The Daily Courier

Developers don’t do their share

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Dear Editor: A big thank you to the Kelowna city staff and local developers who made presentati­ons at the KLO Neighbourh­ood Associatio­n meeting last Wednesday.

They faced a large crowd of people, most of them very disappoint­ed by the city’s huge backlog of undevelope­d parks. No politician­s attended. Kelowna (like most cities) charges real estate developers a fee to pay for public amenities that their new building’s residents will be using, like roads, sewers, parks, etc.

They’re called developmen­t cost charges — or DCCs.

In Kelowna, our politician­s have chosen to collect parks DCCs that only apply to the purchase of land for any new parks. The cost of actually building those parks is left to us taxpayers.

There’s seldom enough money in the city budget to build even one park, never mind all of them. Hence the dozens of unbuilt parks here, including the one at Cedar Ave., which has remained undevelope­d for more than 20 years.

Many other cities in B.C. and across Canada collect community amenity contributi­ons — or CACs — from developers which deliver finished parks to those communitie­s.

It appears that Kelowna has had the option of having them here but our politician­s have so far refused them — in the middle of an unpreceden­ted, very profitable building boom.

Our city politician­s will soon be campaignin­g for the Oct. 20 municipal election. Some good questions you could ask them: Why doesn’t Kelowna have CACs and will we soon?

When will my closest undevelope­d park get built?

Al Janusas Kelowna

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