Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's Election Focuses On Housing, But Observers Say Little Cities Can Do

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 09 Nov, 2014 02:22 PM
    VANCOUVER — When Aaron Cruikshank and his wife decided to start having kids a decade ago, they figured it was time to leave the world of apartment rentals and buy a home.
     
    The couple had been renting in Vancouver's east side for several years and wanted to stay, but they quickly realized astronomical housing costs meant the city was out of reach.
     
    Instead, they found a condo in Surrey, a growing suburban community south of Vancouver.
     
    "Something similar in east Vancouver would have been at least double," says Cruikshank, 36, who works as a management consultant.
     
    "Neither of us really even thinks about moving back to Vancouver anymore. It's not that we're so in love with Surrey — it has a lot of nice features. We've just resigned ourselves to the fact that Vancouver is not in the cards for us."
     
    Cruikshank's story is what politicians and pundits warn of when they talk about Vancouver's housing crunch: young adults, professionals and families forced out of the city by staggering prices.
     
    And it's why housing has emerged as one of the central issues in the campaign for Vancouver's Nov. 15 election, with the major parties each promising to bring rental rates and housing prices under control.
     
    Incumbent Mayor Gregor Robertson's platform focuses on renters, promising to add 1,000 rental units per year over the next four years, with the hope that increased supply will bring prices down.
     
    Robertson's Vision Vancouver party also plans to use a municipal housing agency to build affordable housing on city land and require developers to ensure more units are large enough for families.
     
    His main opponent, Kirk LaPointe, the mayoral candidate for the Non-Partisan Association, is promising to start a city-wide planning process with the end goal of increasing family and senior housing.
     
    LaPointe says his party's focus on economic development will mean higher paying workers who can afford to live in the city.
     
    However, both parties acknowledge there are few ways the city can influence housing and rental prices.
     
    A recent report from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. projected the average cost of a new detached home in the greater Vancouver region, which also includes surrounding communities, would be about $1.5 million next year.
     
    Resale prices in the region are more than $800,000.
     
    For renters, the housing corporation says the average rate for a two-bedroom apartment in the city was about $1,500 last year, a figure that jumps to about $1,800 downtown.
     
    Gordon Price, a former Vancouver city councillor who runs the city program at Simon Fraser University, says housing prices are heavily influenced by factors outside the city's control, such as interest rates and immigration.
     
    Price says the municipal government can increase supply through zoning, but he says even that would require a dramatic increase in density throughout the city — a prospect existing homeowners would almost certainly oppose.
     
    "No one from city hall ever goes to a neighbourhood and says, 'We're going to change the character of your community,'" says Price.
     
    "If you're not going to change the character of communities, you are not going to address Vancouver's housing problem, not even remotely."
     
    What's left is slow, gradual change — a few new townhouses here, a new condo development there — that keeps housing scarce and expensive, says Price.
     
    Andy Yan, an urban planner and researcher with Bing Thom Architects, says the problem is exacerbated by wages that have not kept up with housing costs. He notes the median income for an adult with a bachelor's degree in the Vancouver region is about $42,000, which is the lowest of any major Canadian city.
     
    "The idea that housing prices are connected to local economic conditions really seems to have broken down in Vancouver," says Yan.
     
    A common explanation for Vancouver's housing woes is that the city has countless residential properties that are scooped up by foreign investors and left sitting empty.
     
    Yan says very little is known about the influence of foreign ownership because the data just doesn't exist.
     
    Still, he suggests the more important effect of foreign money on the Vancouver housing market may be the arrival of affluent immigrants.
     
    "It's not necessarily just about a pieces of real estate being sold in another country, it's the fact that you have folks moving in from other countries with large amounts of money buying residential real estate," says Yan.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wind turbine noise not linked to perceived health effects: Health Canada study

    Wind turbine noise not linked to perceived health effects: Health Canada study
    TORONTO — A Health Canada study has found no evidence to support a link between exposure to wind turbine noise and health effects reported by people living near the towering structures.

    Wind turbine noise not linked to perceived health effects: Health Canada study

    Freight Train Plunges Into River After Derailing On Quebec's North Shore

    Freight Train Plunges Into River After Derailing On Quebec's North Shore
    SEPT-ILES, Que. — Quebec provincial police say a freight train with one person aboard has plunged into a river after derailing on the province's North Shore.

    Freight Train Plunges Into River After Derailing On Quebec's North Shore

    Khadr argues U.S. judge hearing his appeal may be committing a federal crime

    Khadr argues U.S. judge hearing his appeal may be committing a federal crime
    TORONTO — The judge presiding over Omar Khadr's challenge to his conviction by U.S. military commission may himself be committing a federal crime by maintaining a law practice, according to allegations contained in new court documents.

    Khadr argues U.S. judge hearing his appeal may be committing a federal crime

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts
    TORONTO — Criminal defence lawyers are dismayed that Immigration Minister Chris Alexander publicly branded a man charged with killing his wife a murderer before his trial.

    Lawyers slam Chris Alexander comments on murder case still before the courts

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week
    VANCOUVER — Another rainfall warning has been issued for Metro Vancouver, just two days after torrential rains caused flooding and evacuations in the District of North Vancouver.

    North Vancouver Braces For More Rain Following Flash Floods Earlier In The Week

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard
    QUEBEC — A new bridge in Montreal will not bear the name of hockey great Maurice Richard.

    Ottawa says new Montreal bridge will not be named after Maurice Richard