Âé¶čAV City Councillor Luke Stack believes affordable housing targets for the city, set out by the provincial government, are unrealistic.
During a discussion of the city's Housing Act Plan at Mondayâs (Jan. 27) meeting, Stack quoted a figure of 3,321 units over the next five years, or 664 units per annum.
âFrom my many years in this field, that is an outlandish number,â he said. âCompletely unachievable. We havenât got a hope of ever doing it.â
Stack pointed out that âin a good yearâ the city might see 100 affordable units built.
Staff noted that the HAP does not specify provincial affordable housing targets as they are a separate piece of legislation that the city is tasked with implementing.
âThe key here is that the provincial number is a target they would like us to try to achieve,â explained Graham Allison, city planner. âThe legislated target is the total housing units. There is no legislated requirement to hit the affordability number.â
The HAP doesnât guarantee to hit affordability targets, Allison added. âCertainly we have the freedom to take the actions we see fit to achieve the affordability that council sees as appropriate.â
Stack also expressed concern over the city taking on the role of preventing housing insecurity.
âI sort of feel this is a provincial mandate, to be dealing with this at a high level,â he added. âI think we are stepping outside of our lane on this one.â
The councillor added that he appreciated the new definition of affordable housing in the HAP.
âBreaking it down by unit per month, per month is extremely helpful,â he said. âItâs one of the questions we are constantly wrestling with, is what is affordable housing.â
In November 2024, staff brought forward 26 draft actions aimed at achieving two key outcomes of the HAP; ensuring residents have access to suitable housing options, and maintaining a housing system that adapts to future community needs.
, directing staff to advance the objectives and action in the plan.