New Housing Alternatives
In this episode of New Housing Alternatives, hosts Cherise Burda and Dr. Ren Thomas speak with Dominique Russell, writer, activist, teacher, and co‑director of the Kensington Market Community Land Trust (KMCLT). Together, they explore how community land trusts (CLTs) use collective ownership, organizing, and mutual aid to fight displacement and preserve deeply affordable housing and commercial spaces in Toronto’s Kensington Market. Drawing on a decade of neighborhood organizing—from stopping a proposed Walmart to acquiring three mixed‑use buildings—Dominique explains how CLTs decommodify land, center community power, and reimagine what “ownership” can look like. She discusses funding tools like Toronto’s Multi‑Unit Residential Acquisition (MURA) program and community bonds, and reflects on how CLTs across Canada are increasingly grounding their work in decolonization, land back, and social justice. Key Takeaways * Community land trusts (CLTs) decommodify land and housing: CLTs are democratically controlled, neighborhood‑based nonprofits that acquire and hold land for community benefit, prioritizing security of tenure and affordable homes and commercial spaces over market returns. * Organizing comes before funding: KMCLT’s story shows that successful acquisition and financing (through tools like Toronto’s MURA program and community bonds) only become possible after deep community organizing, knowing your neighbors, and building a shared, representative vision for the neighborhood. * CLTs are part of a broader movement for decolonization and social justice: KMCLT and other members of the Canadian Network of Community Land Trusts are increasingly centring land back, decolonization, and racial justice—redefining community ownership as mutual aid, local power, and long‑term resistance to displacement and gentrification. Chapters: 00:00 – Intro & Episode Overview 00:39 – Introducing Dominique Russell & Kensington Market CLT 01:25 – What Is a Community Land Trust? CLTs vs. Nonprofit Housing 04:13 – Why Kensington? Neighbourhood Preservation and Mission 04:39 – KMCLT’s Buildings on Kensington and Spadina 07:30 – From Anti‑Walmart Campaign to Community Land Trust 10:54 – Organizing Before Funding: Building a Representative CLT 11:04 – Acquisition, MURA, and Protecting Vulnerable Rental Housing 14:23 – Community Bonds and Financing Community Ownership 16:40 – Community Support, Short‑Term Rentals, and Displacement 19:24 – Advice for Communities Wanting to Start a CLT 21:20 – Future of KMCLT: Leadership Transition and Decolonizing Practice 23:30 – Relationship to Chinatown and Business Ecology 26:25 – Love of Place as the Emotional Core of CLT Work 28:58 – Local Organizing and the Wider CLT Movement 29:45 – Reflections & Key Lessons from Kensington Market 30:18 – Outro, Show Notes, and Credits Learn more about the Kensington Market Community Land Trust here: https://kmclt.ca/ New Housing Alternatives is made possible with the support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Explore our Vision & Objectives and Research Clusters & Projects, and subscribe to our blog at the link below: https://newhousingalternatives.ca/blog [https://newhousingalternatives.ca/blog]
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