"I will find out where public land is and to prevent sales so that affordable housing can be possible, instead of being sold to privately catering to big businesses that keep the housing crisis an issue or becomes worse."

Jeffrey Tunney

Question from TRREB

Q1: In your opinion, what are the two greatest challenges facing the City of Toronto today?

candidate response

1. Violence

2. The cost of living.

Q2: If elected, will you support and accelerate the commitments made in the 2023 Housing Action Plan, including ending municipal exclusionary zoning by-laws and policies in Toronto that will allow and encourage more medium-density housing and purpose-built rental units?

Yes

Q3: If elected, would you support reducing approval times and other red tape barriers that limit the building of new housing in Toronto, thereby speeding up development?

Yes

Q4: If elected, would you push for more investment in critical infrastructure, such as transportation, to facilitate growth and housing by finding creative ways to secure funding from the provincial and federal governments?

Yes

Q5: If elected, would you commit to capping municipal costs added to new housing in order to limit further affordability erosion, and instead work together with the higher levels of government in finding new and sustainable funding mechanisms?

No

Q6: The City’s biggest and main source of revenue is property taxes. What would you support by way of annual property tax increases to maintain and/or improve the current services and programs the City provides?

0%

Q7: If elected, would you be willing to explore reform or adjustments to the Municipal Land Transfer Tax in Toronto? This might include increasing the first-time buyer rebate and indexing the MLTT rebate and tax thresholds to account for housing price inflation.

Yes

Q8: If you become the next mayor of Toronto, what is your top priority that you want to accomplish in the first 100 days in office?

To find out where public land is and to prevent sales so that affordable housing can be possible, instead of being sold to privately catering to big businesses that keep the housing crisis an issue or becomes worse.

To get the violence under control so that people can feel safe leaving their homes, walking the streets and taking TTC to increase traffic for businesses.

To begin looking over the budget so that my promises I have promise to the voters is kept and making sure that there is no tax increase especially in property tax. The average person who makes the average salary and owns a home is finding very difficult in maintaining and keeping their home and this needs to change.

If elected, will you use the “strong mayor powers” to modify the budget to pay for your key priorities?

Unsure