Why do deals need to be made at all? Why can't city planning and zoning just be more permissive?
They should be, to a point.
The yester-year status quo for housing policy has certainly resulted in failure
This is entirely incorrect. The housing policies that gave you the St. Lawrence neighbourhood and widespread purpose-built rental in low, mid and hirise forms was the planning of yesteryear. There was no housing crisis in 1980, nor 1990.
and ridiculous restrictions on new development like angular planes and arbitrary aesthetic preferences.
With all due respect, I'm getting tired of having to explain that
a) There are no restrictions based on aesthetics, those are prohibited by provincial law.
b) Angular planes do add slightly to costs on midrise pro-forma, and there is absolutely room to be more flexible around achieving the objectives they seek to protect (Which aren't aesthetic but essential to the environment (living trees and plants) and human health (access to sunlight is a proven determinant of both phsyical and mental health.)
c) You could absolish zoning entirely tomorrow and have a free for all and housing costs would not drop materially and housing supply would not increase materially. The industry is physically in capable of turning out more units than it is now for immediate future due to worker shortages at all levels of the trades, engineering, project management and limitations on capital deployment.
If you increase population beyond the ability of the industry to keep up, prices will rise and housing will be scarce. No amount of zoning reform however desirable it may be will change any of that.
It's good to see a public builder be proposed this election
That I can agree with.
and hopefully it will result in some real action on housing
I too have hope, but the financing aspect of the proposal remains a serious question mark.
, but the planning culture at the city needs to change as well.
I agree that it does, but I don't think that will materially increase affordable housing supply in the next decade. What it may do is see some of the housing built shift from a hirise to a mid-rise typology, or a missing middle typology, but total unit output will rise slowly, and remain at prices inacessible to a large portion of the population.