Vancouver City Councillor

Category — Housing

Three important questions that were seldom raised at all-candidates’ meetings, and Vision’s answers

With all-candidates’ meetings over and five days of door-knocking remaining before Saturday’s election decision, I realize there were three questions I expected but seldom encountered at all candidates’ meetings. I participated in about six meetings, I think — it’s all a blur — from small community centre affairs to the large transportation forum chaired by Gordon Price last week.

But I heard little about:

1. The crisis for renters

Although half the city rents, few meetings had the intensity we experienced in 2008 with “renovictions” soaring and vacancy rates near zero. The situation for renters has not improved, but the very significant launch of  a new rental housing coalition got little coverage last week. Only Vision Vancouver is making specific commitments to help renters and has generated significant new rental housing construction since the last election.

2. The crisis in the global economy

Although Greece’s economy imploded since nominations closed and Italy has gone to the brink, the economy almost never arose. Meetings generally stayed close to local issues like zoning and housing prices. (Many discussions centred on the impact, if any, of mysterious “foreign” investors.)

But Vision’s platform does lay out specific proposals to support job creation and innovation in Vancouver. I spoke hopefully, in an early-campaign news release, of “economic recovery,” a prospect that seems to be fading in light of the latest news.

3. Climate change and global warming

Perhaps because support and engagement around the Greenest City Action Plan is so broad, there were few arguments about the need to work harder to make Vancouver green.  But the decision to delay approval of the Keystone XL oil sands pipeline means that the push to export bitumen from Metro Port Vancouver will intensify. Vision is the only party with a comprehensive environmental program and convened a special council meeting last year to shine a light on growing oil exports from our port.

Without a strong Vision team at all three levels — council, school and parks — Mayor Gregor Robertson will be hard-pressed to deliver on these commitments, despite their obvious importance.

November 14, 2011

Vision’s affordable home ownership pledge a key election commitment

With the election scarcely three weeks away, almost no time has been spent on what all agree is perhaps the most critical issue facing Vancouver: the cost of housing.

Mayor Gregor Robertson’s platform announcement yesterday set out VisionVancouver’s proposals to tackle the problem, including a key pledge to begin work on affordable market housing.

After a scant three questions, however, reporters turned to more pressing issues, like the possibility of rats at the site of Occupy Vancouver.

Nonetheless, Robertson spelled out what Vision Vancouver will do if given a new mandate Nov. 19. Here’s exactly what the Mayor said:

“It wasn’t that long ago that people thought Vancouver’s toughest social problems were permanent fixtures.
Homelessness… unaffordable housing… Too bad, some people would say, but you’d better get used to them. They’re just part of the backdrop, like the mountains and oceans.
Well, three years ago, homelessness hit the crisis point. And the people of Vancouver decided it was time to start moving mountains.
We knew Vancouver could do better. We knew we have to do better. It’s what led me to run for Mayor. [Read more →]

October 31, 2011

Energy retrofit of BC homes would fight poverty, cut GHGs, drive green jobs

A clear commitment to energy retrofit BC’s existing housing stock while changing energy pricing could reduce poverty, cut a leading source of greenhouse gas emissions and create up to 12,000 new jobs province-wide, according to a compelling new study from the Centre for Policy Alternatives.

The CCPA analysis is the first to look carefully at the social justice side of energy pricing to create a program that could reduce poverty and global warming at the same time.

It’s entirely consistent with Mayor Gregor Robertson’s Greenest City Action Plan and a challenge to make such a plan province-wide in scope.

September 29, 2011

New Credit Suisse Stock Exchange tower example of Vancouver’s “green” jobs boom

News that Credit Suisse proposes to build a 400,000 square foot LEED platinum double office tower at the site of the old Vancouver Stock Exchange should convince sceptics that Vancouver’s commitment to “green jobs” is producing results.

The Stock Exchange project is just one of a new wave of construction of office and job space projects in the Downtown Core that will exceed two million feet very quickly.

The announcement should raise confidence about four key council policies:

  • the decision several years ago to impose a moratorium on condo construction in a key section of the downtown core so there would be room for the jobs needed to make the city economy tick;
  • the decision to adopt other jobs-friendly land use policies of the Core Jobs Review;
  • the requirement for green building construction at LEED gold levels, which this project will exceed; and
  • Mayor Gregor Robertson’s drive to commit the city to “green jobs” as a strategy to move Vancouver forward.

The result is a rash of office construction exceeding two million square feet that is riding these policies as well as the wave built up by the city’s very competitive tax structure, rapid transit and our general economic stability.

The only cloud on the horizon? Housing prices, which more and more employers are learning can be a deal-breaker even when recruiting high priced help that can work anywhere but earn much more where housing costs are lower.

September 25, 2011