Close X
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancity Report Shows Vancouver Rental Market Too Pricey For Young Workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jul, 2016 12:15 PM
  • Vancity Report Shows Vancouver Rental Market Too Pricey For Young Workers
VANCOUVER — Canada's largest credit union is warning that young workers who have long since abandoned hope of owning a home in the Vancouver area are now being priced out of the city's rental market.
 
A new report from Vancouver City Credit Union explores the tight rental market across Vancouver and the problem it poses for the so-called millennial generation.
 
Vancity's vice-president of community investment, William Azaroff, says the report shows only the Marpole and East Hastings neighbourhoods remain affordable for the average worker under 40, earning less than $40,000.
 
He says millennials are being forced to the suburbs because Vancouver's high rents and near zero vacancy rate mean renting is no longer an alternative to home ownership.
 
Azaroff says the report recommends governments encourage more rental housing construction by offering tax breaks and other incentives to developers.
 
 
He predicts businesses will be unable to attract new workers if vacancy rates remain low, because tenants won't want to make a long commute from the suburbs.
 
"Business owners (have) to be able to attract workers and if the people who would consider working there can't get rental within a decent commute to those jobs, then you don't have that kind of labour fluidity or labour mobility, so people can move to where the jobs are within our region," says Azaroff.
 
Renters chased to the suburbs by high rents and a lack of vacancies in Vancouver may find more affordable housing, but the report also says they will spend much more on transportation and other related costs.

MORE National ARTICLES

Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace

Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace
As the row over the Kohinoor diamond intensifies with political parties demanding its return to India, accounts of historians establish that the majestic stone was forcibly taken away by the British and was never gifted by Duleep Singh

Kohinoor's Tragic Tale From Lahore To Buckingham Palace

Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill

Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill
Lee and Price Carter say their late mother would not have qualified for medical help to end her life under the restrictive provisions of the bill introduced last week by the Trudeau government in response to the top court's ruling.  

Children Of Woman At Heart Of Assisted Death Debate Urge Amendments To Bill

Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report

Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report
A new report suggests the red hot real estate markets in Vancouver and Toronto are discouraging some potential sellers from listing their homes because they're afraid of becoming buyers themselves.

Potential Home Sellers In Vancouver, Toronto Worried About Becoming Buyers: Report

Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver

Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver
Support from two nearby schools helped to convince Vancouver city officials to allow a nearly 20-year-old medical marijuana shop to remain in operation.

Marijuana Compassion Club Gains Unanimous Support To Stay Open In Vancouver

Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug

Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug
A University of British Columbia engineering professor is the latest to create a breathalyzer she says can detect THC levels in the breath of someone who has smoked pot.

Race To Develop Marijuana Breathalyzers Before Canada Legalizes Drug

'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise

'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise
When a tiny town in northeast British Columbia couldn't get federal funding for bicycle lanes, Greg Moore says it fudged the paperwork.

'Third-Class Citizens:' Canadian Cities Seek More Power As Demands Rise