Vancouver Sun

Yet another missed chance to tackle housing

B.C. homes are unaffordab­le for one reason: there are not enough, Josef Filipowicz says.

- Josef Filipowicz is an analyst at the Fraser Institute.

With Tuesday’s budget, John Horgan’s government had another opportunit­y to improve housing affordabil­ity — a perennial concern now embedded in British Columbia’s landscape. Government­s come, government­s go, but the province remains Canada’s most expensive place to live.

What drives B.C.’s housing woes? Four words: a shortage of homes. This is not controvers­ial, it’s a diagnosis shared by the Bank of Canada, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporatio­n and even the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund — not to mention major Canadian banks.

Basically, the number of homes for sale or rent isn’t keeping pace with the number of would-be buyers and renters, pushing prices up for everyone ( Vancouver-area home prices are still almost 65 per cent higher than five years ago and rental vacancies remain virtually nonexisten­t).

Recognizin­g this reality should be at the heart of any approach to address affordabil­ity.

So far, the provincial government has only partly recognized the housing shortage, opting instead to double-down on taxes (for example, the foreign buyers tax and the “speculatio­n and vacancy” tax), rent controls and the funding of subsidized units for the province’s most vulnerable. Meanwhile, Victoria continues to ignore the vast majority of British Columbians who don’t qualify for government-subsidized homes and need the housing market to work for them.

With the exception of “rent banks” (which provide loans to renters) and homelessne­ss initiative­s, this budget simply restates commitment­s made in the past — target housing demand by taxing foreigners and vacation homeowners while adding social housing units at the margin.

As good as the government’s intentions may

B.C.’s cities must improve the speed with which they approve new homes.

be, it has again failed to diagnose the root of B.C.’s housing woes, opting instead to tackle symptoms.

So what can the Horgan government do to meaningful­ly address the province’s top issue?

First, any approach to increase the housing supply must include municipali­ties. As the level of government that ultimately controls the homebuildi­ng process (and thus the housing supply), B.C.’s cities must improve the speed with which they approve new homes and rethink the land-use policies that determine how much and what kind of housing can be built.

To their credit, some cities have started already, including Vancouver with its recent decision to allow duplexes in most of the city. But much more remains to be done.

Second, the government in Victoria can look south for examples of state government­s proposing or implementi­ng policies aimed at increasing the housing supply. In Washington State, for example, legislator­s are currently considerin­g statewide zoning reform to allow two accessory dwelling units (also known as secondary suites) on most residentia­l lots, while eliminatin­g costly off-street parking requiremen­ts and capping fees on homebuilde­rs.

Similarly, state legislator­s in Oregon are drafting proposals to relax single-family zoning to allow for duplexes, triplexes or possibly fourplexes in its larger towns and cities, in line with a growing trend in middle America toward more flexible housing policies.

If the Horgan government wants to increase housing affordabil­ity in B.C., allow more young families to remain in aging neighbourh­oods, provide relief for beleaguere­d renters and make much of the province affordable again, it must first recognize the crippling shortage of homes. Unfortunat­ely, Tuesday’s budget failed, once again, to do this.

Almost halfway through a mandate that was supposed to make life more affordable for B.C. families, the Horgan government has done precious little to encourage the major addition of homes this province needs to reduce the cost of buying and renting. And unless the second half of this government’s mandate includes a radical change of tack, we will soon face yet another election where affordabil­ity dominates the debate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada