I think a few different issues are being mixed up here.
Renting an apartment/basement apartment does not necessarily mean you don't have money. There are many people renting because they feel a housing crash is coming, they want to remain mobile because they don't think they will be living in that location forever, they're there for only part of the year (students, consultants). In fact, with 0% down mortgages, it has become a choice for a lot more people than it was thirty years ago, where you left home and rented until you could save up a down payment. That's not to say there aren't people renting because house prices have gotten insane and they wouldn't be able to afford the monthly payments, but my point is that noone can make a blanket statement that renters are low income earners.
Crowds/traffic/etc... is not indicitive of the number of houses or the number of rented apartments. When I bought my first house, I rented a room out for a while. That meant that in the household there were two people and two cars. Next door lived a family with two parents and two grown kids, which had 4 people and 4 cars (and a three car driveway, which meant there was always one, if not two, cars on the road, impeding traffic). There are rules about the number of parking spots for basement apartments, but no rules about them for a family, and as has been discussed in many threads on this board, that leads to the problem of families buying a house without enough parking because it's all they can afford, and then the streets fill up. If this is the concern, rather than saying that basement apartments should not be allowed, it would make more sense to make a law that "a household can only own as many cars as they have driveway spots for, and no more".
Voting and taxes. JClayton, you posted
Quote:
"If you really want to get technical, let's also point out that renters do not pay taxes, so any addition to the population problem that is fixed through tax dollars (widening roads, recreation expansion) which is budgeted through expected tax revenues, is completely thrown off. This is why you are not allowed to vote in local elections, either."
First of all, renters are allowed to vote in local elections, renting does count as residency. However, because renters do tend to move around more, they often are not listed on the local ballot lists, and must take extra steps to show Elections Ontario that they are qualified voters. In addition, having a basement apartment increases the value of your home as far as property assessments, which means an increase in taxes collected. I think the larger problem you are referring to (tax revenues not matching expenses) is a result of using property taxes to fund those types of services. For example, if I live alone in a big house, and I live next door to an identical house that has a family of 8 people, we will pay the same amount of local taxes, and yet they will put more of a strain on the roads and recreational facilities than I will, and that's without any renters in the equation. This is why municipalities are pushing for alternate forms of taxation (a share of the GST/gas tax) and moving more towards user fees.
In short... while I share people's frustration about crowds, for example (which is why I didn't move downtown Toronto when most people my age did... just too many people everywhere), the problems that are being experienced have nothing to do with renters, but population growth that is outpacing infrastructure growth. Having another 500 people move in while Thompson is still one lane and James Snow Parkway is still closed is just as hard for everyone whether they are 400 owners and 100 renters or 500 owners.