Committee approves budget with $23.3-million investment in affordable and supportive housing | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: November 19, 2025 - 14:32

Committee approves budget with $23.3-million investment in affordable and supportive housing

November 19, 2025
The Planning and Housing Committee today approved its portion of Draft Budget 2026.

The Planning and Housing Committee today approved its portion of Draft Budget 2026, which includes $91.8 million in net operating funding and $24.1 million in capital funding.

The City will invest the bulk of that capital, $23.3 million, to develop more affordable and supportive housing for low and moderate-income households.

In line with the 2025 Affordable Housing Capital Strategy and Update, which the Committee also approved today, the $23.3 million in capital funding will help support projects in the Affordable Housing Pipeline. The pipeline currently includes 1,565 units receiving funding support, with 903 units under construction, 470 nearing construction start, and 192 in pre-development.

Affordable housing has been a key priority for this 2023-2026 Term of Council and the City has ambitiously expanded both investments and outcomes. By the end of this term of Council, the City expects to have delivered approximately 850 new affordable housing units – more than double the number built in the previous term. The funding approved by Committee today will support the construction of approximately 436 affordable units in 2026.

The City remains committed to delivering affordable housing through strategic use of municipal lands, streamlined approvals and delegated authority. Since 2024, the City has committed approximately $230 million in funding across municipal, provincial and federal sources to support affordable and supportive housing projects. These investments are supporting nearly 1,400 non-profit and nearly 500 affordable private sector units.

Other capital investments approved today include $444,000 to support the development of secondary plans around transit hubs that will help guide intensification, infrastructure and housing priorities. An additional $420,000 will fund plans in approved urban expansion areas to direct greenfield growth and identify infrastructure needs. The budget also proposes a $50,000 increase to the Heritage Property Grant Program, which aims to help owners cover the costs of restoring the original heritage character of designated heritage buildings.

The approved budget includes several continuous improvement initiatives designed to deliver efficiencies and modernize services. For example, through the Housing Action Plan approved by Council in October, the City will coordinate actions to streamline the development review process for not-for-profits on municipal lands. Removing such barriers will simplify the development of affordable housing and allow other infrastructure projects to move forward more quickly.

Council will consider Draft Budget 2026 on Wednesday, December 10. Other items from today’s meeting will rise to Council on Wednesday, November 26.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Pete Hoekstra, the U.S. ambassador to Canada, told an audience in Ottawa that he thinks Canada has recently meddled in American politics, but that he also doesn’t understand why Canadians are angry about comments regarding this country becoming his nation’s 51st state. His remarks came this week at the 2025 National Manufacturing Conference...
November 20, 2025 - 09:52 | Chris Knight | National Post
British Columbia's minister of jobs and economic growth announced the deal in Victoria, although it was signed by trade ministers at a meeting in Yellowknife on Wednesday. 
November 20, 2025 - 09:50 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Canada
Backhoes tore into the brick and plaster of the White House’s East Wing, sending a chalky cloud drifting across the South Lawn. In a single morning last month, a piece of America’s most familiar building collapsed under the teeth of heavy machinery.The metaphor was almost too crude, but U.S. President Donald Trump has never been subtle. In ripping down and remaking “the People’s House,” he is broadcasting a clear message: The rules don’t apply to him.
November 20, 2025 - 09:35 | Alex Bozikovic | The Globe and Mail