As of April 1, 2026, London had created 9,902 of its 11,803 three-year Housing Accelerator Fund target units — about 84 percent — with 11 HAF action-plan initiatives reported as completed. That leaves roughly 1,900 units to find before the federal deadline closes the city's three-year HAF window in September 2026. Staff estimates of the permit-fee waiver's expected impact land at the same 1,900-unit figure, which is not a coincidence. The waiver is calibrated to the shortfall.
London's 2025 HAF Annual Update shows the city has already exceeded its Year 1 and Year 2 permit targets — 3,341 against a 3,184 goal in Year 1, and 4,284 against a 3,991 goal in Year 2. The Year 3 permit target is 4,178. The arithmetic of a city that has been outperforming its annual permit goals but still faces a unit-creation gap explains the pivot toward homeowner-scale incentives. Large developments take years from permit to occupancy. ARUs and gentle-density projects can move from approval to completion inside a single construction season, which is exactly the time horizon a federal deadline creates.
Mayor Josh Morgan framed the expansion to all ARU types as opening opportunities for more homeowners to participate while keeping the city on track for its targets. Deputy City Manager Scott Mathers, in the city's own news release, described the strategy as stacking new incentive programs and waiving building fees to help projects move forward quickly. That language matters: stacking is the explicit intent. Grants and fee waivers are designed to combine on the same project, not to substitute for one another.