Toronto

'Get on board' and 'stop the whining': Ford knocks mayors opposed to new housing bill

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is telling the mayor of Mississauga and other municipal leaders who've voiced opposition to new housing legislation to "get on board" and "stop the whining."

Mayors say freeze on development fees will force them to raise taxes

Ontario Premier Doug Ford.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford criticized municipal leaders who are opposed to new provincial housing legislation Wednesday morning. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The mayor of Mississauga and other municipal leaders who have voiced opposition to a new provincial housing law need to "get on board" and "stop the whining," Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday in an unprompted burst of criticism.

Ford took issue with mayors who've raised concerns with the law that will reduce or eliminate some municipal revenues from developers, but singled out Mississauga Mayor Bonnie Crombie after he made an unrelated announcement in neighbouring Brampton, Ont.

"We have a few mayors that, you know, don't want to play in the sandbox and one being mayor Crombie, and I don't know what her issue is," Ford said.

The premier said he is asking for a partnership with Crombie and all the other mayors.

"If we sit back and think some magical thing is going to happen, or you think when people come here we're going to start living in mud huts — it's not going to happen under our government," he said.

"We want to work collaboratively, co-operatively with you, but we need to get on board and and start moving forward and stop the whining and complaining that I hear day in and day out."

In a statement, Crombie said Wednesday that she isn't whining, she's just doing her job and trying to stand up for residents.

"We are trying to build a great city and accommodate growth, but as it stands, this legislation will force us to either put the brakes on these plans due to lack of funding or significantly raise taxes by up to 10 per cent a year for the next decade. I think we can all agree that none of us want that," she said.

"Mississauga is simply communicating the facts. I'm confident in the numbers our staff have presented and know the province's third-party audit will say the same. We welcome the opportunity for a review of our books to demonstrate that we are strong fiscal managers that respect taxpayers' dollars."

3rd party audit to be launched

Crombie and other mayors have said the new law will force them to raise property taxes to pay for infrastructure that supports new housing.

The Association of Municipalities of Ontario has said the changes could leave municipalities short $5 billion and see taxpayers footing the bill — either in the form of higher property taxes or service cuts — and there is nothing in the bill that would guarantee improved housing affordability.

Municipal Affairs and Housing Minister Steve Clark has said in response that he will launch a third-party audit of the finances of select municipalities to determine if the law will indeed cause a shortfall and if so, the province will make those communities "whole."

Ford said Mississauga has increased its fees on new home buyers by nearly 30 per cent in the last two years and that makes it difficult for people to buy a home. He also accused Mississauga of not fully spending the development charge revenues it gets now, saying the city is sitting on millions of dollars in development charge reserves.

"I see that Mayor Crombie's out there handing out flyers and doing this — all I say is get on board, stop being disingenuous, you know, with the people of Mississauga," Ford said.

"It's just absolutely wrong."

With files from CBC News