Windsor councillor wants to revisit housing money decision - Action News
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Windsor

Windsor councillor wants to revisit housing money decision

Ward 9 Coun. Kieran McKenzie says Windsor city council should review its decision to not allow fourplexes, as part of an application for up to $70 million in federal housing money.

Council effectively closed the door on millions in federal funding by saying no to fourplexes across the city

An image of two construction workers standing on the roofs on a string of houses being built.
New homes are constructed in Ottawa on Monday, Aug. 14, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick (The Canadian Press)

A Windsor city councillor wants to revisit the city's application for up to $70 million in housing funds, after council votedto effectively turn down the money earlier this month.

Ward 9 Coun. Kieran McKenzie says the original motion was rushed, with councillors told they had to make a same-day decision on suggested changes to Windsor'sfederalHousing Accelerator Fund (HAF) application.

But, he says, he wants to see the decision revisited now that there could be more time available after he discussed the issue with local members of Parliament.

"What I'm asking for is for council to be given another clean shot at looking at the report and coming to a decision with respect to the Housing Accelerator Fund application," McKenzie said. "We may very well land in the same place."

To access between $40 and $70 million in HAF money, the City of Windsor would need to to allow four residential units by right on any property zoned for a single-family home also known as fourplexes.

The city'sapplication to the HAF would allow fourplexesin some areas of the city, where staff said they felt intensification was supported by infrastructure, but wouldn't allow them everywhere.

Councillors voted to keep the city's application the same in mid-December.

Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkenssaid in a statement to CBC Newshe was asked by the federal government to make a decision, either by himself through a letter or as a council decision, by the beginning of the holidays.

He said he asked council if they needed more time to consider the report on the proposed changes.

"No member of city council asked for more time," he wrote in an email.

In a recording of the council meeting, Dilkens asked council if they needed "a few more minutes" to read the report.

During the meeting, McKenzie asked staff for clarification on the timeline and what risk that would pose to the city's application.

Ward 9 Coun. Kieran McKenzie says the E.C. Row Expressway is a regional road and Windsorites should not bear full responsibility for it.
Ward 9 Coun. Kieran McKenzie says council should revisit its federal Housing Accelerator Fund (HAF) application. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

McKenzie says he's spoke with Windsor-Tecumseh MP Irek Kusmierczykabout the timeline after council's decision.

"He indicated to me that the government would still be open to considering the application if it was resubmitted or submitted with a different recommendation up until early to mid January," McKenzie told CBC Windsor.

McKenzie says it's not an issue with the city's staff, who he says responded to the timeline handed to them. But, he says there was no time for public input on the issue.

He is asking for a new report on the decisionat the next council meeting on January 15.

City needs to allow fourplexes to be considered for funding

The federal government returned Windsor's HAF application in early December, noting the city would need to allow fourplexes across the entire city to meet the minimum bar for getting HAF money.

The city currently allows three residential units per single-family zoned properties, or threeplexes, across the city.

McKenzie said council acknowledgedthat not changing the application would make Windsor's bid for money "significantly weaker than a number of othercommunities across Canada," and that the grant would likely be turned down.

Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens and Jessica Tsirimbis with RJM Holdings (left) at the Paul Martin Building Conference in downtown Windsor on Thursday, December 14, 2023.
Windsor Mayor Drew Dilkens told CBC Windsor the city approving of fourplexes across the city is "disrespectful" to Windsor residents. (TJ Dhir/CBC)

After the decision, Dilkens told CBC Windsor he stands with the initial decision to submit the application without changes.

He said approving fourplexes by right anywhere in the the city is "disrespectful" to Windsor residents but the city's application would allow them in some areas where infrastructure like transit could support more density.

Public concern about infrastructure

Council initially made its decisionover concerns aboutflooding,intensification, quality of life and pressures on city infrastructure.

McKenzie said there should be a harder look at the concerns aboutinfrastructure and at the rate fourplexes would be built.

"It's not a reasonable thing to think that suddenly across the entire community people are going to be converting their homes into fourplexes," he said.

Mike Moffatt,executive director ofPlace Institute at the University of Ottawa, which examines housing issues, previously told CBC News atallowing fourplexesisn't much different than building other types of homes.

And, he says, Windsor is lagging behind other municipalities in meeting its housing targets.

NextStar Energy
Upcoming developments like the NextStar Energy battery plant make Windsor an attractive city to move to, according to Ward 9 Coun. Kieran McKenzie. (Submitted by LouAnn Gosselin)

"You should be allowed to build a fourplex as of right... the same way you could build a McMansion as of right," he said.

McKenzie said with large developments like the NextStar battery factory and the Gordie Howe bridge in the works, he expects Windsor's gpopulation will continue to grow.

"People are already coming. It's not the housing form that actually puts the pressure on the infrastructureit's people," he said.

"Apartment buildings aren't what's driving people coming to the City of Windsor. It's thebright future that we have in front of us."

With files from Dalson Chen