Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

District of West Vancouver passes zoning changes, falls in line with province

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2024 04:33 PM
  • District of West Vancouver passes zoning changes, falls in line with province

Councillors in the District of West Vancouver, B.C., have narrowly voted in favour of getting onboard with provincial legislation requiring communities to allow multi-unit housing on lots that have previously been zoned for single-family homes.

The district, which includes some of British Columbia's most expensive properties, had initially rejected the provincial legislation aimed at easing the housing crisis.

The B.C. government had set a deadline of June 30 for communities to update their zoning rules in accordance with the legislation passed last fall.

Last month, the province issued a statement saying it had sent a non-compliance notice to the District of West Vancouver and a ministerial order could follow.

West Vancouver Mayor Mark Sager told Monday's council meeting that he had received a letter from Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon saying, "do it, or I'm simply going to do it" when it came to making the zoning changes.

Speaking in favour of the motion, Cllr. Nora Gambioli told the meeting she felt the district hadn't done enough to tackle housing challenges and the zoning changes would apply to less than three per cent of the total number of lots in the district.

Gambioli said that amounts to just over 380 individual lots, while zoning for all other properties in the district would remain unchanged.

"We're not that special. We're not more special than every other municipality in the province, and I think we need to do our part," she said.

"We haven't been doing our part for a long time, so I am appreciative, actually, that the province has sent us, essentially, this ultimatum, and I support it."

Sager, meanwhile, said he doesn't think the province's approach is democratic. The mayor said he had sent numerous requests asking Kahlon to consider the actions the district is already taking to address housing challenges.

"It makes me ill," Sager said of the required bylaw changes.

The provincial statement issued in July said nearly 90 per cent of 188 local governments had heeded the legislation.

MORE National ARTICLES

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north
There are two wildfires of note, meaning they are either highly visible or pose a threat to public safety, located in northwestern B.C. The wildfire service's map shows a cluster of about two dozen new fires sparked in the Cariboo.

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north

Targeted shooting in Surrey

Targeted shooting in Surrey
Police say they're investigating after a man turned up at the Surrey Memorial Hospital to receive treatment for minor gunshot injuries. R-C-M-P say officers were in the middle of responding to shots-fired reports along 66 Avenue near 127 Street when the man showed up at the hospital.

Targeted shooting in Surrey

Baby killed in crash

Baby killed in crash
Police say it happened early yesterday morning when the family's car collided with a tractor trailer. The two adults in the front were pronounced dead at the scene, while the baby was airlifted to hospital only to die a few hours later.

Baby killed in crash

B.C. to provide more funding for new medical school, founding dean appointed

B.C. to provide more funding for new medical school, founding dean appointed
Eby says $33.7 million will go toward the renovation of an interim space at an existing building on Simon Fraser's Surrey campus, as well as at leased space to accommodate classrooms, laboratories and offices.

B.C. to provide more funding for new medical school, founding dean appointed

Residents of Merritt told to conserve water as city well has 'major failure'

Residents of Merritt told to conserve water as city well has 'major failure'
There has been a "major failure" in a well in Merritt prompting the city to ask its residents to stop all non-essential water use. The city says in a statement that the failure is in the Voght well and affects the city's water distribution system. 

Residents of Merritt told to conserve water as city well has 'major failure'

Trudeau attends NATO leaders' summit as Russia escalates aggression toward Ukraine

Trudeau attends NATO leaders' summit as Russia escalates aggression toward Ukraine
The ongoing war will top the agenda of the three-day summit following Russian missile attacks Monday that left death and destruction, including at a large children's hospital in Kyiv.

Trudeau attends NATO leaders' summit as Russia escalates aggression toward Ukraine