Access to housing is a right and not a commodity

Montrealers fear that they will no longer be able to find accommodation in metropolis

Affordability of housing is a major concern for Montreal residents, as most citizens fear they will no longer be able to live in the metropolis by 2050.

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At least that’s according to a report by the Office de Consultation Publique de Montréal (OCPM), for which Montrealers were asked to vote on the city’s future urban planning and mobility plan for 2050.

The OCPM, commissioned by the local council, confirms that this is “the most impressive public consultation in its history”.

According to the report released on Thursday, the main concern of the citizens, organizations and experts met is housing affordability. And for most of them, “improving the affordability and quality of housing” is one of the city’s top seven solutions to reducing social inequalities.

“Everyone agrees on densifying the city to curb urban sprawl and allow everyone to choose where they live. Above all, however, economic actors are pushing for more predictability and flexibility in regulations and procedures to increase the housing supply, while citizens and organizations are proposing a range of regulatory, financial and fiscal solutions to facilitate the preservation, creation and delivery of housing Access to social and affordable housing. “Everyone agrees on close-meshed housing planning and traffic design,” it says in detail.

Twenty recommendations

Thanks to this consultation, carried out over a period of 13 months, the OCPM was able to list 4,310 citizens’ contributions, formulate 22 recommendations and define the main lines that will make it possible to “steer the future Urban Planning and Mobility Plan (PUM) 2050”. aiming to achieve carbon neutrality and social justice goals.”

“It is therefore recommended to integrate six guiding principles into the PUM: social-ecological transition; appreciation of nature and protection of the environment; integrated urban and mobility planning; respect and develop the identity of the territories; civic participation and representativeness; and stable economic prosperity,” the 142-page document said.

Among the recommendations, the OCPM believes that the city “needs to prioritize the development of social and community housing and affordable housing.”

The Office also stresses the importance of “protecting the households occupying the rental housing stock, in particular by establishing a rental register”. Remember that during the last election campaign in 2021, Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante committed to establishing certification for Montreal landlords with a rental registry.