Skip to main content

United Ways of Ontario Call for the Province to repeal Schedule 12, Bill 60, the Fighting Delays, Building Faster Act, 2025

November 17, 2025 by United Way Greater Toronto

Ontario United Ways express concern that proposed changes will escalate the homelessness crisis across Ontario

Ontario is at a critical point. Housing need is rising, homelessness is growing, federal investment is starting to move but new home construction is slowing in Ontario. The Province’s goal to create conditions for faster homebuilding, through predictable approvals and transit-oriented projects makes sense but decisions made now will set the course for years.

The legislative changes to the Residential Tenancies Act in Schedule 12 of Bill 60, move policy in the wrong direction and will serve to escalate the homelessness crisis across Ontario. They weaken security of tenure, speed eviction and narrow review windows. This is not a solution for people who are precariously housed and will level even greater pressure on municipalities and community agencies struggling to address need.

The focus should be on keeping people housed while new supply comes online. That means maintaining reasonable grace periods for arrears, ensuring tenants can raise legitimate health and safety concerns without undue barriers, preserving fair compensation and clear standards in no-fault evictions with consequences for bad-faith cases and keeping review and appeal timelines workable so disputes are resolved on their merits. These measures protect due process, prevent avoidable evictions, and steady the system as we build.

We join colleagues from across the community services sector in calling on the Province to repeal Schedule 12 of Bill 60 and commit to meaningful consultation with tenants, sector partners and municipalities on proposed amendments to the Residential Tenancies Act and provincial housing policies that impact tenants.

United Ways across Ontario partner with regional and municipal governments and are ready to work with the Province to keep people housed while Ontario builds the homes our communities need.

United Way Bruce Grey

United Way Centraide North East Ontario

United Way Centraide Simcoe Muskoka

United Way/Centraide Stormont-Dundas & Glengarry

United Way/Centraide Windsor-Essex Chatham-Kent

United Way Haliburton Kawartha Lakes

United way Durham Region

United Way East Ontario

United Way Greater Toronto

United Way Guelph Wellington Dufferin

United Way of Haldimand and Norfolk

United Way Halton & Hamilton

United Way Hastings & Prince Edward

United Way Kingston, Frontenac, Lennox & Addington

United Way Leeds & Grenville

United Way Oxford

United Way Niagara

United Way Northumberland

United Way Perth Huron

United Way Peterborough & District

United Way of Thunder Bay

United Way Waterloo Region Communities


Our public policy and mobilization in action

September 02, 2025

Ontario United Ways Make Joint Submission to the Build Canada Homes Design

Ontario United Ways make recommendations to the federal government’s Build Canada Homes design to help realize the full potential of Canada’s community housing sector to build the homes Canadians need.

August 12, 2025

Non-Profit and Co-op Homes: The Way for Ontario to Build Its Way Out of the Housing Crisis

“Built for Good” shows how targeted investment in non-market housing can deliver thousands of deeply affordable homes, preserve existing stock, and ease pressure on public systems — all while creating jobs and economic opportunity

January 31, 2024

Provincial Budget 2024: Ontario United Ways are calling for investment in the non-profit sector to deliver a full range of housing options

As the Government of Ontario outlines its budget priorities for the coming year, Ontario United Ways are calling for investment in, and engagement of, the non-profit sector to deliver the full range of housing options, particularly the affordable and deeply affordable homes, so desperately needed in this province.

Share this article: