 units. As of January 2005 the market for condominiums appears to be on the decline and it is unclear what impact this will have on the redevelopment since the contract between TCHC and the developer has never been made public.

    The Don Mount redevelopment is the first large redevelopment of a public housing project in Canada . It is not an auspicious start, but it does show that the reestablishment of a public street system and the mixing of market and social housing units is entirely feasible. What's needed is some device to ensure that redevelopment happens more expeditiously and in a more transparent manner. This may involve significant reorganization of TCHC and the city's own interest in housing redevelopment, neither of which is a small task.

  3. Regent Park

    John began organizing tenants to consider redevelopment in Regent Park in 1995. At that time, a steering committee of tenants was formed. In 2002 the Toronto Community Housing Company indicated its interest in redeveloping Regent Park. The Steering Committee had continued to be active, and it became the Redevelopment Committee which TCHC used as the sounding board for its redevelopment plans. A consultant’s study was undertaken in 2002. The lead consultant was John Gladki of GHK International.

    The Regent Park Revitalization Study was completed in December 2002 and calls for re-introducing streets into Regent Park, replacing the 2100 units with 4500 units, of which 2100 will be rent-geared-to-income and the remainder will be market units. Some non-residential uses will be included in the redevelopment.

    The study was approved the TCHC Board without the Redevelopment Committee having had a chance to review its recommendations, and attempts to change the proposed redevelopment have not been agreed to by the TCHC Board. The Redevelopment Committee had asked for three specific changes: that in a redevelopment of this size (69 acres) every attempt should be made to increase the number of affordable units rather than simply replacing what is there; that the total number of units being proposed should be increased beyond 4500 to accomplish this change; and some replacement units for Regent Park residents should be available for sale rather than on a rent-geared-to-income basis.

    The redevelopment plans for Regent went through some fine tuning and further consideration during 2003 and 2004. Some members off the surrounding community argued that it would be wrong to replace all of the rent-geared-to-income units in Regent Park since even if mixed with a larger number of market units, this constituted too large a concentration of low income households. John believes that this argument is wrong-headed and that the underlying objection is really to the current development form and the way Regent Park has been managed. He has suggested an increase – not a decrease - of affordable housing in Regent and that a large portion of the rent-geared-to-income units be replaced with ownership units affordable by current Regent residents. This change would be of a significant benefit to low income residents and to the new communities being developed, as outlined in John's proposal, which follows.

    The planning amendments required to begin implementing the Regent Park redevelopment plan will be before City Council committees in January 2005. There is some possibility that the plan might be amended at that point. But the key problem is that there are no strong leaders capable of driving redevelopment at either the TCHC level or City Council. If there is any lesson the city learned during its housing initiatives in the 1970s, it is that very strong internal leadership is necessary for redevelopment to occur - otherwise there will always be a reason for delay. Certainly the long gestation of the Regent Park plan (in its third year so far) shows that this is the case. By comparison, less than 18 months elapsed between the first thought of possible redevelopment in March 1973 and the construction of the first building in the proposed St. Lawrence community in September 1974.

    **

    A proposal for redeveloping Regent Park.

    1. The Current situation

    Currently, there are about 2100 units in Regent North and South, at a density of about 30 units per acre.  All units are Rent-Geared-to-Income (RGI) which means that a household pays about 30 per cent of income for rent. Changes of income and family members must be reported as they occur. As income climbs, so does rent, and households that do well financially find that it makes sense for them to move out into less expensive accommodation.

    The built form of both Regent North and South leaves much to be desired.  Almost all units in Regent North are in three to six storey apartment structures sitting among large stretches of open space including parking lots. There's no `ownership' of this open space by the individuals who live close to it (unlike in most communities where front and back yards are controlled by the people who live there)  and often these spaces attract garbage, litter and abandoned cars which give the area a feeling that it is uncared for.  Inside the buildings are long corridors which are almost `unowned', and since it has proven impossible to control access to these corridors (since no own `owns' the doors, locks often are ineffective and undesirables can easily gain entry), social problems and violence are often evident in these buildings, which many feel are unsafe.

    These same problems are evident in the five apartment towers in Regent South, and to a lesser extent in some of the rows of townhouses in Regent South. The fact that there are no through streets in Regent means that normal flows of traffic are not there to add surveillance and safety to pedestrians on streets.

    2. Objectives for redevelopment

    The primary objective in redeveloping Regent Park should be to achieve a housing form which incorporates as many ideas of public safety as other neighbourhoods in Toronto .  This means that units at grade should have front and back yards controlled by the residents of the unit; the neighbourhood should be laced with public streets; buildings should face onto public streets and be directly linked to streets with sidewalks; as in other neighbourhoods in Toronto the services to these buildings like should be public in nature; there should be a mix of incomes; there should be a mix of tenures; and there should be a mix of uses.  As we know from looking at other successful neighbourhoods in Toronto these are the characteristics that seem to create really good communities.

    A second objective of redevelopment should be to create more housing that is affordable by households with low incomes.  There is a considerable shortage of housing that low income households can afford and on such a large publicly owned site (70 acres!) the city has an obligation to create more housing for low income households than now exists on site.

    A third objective should be to create affordable housing which is affordable for governments.  If there are good ways to minimize the public expenditures (subsidies) in achieving affordable housing then these methods should be explored.

    A fourth objective should be to help low income people become more self sufficient with more opportunity to move themselves up economically and have more resources to support themselves.  A housing scheme that helps to do this is clearly a benefit not only to the households involved but to society at large.

    To sum up, the objectives to be achieved in redeveloping Regent Park are:

    1. To create a much better and more sustainable urban form, one that is similar to other successful neighbourhoods in Toronto.

    2. To increase the amount of housing affordable to low income families on this site.

    3. To do everything possible to minimize public expenditures in creating good housing affordable to low income households.

    4. To help low income households become better off.

    3. A Development Proposal

    To achieve these objectives the following kind of development should be made:

  4. Regent Park should be developed in a medium-rise form to accommodate between 75 and 80 units per acre for a total of about 5,500 units.  This is a quite reasonable density for a downtown neighbourhood, about double the density of Cabbagetown and Riverdale, but one-third less than the density of the St. Lawrence community.

    Three types of tenure should be offered in this redevelopment:

    * 1000 units of rent-geared-to-income in a way that is mixed into the rest of the development;

    * 2000 units of ownership housing affordable by most Regent Park residents and other TCHC residents; and

    * 2500 units of market housing.

    This mix means that about 3000 units of housing will be available to the kinds of people who live in Regent Park and other public housing projects.  A third of that will be available on the same terms as now exist, namely rent-geared-to-income, but the other twp thirds will be by way of ownership.  This ownership housing should provide opportunities for some of the lowest income households in Regent Park to own if they so wish, as well as to others in Regent Park who have higher incomes.  The company Options for Homes has shown how ownership can be made available to households with incomes as low as those on welfare.  But there is no thought that welfare families would be the only people permitted to own - there are many working families in Regent Park and other public housing projects with higher incomes who would be delighted to own a home, and have the where-with-all to generate incomes to pay the necessary costs for much of the unit without subsidy.

    The merit of this arrangement is three-fold.  First, ownership means that the family will no longer have to report on a regular basis to the housing company about family composition and income.  This reporting requirement, necessary where rents are geared to incomes,  is a very serious bureaucratic intrusion into family life and it should be ended if at all possible.  Providing ownership means that families are entitled to make what ever money they can and have whatever family composition they can without being required to report to someone else. 

    Not only is this change a social benefit to the families involved: it also saves considerable administrative expenses.  This is a second benefit. 

    Third, the government investment in these ownership units -  the subsidy - will be returned to the government if and when the units are sold. This means governments will have, through the ownership option,  a revolving fund of money  that can be reinvested into new housing as those low income ownership units are sold for whatever reason.  Obviously low income families will be reluctant to sell because of the favourable conditions under which they occupy the unit but there are many reasons for people to sell and there is no reason why they would not be allowed to do so if they so desire, knowing that government investments in the units will be returned to government for new housing purposes.

    One final point:  the low income ownership arrangement means that over time, different families will be changing their economic status at different rates.  Very quickly, the community will be a very viable and interesting mix of families with different incomes.  As we know from the experience of St. Lawrence this kind of mix is very healthy and is something we should be trying to repeat.

    4. Constraints

    City policy does not encourage low income ownership housing.  It requires rent-geared-to-income housing to be retained and does not permit it to be replaced by ownership housing, even if the same household could afford to own rather than rent.  These policies will have to be changed. 

    The policies are set out in the new Official Plan.  The plan  has not yet been approved by the Ontario Municipal Board, but it is used to manage current issues that come up at Council.

    Policy 5 in Section 3.2.1 reads as follows:

     

    Significant new development on sites containing seven or more rental units, where existing units will be kept in the new development, will secure for as long as possible:
    a)  The existing rental housing units, with either affordable or mid-range rents, as rental housing; and
    b)  Any needed improvements and renovations to the existing rental housing with no pass-through of such costs in the rents to the tenant.

     

    Policy 4 in the same section states that municipal assistance (providing land at below cost, or waiving city fees, for instance) will only be provided to low income ownership units if “provided on a long term basis by non-profit groups.”

    The key issue is that in redeveloping public housing sites,  city policy is to ensure that the same number of rent-geared-to-income units is available at the end of the redevelopment as at the beginning.  The policy appears to prevent the replacement of low income rental housing with low income ownership housing even if the low income ownership housing can be available at the same or lower cost. And the policy seems to prohibit the city from lending assistance to a private developer who wishes to provide low income ownership units.

    The reason for this policy apparently is the assumption that rent-geared-to-income rental housing is a continuing asset controlled by the city or a non-profit agency, whereas ownership housing is not.  There are two fears about an ownership unit:  first, that a low income family which buys their own unit will be able to arrange their affairs so they no longer are a low income family and continue to live in the house they have purchased, so the unit is no longer occupied by a low income family. Second, that if the low income family sells, the unit would be “lost” to another low income family, even if the city is fully reimbursed for subsidies provided.  In short, rent-geared-to-income units are seen as a continuing asset to the city whereas low income ownership units are not.

    Perhaps the fears are unfounded or misplaced.  One key advantage of the ownership option is that it reduces the subsidy cost to the city, so that for the same cost the city can provide more housing that is affordable to low income households if it wishes.  (Admittedly, governments often try to reduce the amounts they provide for low income purposes, but that's a different issue.)  Another advantage is that when a low income ownership unit is sold, the subsidy originally given is returned to the city for re-investment.  This means that the opportunity to replace the unit “lost” is available.

    The fear that a family in a low income ownership unit might increase its income and not remain in the low income category should be considered a positive outcome, not a negative outcome. 

    The benefits of ownership are social and financial.  If the city can better use its subsidy dollars so that more of the low income population is in units they can afford, then surely a policy favouring this arrangement will be superior.  This is  the result of low income ownership units:  the subsidy cost to the city is less because the city does not have to pay management costs.  The social value of ownership is higher for the low income family because of the lack of oversight in  family arrangements. 

    One can understand why the city might think that it is good to continue the worn-out system of rent-geared-to-income housing with all of the bureaucracy involved.    But while one can understand it, one should not support it.  The policy should be changed to help families climb out of a low income status, and allow communities to evolve and change at their own pace rather than being frozen into a rent-geared-to-income regime administered by a bureaucracy which at the best of times will respond in bureaucratic ways.

    5. A short note on financing low income ownership housing

    The cost of a two bedroom unit is about $ 143,000. Here's how financing can be arranged so the unit is affordable by a very low income household, one that can afford to pay only about $400 per month:

    1) A mortgage for $50,000, which at current interest rates would require a payment of about $370 a month to cover principle, interest and property taxes.

    2) A subsidy covering the cost of land, about $40,000.

    3) A write-off of city development charges and other such charges, $13,000.

    4) A subsidy generated from market units in the project, $40,000.

    Once the owner has paid off the mortgage she can then start to pay down some of the other subsidies.  When the unit is sold the owner recovers only the equity on the share represented by the paid portion of the mortgage. The remainder of the sale proceeds goes into a fund to cover the other subsidies. This fund could be used to create another low income unit for sale.

    If the owner sells within a short period of time then the equity will be very small. But over time as payments are made and the mortgage is paid off the equity clearly increases.  Any household whose income moves upward will quickly find that many of the subsidized costs can be paid off so the owner's equity substantially increases.

    The value of the property will increase in line with the general increase in real estate values, which means the value of the subsidized items increases too. This means that those who have provided subsidies will find their investments protected.

    Providing the suggested subsidies can be generated, low income ownership units appear to be very viable.  If they are built on city-owned land then it is quite clear that the land subsidies and the city charges are relatively easy to secure.  Assuming that there is a mix of units, it seems entirely possible that the subsidies from the market units are also fairly easy to secure.  In any case, it is unlikely that all of the units will require the very steep subsidies needed for families on welfare.  In most cases they will be able to pay a much higher monthly payment than the $400 suggested.

    There are various scenarios about how one deals with the resale of units.  Obviously, the fewer controls the better.  One may want to ensure that no sale takes place during the first five years.  One will probably also want to provide assistance to very low income owners to give them the assurances needed to provide oversight for matters such as insurance.  Revenue from any sale should probably be divided according to capital investment so that if the city provided 40 per cent of the capital (through land contribution, waiving fees, etc,) then the city should receive 40 per cent of the sale price. In any sale the owner would receive the same share as the paid-off portion of the mortgage represented to the capital investment. There will also be question of where the revenues on the contributed side of the investment go - back to those who were providing the subsidies, or to a special fund controlled by a public body or a non-profit body to be reinvested in low income housing. These are issues to be decided.

    John Sewell,

    January 3, 2004.