Saturday, May 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Housing minister won't commit to Liberal election promise to cut development fees

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Oct, 2025 10:50 AM
  • Housing minister won't commit to Liberal election promise to cut development fees

The federal housing minister wouldn't commit today to a Liberal election campaign promise to push cities to cut the fees that help fund local infrastructure.

In Toronto today for an announcement, Housing Minister Gregor Robertson did not answer directly when asked whether the Liberals are still committed to their promise to cut municipal development charges in half to lower the cost of homebuilding.

Speaking to reporters, Robertson said Ottawa "initially" was looking at a 50 per cent reduction in development charges, but was not clear on whether the government would meet that bar and suggested more details are coming in advance of the Nov. 4 budget.

Robertson said infrastructure accounts for a large part of the cost of building new homes, and development charges are key to covering those housing costs in cities like Toronto and Vancouver.

The minister was in Toronto to announce federal funding for the city's sewer infrastructure and the first housing project to go forward through the federal government's new affordable housing agency, Build Canada Homes.

Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow said financing is a major hurdle keeping many builders from breaking ground on new homes, and that's why the city is talking with Ottawa about adjusting development charges.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

MORE National ARTICLES

Jobs minister meets with Canada Post union reps as overtime ban persists

Jobs minister meets with Canada Post union reps as overtime ban persists
Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu is meeting with postal union officials in Ottawa today amid an overtime ban and declining mail volumes at a beleaguered Canada Post.

Jobs minister meets with Canada Post union reps as overtime ban persists

Dive-bombed or not, Vancouverites are still pro-crow, researchers say

Dive-bombed or not, Vancouverites are still pro-crow, researchers say
Along her journey towards understanding Vancouver's crows, psychology professor Suzanne MacDonald says she made a friend.

Dive-bombed or not, Vancouverites are still pro-crow, researchers say

Crown cross-examines one of five hockey players accused of sexual assault

Crown cross-examines one of five hockey players accused of sexual assault
One of five hockey players accused of sexual assault says he went to a London, Ont., hotel room hoping for and expecting a sexual encounter with an unknown woman but didn’t know anything about what the woman wanted when he got there.

Crown cross-examines one of five hockey players accused of sexual assault

Quebec tables bill to eliminate interprovincial trade barriers on sale of goods

Quebec tables bill to eliminate interprovincial trade barriers on sale of goods
Quebec is moving to lower interprovincial trade barriers, with some exceptions. 

Quebec tables bill to eliminate interprovincial trade barriers on sale of goods

Carney says he has no immediate plans to overhaul municipal funding

Carney says he has no immediate plans to overhaul municipal funding
Prime Minister Mark Carney says Ottawa probably can't undertake a thorough overhaul of how municipalities are funded in the near future, with the federal government now focused on major projects.

Carney says he has no immediate plans to overhaul municipal funding

Wildfire in Peace River, B.C., quadruples in size after evacuation order

Wildfire in Peace River, B.C., quadruples in size after evacuation order
A wildfire in British Columbia that prompted an evacuation order on Thursday has quadrupled in size, as firefighters prepare for "intensifying conditions" in the parched northeast of the province where most fire activity is concentrated.

Wildfire in Peace River, B.C., quadruples in size after evacuation order