Times Colonist

Victoria only city so far to pass home-building target

- KATIE DeROSA

Just over six months after the B.C. NDP government announced ambitious targets to force municipali­ties to greenlight new housing, several municipali­ties are falling short — but at least one, Victoria, has exceeded those targets.

The 10 communitie­s initially tapped to meet the provincial­ly mandated housing targets are required to update the province on their progress every six months in the first year and annually after that.

Oak Bay, Saanich, Delta and Victoria produced staff reports within the past week that chart their progress. So far, Victoria is the only municipali­ty exceeding its target.

Oak Bay, the smallest of the first 10 communitie­s on the list, was given a target of 56 net new housing units in the first 664 units by 2028. However, a staff report shows Oak Bay has added just seven net new housing units in the six-month period since the targets were set on Sept. 30.

Oak Bay Mayor Kevin Murdoch said he’s not convinced his community will be able to reach 664 net new units in the time frame set out by the province.

“Looking at what’s in the pipeline now and knowing the developmen­t timelines, it’s hard to have occupancy in the next 4½ years,” he said. “Even if we can get some of these larger projects started, the chances of actually hitting occupancy within that time frame is difficult.”

However, Murdoch stressed the municipali­ty is trying to speed up the approval of secondary suites and laneway houses.

Saanich is also lagging, with 195 net new units completed in six months, according to that municipali­ty’s staff report. Saanich’s first-year housing target is 440 net new units and 4,610 net new units over five years.

A staff report from the City of Delta appeared more promising — with 242 occupancy permits issued in the first six months, which would put the city on track to meet its oneyear target of 514 new units. However, the numbers turned out to be inflated because staff made clear that the figures did not take into account homes that were demolished — which is required to determine net new homes.

The report noted that rising interest rates and constructi­on costs have caused developers to “put their projects on hold for extended periods of time at all stages, waiting for more favourable market conditions to proceed.”

Delta Coun. Dylan Kruger said the political will is there among his council colleagues to approve the housing needed to address affordabil­ity challenges and keep up with record population growth.

A symbol of that, he said, is that in every boardroom and meeting space at Delta City Hall, there’s a thermostat which tops out at 3,607, the five-year housing target for the city. Every month, the house symbol slides upward based on the number of new occupancy permits issued.

“It’s motivating,” Kruger said. “It makes [housing] top of mind for every department in our city and it’s certainly a goal.”

Victoria’s report shows the city has completed 753 net new units in the first six months, exceeding the 659-unit housing target for the first year. This puts the city 15 per cent of the way toward meeting its five-year housing target of 4,902 units.

The province’s Housing Supply Act uses a carrot-and-stick approach to creating more housing. The carrot for municipali­ties that meet targets comes in the form of provincial cash for amenities, such as parks, bike lanes and recreation centres.

If communitie­s don’t meet the targets within six months, the province will appoint an independen­t adviser to help them make progress. If that doesn’t work, the province will wield a bigger stick and overrule the municipali­ty with the power to rezone entire neighbourh­oods to create more density.

Last month, the province added 20 municipali­ties which must meet housing targets set by the province. They are Central Saanich, Chilliwack, Colwood, Esquimalt, Kelowna, City of Langley, Maple Ridge, Mission, Nanaimo, New Westminste­r, North Cowichan, North Saanich, City of North Vancouver, Port Coquitlam, Prince George, Sidney, Surrey and View Royal.

The first 10 municipali­ties are Vancouver, Victoria, Kamloops, Abbotsford, Delta, Saanich, District of North Vancouver, Port Moody, Oak Bay and West Vancouver.

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