Housing is one of the most direct ways municipal government shapes daily life. Local councils make decisions about zoning, development approvals, and affordable housing programs that determine where homes get built, who can afford them, and what neighbourhoods look like over time.
The Region of Waterloo is responsible for social housing: subsidized rental housing for low-income residents. This includes managing thousands of units directly and overseeing wait-lists that have historically stretched to a decade or more.
The Region is also the upper-tier planning authority, meaning it sets rules about how land can be developed through the Regional Official Plan. This document guides where growth goes, either outward into greenfield areas or inward through intensification of existing neighbourhoods.
The cities (Cambridge, Kitchener, Waterloo) and townships handle their own zoning by-laws. These are the rules about what can be built where in their cities. When a developer wants to build a new apartment building or a homeowner wants to add a secondary suite, they are usually dealing with city approvals.
City councils also set policies on things like: