Why some B.C. municipalities are split over proposal to end single-family zoning - Action News
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British Columbia

Why some B.C. municipalities are split over proposal to end single-family zoning

The province plans to introduce legislation allowing three to four units on a traditional single-family lot. Municipal leaders across Metro Vancouver are divided on whether such a sweeping policy is the answer.

Province plans to introduce legislation that would allow 3 to 4 units on a traditional single-family lot

Single homes near Vancouver's Queen Elizabeth Park appear tightly stacked in a telephoto close-up photograph.
A neighbourhood full of single-family homes near Vancouver's Queen Elizabeth park. (Rafferty Baker/CBC)

As B.C. moves forward witha housing plan that would effectively end single-family zoning, municipal leaders have voiced both praise and concern over how the sweeping policy might shape the fabric of their communities.

On Monday, B.C. Premier David Eby and Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon unveiled theHomes for People plan, a multi-billion-dollar effort to construct more homes as quickly as possible in an attempt to build our way out of the housing crisis.

As part of the plan, the government will introduce provincial legislation this fall to allow three to four units on a traditional single-family detached lot with additional density permitted in areas well served by transit. It's a strategy that a number of jurisdictions across the world including Oregon, California and Auckland,New Zealand have adopted as a way to gently bump up housing density in their communities.

Langley City Mayor Nathan Pachalsays the policy has the potential to be transformative in creating more affordable housing options.

"We know traditionally throughoutMetro Vancouver, and even across B.C., the largest percentage of urban land for housing is dedicated to single detached homes," Pachaltold CBC News. "What this should allow is gentle density."

Langley City, a municipality east of Vancouver,is about 10 square kilometres in size, and 80 per cent of the population lives in townhouses, condos or rowhomes. Pachal says the other 20 per cent lives in single-family detached homesthat are taking up about 50 per cent of the land base.

In Victoria, city council hasalready passed policy that will alow up to 12 units on certain lots.

Vancouver is also seeking public input on a plan to increase its"missing middle" housing supplyby allowing multiplexes in low-density neighbourhoods across the city.

Rows and rows of single-family homes are seen in this aerial shot of Vancouver.
Under B.C.'s new housing plan, legislation to be introduced in the fall will allow for more units on traditional single-family lots. (Gian-Paolo Mendoza/CBC)

Density concerns

But other leaders aren't yet sold on the province's direction.

RichmondMayor Malcolm Brodie thinks it should be up to municipalities to decide how they are zoned, particularly given local infrastructure limitations.

"It's fine to say you want a lot more dwelling units, but do you have the sewers and the pipes and the water supply, everything that it takes," said Brodie."Every time we have a rezoning, we have a traffic study. Are we going to assume that traffic will take care of itself? What about the need for other services, the police, the fire, the libraries, the community centres?"

"What about the character of the various neighbourhoods?"

In November 2020 Oregonians voted to eliminate criminal consequences for small quantities of all drugs. Police now issue $100 citations, similar to traffic tickets, which can be waived if users call an addiction hotline.
File photo of Portland, Ore. Oregon is among the jurisdictions that have introduced laws effectively eliminating single-family zoning. (Georgie Smyth / CBC)

Lessons to be learned

While specifics on the legislation are yet to be unveiled, researchers in Oregon say the policy is unlikely to yield a dramatic increase in total units.

In 2019, the state passeda bill that allows duplexes to be built in areas zoned for single-family housing andup to four homes on almost any residential lot in cities of a certain size. In 2020, officials inPortland introduced a law allowing up tosix units with strict affordability requirements.

The zoning took effect in August 2021, and thenet result has been about an additional200 to 300 homes per year in Portland, according toMichael Andersen, a senior housing researcher at the non-profit Sightline Institute in Portland.

"Middle housing is not a silver bullet. Anybodywho claims that two, three, fourplexesare enough to bring housing costs down and house everyone who needs it ... is mistaken," he said.

Anderson says the policy has, so far, ledto gradual change in single-family neighbourhoods, but it will enable more lots to house more residents as buildings reach the end of their life cycle and are replaced.

"The big vision is that we're increasing the amount of options that anybody has in how to live," he said.

With files from Canadian Press