Brian Bowman moving too fast on new Winnipeg growth fees, developers say - Action News
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Manitoba

Brian Bowman moving too fast on new Winnipeg growth fees, developers say

Slow down. That's the message in the local development business these days as Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman's crusade to make "growth pay for growth" gains speed.

Urban planners from outside Manitoba surprised fees on new developments not already in place

Mayor Bowman wants 'growth to pay for growth,' but developers first want consultation. (CBC News)

Slow down.

That's what developers are saying as Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman's crusade to make "growth pay for growth" gains speed.

"Very rushed," saidEric Vogan ofQualico.

Bowman said last week that the city shouldjoin other bigCanadian cities and start charging developers a growth fee, but he remainscommitted to keeping property tax increases linked to inflation.

That wouldputthe city in a position where it can't expand services to new housing developments without additional revenue.

Qualico vice-president Eric Vogan says Winnipeg's mayor is trying to rush with the implementation of new development and growth fees. (Manitoba Home Builders Association)

Vogansaid there is a lot of work that needs to be done before Winnipeg starts imposing new fees on developers.

"I would like to see a collaboration of effort from the city and the industry to come up with a good system to make sure that we can finance growth well," Vogan said.

At stake, according to Vogan and the development business, arehigher housing costs that will come from what he calls a tax.

"If we find that people are ready to spend $10,000 or $30,000to buy a house that their neighbour didn't have to pay, then that will be a different story," Vogan said.

Vogan said there hasn't beena face-to-face meeting with the mayor and his staff.

Winnipeg alone not charging growth fees

Bowman does have some support in his quest to put growth fees on new developments, and the claim thatWinnipeg stands alone in not charging the fees is correct.

Urban planners from outside the provinceexpressed surprise those charges weren't alreadylevied in Manitoba.

"That's a very unusual situation. Most large cities in Canada have lot levies or development impact charges or development fees," said professor David Gordon,who lectures on planning at Queens University in Kingston, Ont.

Queens Professor David Gordon says Winnipeg is alone in not charging growth fees or levies. (Queen's University)

He says those new development fees are meant to share the cost of infrastructure fairly and it's perfectly possible to figure out what a fair share is for developers.

Gordon admits in some cases municipalities push the process too far, citing aninstance where during rapid growth the City of Mississauga, Ont., used development fees to subsidize the construction of a hockey rink and even part of a new city hall.

But Gordon says if taxpayers in existing neighbourhoods consistently have to pay for new infrastructure "on the edges," it ends up putting"such a strain on city finances eventually cities become anti-growth."

Fees withoutcharter changestough

University of Winnipeg professor emeritus Christopher Leo agrees it might be the time for a growth fee or levy.He believes growth isn't paying for growth in Winnipeg, addingpotholes in older neighbourhoods are an example where the city can't catch up to the infrastructure upgrade areasit has while still adding on new areas.

Professor emeritus Christopher Leo wonders how Mayor Brian Bowman can get growth fees without first changing the city charter. (University of Winnipeg)

But Leoalso wants to see planning improve and land use tightened.

"Don't pile on unnecessary expenses," Leo said.

He points to opening up large tracts of land in Transcona (Transcona West specifically) and the city's southern region (Waverley West) that need all sorts of infrastructure attention and are on the fringes of the city.

What Leo isn't sure of is how Bowman can get growth fees without changing the City of WinnipegCharter, whichis provincially controlled. Premier BrianPallister says he won'tchange the charter and there will beno new taxes under his watch.

"Bowman seems to be suggesting that we recover those other expenses under existing regulations. I find that questionable, let's say," Leo said.

Leo says there is no point indemonizing developers, who are in business to make money. He suspects if there are added requirements placed on new subdivisions and the companies that build them can make a profit, developers arelikely to accept those new costs.

Unique charging system

How Winnipeg goes about charging anything on suburban growth is unique. The city uses development agreements with each subdivision, and each agreement is developed on a case-by-case basis, according to a study done out of the University of Toronto in 2012.

In his State of the City address, Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman said he wants to introduce growth fees in Winnipeg to cover infrastructure costs associated with new development. (CBC)

It's provincial legislation,not the City of Winnipeg's rules,that form the basis for what's being done currently, and the U of T study called the Manitoba example "the least prescriptive legislation of the five jurisdictions [it] studied."

Growth fees in some form or another occur in all major Canadian cities, but some mayors are hungry to find more ways for their municipalities to recover some of the massive costs of expansion.

Calgary way in front on fees

Calgary is aggressivelypassing the costs of new infrastructure on to developers. From bridges and interchanges to traffic signals on roads leading into new neighbourhoods, Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi has beenlooking for an end to what he referred to as a subsidy.

Levies were introduced in 2011, but Nenshi felt they didn't go far enough. The city council passed a new round of charges unanimously in 2016,this time to help cover the cost of everything from water and waste treatment plants to libraries, police stations and transit buses.

Those were done, however, after extensive consultation with the development industry.

Bowman says "growth has to pay for growth;"the development industry says added fees to their costs will drive up the price of housing substantially.

The next salvo in this skirmish is expectedwhen a city report on growth fees and a way to make them without changing provincial rules comesout at the end of the month.