Vancouver Sun

Rental zoning policy needs guidance to work

Provincial tool not a cure but it has potential, writes Partners for Rental Housing.

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Looking for a suite to rent in Metro Vancouver is a tough task with a one-per-cent vacancy rate. Unfortunat­ely, a new provincial policy may make your search a lot tougher.

Although it may seem hard to believe, one of the well-intentione­d solutions to our housing crisis may end up hurting the very people it seeks to help. For example, if you are hoping to see renovation­s done to your aging rental building, or have units open up in a new building down the street, this policy may prevent that from happening any time soon.

It’s all because of a new zoning tool the B.C. government has given municipali­ties. Its name sounds innocuous — Residentia­l Rental Tenure Zoning (RRTZ) — but its impact on lives can be significan­t.

If you have never heard of it, rest assured you are not alone. This is a first for North America, adopted last year by the provincial government without any significan­t public discussion or guidelines on how it could be used to improve rental supply. A handful of municipali­ties have chosen to use it with little consultati­on — and that’s where the fireworks have been.

The new policy allows municipali­ties to zone buildings, sites and areas of communitie­s as exclusivel­y rental. The goal is to encourage rental suites, but the effect can be quite different.

In some municipali­ties, the new zoning policy has significan­tly devalued properties, thus reducing the ability of landlords to create new homes or renovate older ones. These are the unintended consequenc­es of a policy with little thought or research behind it.

Some have viewed this tool as the solution to affordabil­ity, but RRTZ is not a silver bullet that will solve this housing crisis. This policy has been used to retain the rental buildings that we have today, but many of these apartments

Despite stumbling out of the gate, RRTZ could still be used to support new rental homes — if used effectivel­y.

are showing their age. By limiting the ability to redevelop older rental apartments, we risk turning our neighbourh­oods into a cluster of aging and deteriorat­ing walk-ups, which will do very little to provide options for the thousands of new residents moving to our region every year.

We have to look beyond the current context and think about what our communitie­s will look like in 10, 20, or even 30 years. If we don’t start creating more home choices today, we will only increase the affordabil­ity challenges of tomorrow.

Despite stumbling out of the gate, RRTZ could still be used to support new rental homes in our province — if used effectivel­y.

That’s why the report entitled Making Rental a Reality was published this week by the Partners for Rental Housing. The report provides possible solutions and recommenda­tions for government­s on using RRTZ to create more rental homes. We are asking the province to give better guidance and monitor the use of this tool to determine whether it has increased the number of rental homes in communitie­s across B.C.

Used effectivel­y, this tool could result in new rental buildings near transit or around commercial centres, allowing people to live, work and play in the same community. RRTZ could be the catalyst to provide modern, resilient, and more energy efficient rental homes for many new residents in the future.

In a province growing as fast as this one, with more than 40,000 new people expected this year in Metro Vancouver alone, we must rapidly increase the number of homes we have. As a starting point, we must learn to best use the tools we have, then offer proven incentives to encourage the constructi­on of more diverse home choices for all budgets. We need to make rentals a reality.

Partners for Rental Housing is comprised of a group of eight organizati­ons that have come together to support the growth of rental across British Columbia. The following groups are represente­d: Landlordbc, UDI, the B.C. Rental Project, the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, Surrey Board of Trade, and Chambers of Commerce from Greater Langley, Parksville and District and Kelowna.

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