Calgary Herald

Mayor should get to work on affordabil­ity

Calgary’s situation can be improved, Steve Lafleur and Josef Filipowicz write.

- Steve Lafleur and Josef Filipowicz are analysts at the Fraser Institute.

Mayor Naheed Nenshi recently won a third term at city hall, giving him four more years to address the city’s most pressing issues, including housing.

Many Calgarians worry about affordabil­ity as the city continues to grow. Among the policy choices available to the mayor and council, three in particular would boost the housing supply.

First, it’s time to deal with secondary suites — rental units built into existing homes, such as basement suites. The issue has dogged city council for years, as arcane regulation­s have forced homeowners to beg for permission to build secondary suites.

While some level of housing safety regulation is obviously important, it’s unclear why someone should be prohibited from building a secondary suite to house an aging family member or earn some extra income to help pay their mortgage.

Moreover, since secondary suites can cost less than a new apartment unit, they can be valuable sources of low-cost housing for residents. For years, Nenshi and some city councillor­s have tried to streamline the approval process for rental units in homes, but the issue has divided city council. It’s time for the legislativ­e gridlock to end.

Second, the city can relax minimum parking requiremen­ts. Calgary, like most North American cities, requires developers to provide a minimum number of parking spaces for each new housing unit. This can add thousands — or even tens of thousands — of dollars to the cost of building a new apartment unit.

This is especially perverse in neighbourh­oods where many residents don’t need, or can’t afford, to own cars. Fortunatel­y, Nenshi and company can look to the N3 building in East Village, which was exempted from providing parking for residents, for a success story to copy.

Third, and most challengin­g, city hall can shorten approval timelines for building permits. According to Fraser Institute research, it takes more than a year (13.5 months, on average) for home builders to obtain permits — five months more than in Cochrane and six months more than in Airdrie.

Relatively high levels of uncertaint­y about exactly how long it will take to obtain permits aggravate these timelines. In fact, according to a survey of home builders operating in the Calgary-Edmonton corridor, timeline uncertaint­y for building permit approval is far stronger in Calgary than in Edmonton, where no meaningful uncertaint­y is reported.

Unlike the first two proposals, which are easy wins, shortening approval timelines and reducing uncertaint­y will likely require more challengin­g and nuanced reforms. But Calgary can learn from other municipali­ties in the Calgary-Edmonton corridor, and in the rest of the country.

Identifyin­g and implementi­ng best practices from other municipali­ties can help reduce the uncertaint­y and duration of the permitting process.

Much remains to be done to meaningful­ly boost the housing supply in Calgary, but the good news is that city hall has tools at its disposal.

With a fresh mandate and a demonstrat­ed need to accommodat­e persistent population growth, Nenshi and city council can do three things if they’re interested in increasing affordabil­ity for Calgarians and their families: fast-track secondary suite approvals, reduce or remove minimum parking requiremen­ts on new housing, and shorten and streamline building permit approval timelines.

Many Calgarians worry about affordabil­ity as the city continues to grow. Among the policy choices available to the mayor and council, three in particular would boost the housing supply.

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