Three solutions to Vancouver’s housing and homelessness crisis

The Vancouver civic election has once again focused on housing and homelessness as a major problem for whichever party governs city hall. But for all the posing in front of over-announced social housing construction sites and manipulation of homelessness numbers, the city has yet to step forward and take simple but serious actions to stop the loss of low-income housing and build the social housing everyone admits we need. These two pieces by DNC board members, an interview broadcast as a Pivot Podcast, and an article published on the Mainlander, outline what a city that was serious about ending the Vancouver homelessness and housing crisis would do.


Solutions to Vancouver’s homelessness crisis
http://rabble.ca/podcasts/shows/pivot-legal-society/2011/11/solutions-vancouvers-homelessness-crisis

Dave Murrray talks about homelessness and addiction in Vancouver, and in the run-up to municipal elections on November 19, Ivan Drury explains 3 easy steps that would be easy for city hall to implement to solve the homelessness crisis, at almost no cost to taxpayers. Ivan also explains why gentrification of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is the worst thing that could happen to that community.


Three solutions to Vancouver’s housing and homelessness crisis
http://themainlander.com/2011/11/15/three-solutions-to-vancouver%e2%80%99s-housing-and-homelessness-crisis-2/

At the recent Homelessness and Affordable Housing debate (Nov 7, St. Andrew’s–Wesley Church), mayoral candidates Gregor Robertson and Suzanne Anton said a lot of things, but they didn’t debate much. They both admitted that they will not slow down or pause destructive market development in the Downtown Eastside (DTES). They agreed that a municipal tax on real estate speculation and non-resident property ownership would not be appropriate. They also agreed that inclusionary zoning, a soft and widely used development permit mechanism that forces developers to include affordable housing in all market developments, would not be good for Vancouver. They even agreed that the solution to the affordable rental housing and homelessness crisis caused by the real estate market is to be found back in the market itself. Put simply, their differences were of degree, not principle.

The most troubling thing about the mayoral debate was the way that both candidates addressed the low-income affordable housing and homelessness crisis: by passing the blame onto provincial and federal levels of government. Both Gregor Robertson and Suzanne Anton avoided the City’s role in building housing, as well as tools in its jurisdiction that could be used to save low-income housing. These are the top-three things the DNC believes a mayoral candidate would do if they were serious about ending the affordable rental-housing and homelessness crisis in Vancouver:

1) Buy 10 sites a year in the DTES for 5 years and dedicate these sites for social housing to replace all 5,000 units of unsafe, unstable, unhealthy SRO hotel housing.

With new social housing construction, the city’s responsibility is to buy and provide land. In addition to buying available properties, the city should buy any SRO hotel that comes up for sale in order to protect low-income housing from the hostile waters of the real estate market. City Council has not purchased one single new property in the DTES for social housing in more than three years. Everyone recognizes that there is a housing and homelessness crisis in Vancouver and in the DTES in particular, but neither mayoral candidate has yet indicated they are willing to buy the land necessary to build the housing.

2) The city must close the loopholes in the SRA bylaw: Define “conversion” of SRO hotels as raising rents above welfare and pension-affordable rates of $375/month.

The DTES low-income community is losing SRO hotel rooms — the last stop for most residents before the street — to developer greed. Unfortunately, the City facilitates this by leaving loopholes in the SRA anti-conversion bylaw big enough to drop entire buildings through. By tying SRO hotel conversion to a dollar rent value, City Council could force those landlords who may be trying to squeeze more rent monies out of their investment properties to go through public application processes for exemptions to this bylaw. This simple action would cost Vancouver taxpayers nothing and would save thousands of units of low-income housing, like the formerly low-income rooms in the Columbia, Lotus, Alexander Court, and Golden Crown hotels which are now renting to students and young workers for more than double welfare shelter rates. It would also provide leadership needed to pressure the provincial government to create more effective rent controls in the Residential Tenancy Act, including putting an end to rent-increases without ceiling after evictions.

3) Implement an immediate moratorium on market development in the DTES to allow the DTES Local Area Planning process, not developers and market forces, to direct the future of the neighbourhood.

This solution will also cost taxpayers nothing and will have more than one powerful meaning for the low-income community in the DTES. Low-income residents of the DTES rely on low-income affordable housing, nearby services, and on affordable shopping options for food, clothes, and other necessities of life. Gentrification transforms the neighbourhood block-by-block into higher-end shops, raises rents, upscales hotels to students and young worker housing, and introduces more policing, threatening all these low income neighbourhood essentials. The City’s policy has been to encourage, reward, and even directly subsidize gentrifying developments: the uber-high-end Keefer bar and celebrity hotel received a $50,000 heritage grant and an award from city council; mega-corporations London Drugs and Nesters Market received a 10-year tax holiday from the City for setting up shop in the Woodward’s condo complex; and the London Pub and Brixton Cafe received $1.4Million in taxbreaks and heritage and density bonuses from Council for their heritage development on the corner of Main and Georgia. A moratorium on market development would give the low-income community the breathing room necessary to work on getting the secure, safe, healthy social housing we all need rather than having to work to defend the substandard but affordable SRO hotel housing we currently have. A market development moratorium would send a powerful signal to the DTES low-income community that their needs, interests, and future are being taken seriously by Council and that the local area planning process is more than a token or placating gesture.

Amidst all the bombast about housing and all the claims about ending homelessness, the DNC hopes that these top-three solutions get some attention. The mayoral candidates can take three real steps to end homelessness and take on the Vancouver housing crisis, and two of them don’t require spending a dime… but they will hurt the profit margins of the richest people in the city. This is, as they say, where the rubber hits the road. Homelessness may, yet again, be the issue of this election, but is ending it the priority of either major candidate? We await their responses to these challenges.

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One Response to Three solutions to Vancouver’s housing and homelessness crisis

  1. FEEDING THE “HOMELESS” IN VANCOUVER’S

    “DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE”

    THIS CHRISTMAS DECEMBER 19 TH @6-P.M.

    MEET @PIGEON PARK ON THE CORNER OF

    CARROLL HASTINGS RAIN OR SHINE

    ALL ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THIS EVENT

    The Servant’s Of Hope 6th Annual “Feeding The Homeless In Pigeon Park”
    December 19th 2011@ 6 p.m.

    For the sixth year in a row a group of “Recovering Addicts” from the greater Vancouver area get together and go into the Downtown Eastside to feed the “Homeless” and do “Outreach”.

    Bringing the message of “Hope And Recovery “to the Downtown Eastside. The success of the last 5 years of outreach involved over 80 people getting together with minimal financial and material support. We were still able to feed and meet the needs of over 600 people each year. The majority of the people involved with helping this cause had a history of substance abuse and a high percentage of those people came from the Downtown Eastside and are now free from their “Addictions” and are productive members of society today. It is both a privilege and an honour for me and the people involved being able to give back to those in need during such a dark and lonely time.

    “If you can assist us in any way through Sponsorship, Donations, Volunteering or Publicity, your help will be greatly appreciated”.

    Last year we were grateful for donations and or assistance from the following organizations:

    Quest Outreach, Salvation Army Harbor Light, Happy Planet, Vancouver Area Food Bank, Schokolade Artisan Chocolates, Trump Fine Foods, Midland Liquidators, Buy-Low Foods Ltd., Claymore Clothes, Hope Reformed Church.
    You are invited to attend this event. This is the sixth year we will be hosting the feeding.

    CONTACT INFO
    EMAIL ppp@live.ca Sean 604-720-9335

    Richard 604-312-8046

    A video we made of last years event:

    Tags: feeding the homeless in vancouver’s down

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