With rental rates still high in Âé¶čAV, providing purpose-built and affordable rental units remains a priority for the city.
It is a metric that Director of Planning and Development Services Ryan Smith believes the NDP government will be keeping a close eye on with all municipalities.
Smith added planning and tracking by staff will let council and the public know that the city is meeting the types of housing needed.
âAs part of our housing needs assessment we know about how many units we need to approve in a normal year to keep up with regular growth,â said Smith.
That includes how many new builds should be rentals, and of those, how many should be at market and non-market rates, and how many should be shelter spaces.
Smith said high levels of apartment units are being constructed now, and while though those numbers are above the five-year average, the expectation is that they will come down next year.
Coun. Luke Stack asked if staff could make public the number of approved units that are not in a downtown high-rise.
âThere seems to be a misperception that the only thing council approves are high-rises,â said Stack. âIf you look at our regular agendas these last few weeks, weâre approving tons of duplexes and small apartment blocks and townhouse complexes, but that never makes front page news.â
READ MORE: Supportive housing and affordable rentals planned for Âé¶čAVâs Rutland neighbourhood
Council also asked about improving Âé¶čAVâs vacancy rate, which is currently at 0.6 percent.
âItâs been extremely challenging over the last few years,â said Smith. âWeâve been approving unprecedented numbers of rental housing in the last five years, more than probably the previous 30 years. We would say weâve been successful if we can get that number over three per cent.â
A three per cent vacancy rate is considered healthy by many apartment listing and rental websites, offering a balance between tenants and landlords.
Smith added that, other than during the first quarter of COVID, Âé¶čAV continues to see overwhelming growth in multi-family developments.
âThe majority, especially in the last quarter - 78 per cent - is in the core area of Âé¶čAV. Thatâs exactly what weâre looking for when weâre talking about putting housing in the right place.â
The first density bonus payments, for certain buildings in the cityâs core areas, are coming early in 2023, according to Smith.
Staff will provide Official Community Plan reporting and a housing workshop for council in January, as well as consider development application fee increases to keep pace with inflation, and a short-term rental review.
READ MORE: Bank of Canada hikes key rate by half percentage point, signals possible pause
gary.barnes@kelownacapnews.com
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