B.C. reveals 60,000-unit housing target for 10 municipalities
Ten municipalities in B.C. must build a total of 60,103 housing units over the next five years, the province’s housing minister announced Tuesday.
At a news conference in Saanich, Ravi Kahlon revealed the housing targets assigned to communities including Vancouver, Victoria and Kamloops, as part of the province’s plan to increase the housing supply in the places that need it most.
Kahlon announced the plan and the 10 selected municipalities back in May, aiming to reduce red tape and speed up the building process to help with housing affordability for families.
“These will be homes for families, for renters and for people of all different income levels,” the housing minister said. “Our aim with these targets is to work with municipalities to improve processes so we can get projects built quicker.”
The highest target by far was handed to Vancouver, which is being asked to build 28,900 units over a five-year period.
The full list of housing targets is:
• City of Abbotsford- 7,240 units
• City of Delta- 3,607 units
• City of Kamloops- 4,236 units
• District of North Vancouver- 2,828 units
• District of Oak Bay- 644 units
• City of Port Moody- 1,694 units
• District of Saanich- 4,610
• City of Vancouver- 28,900 units
• City of Victoria- 4,902 units
• District of West Vancouver- 1,432 units
According to the province, the targets represent a 38-per-cent increase in housing compared to what would have been built without the imposed number, based on historic trends.
The ministry also gave each of the municipalities a guideline for what to build, including how many one-bedroom, two-bedroom and three-bedroom units to build, how many rental units and how many below-market rental units.
According to the guideline, the municipalities are being asked to build approximately 16,800 below-market rental units, which is 28 per cent of the total targeted units.
The minister said the province will work with municipalities by providing funding to speed up the development approval process and updating zoning bylaws.
Khalon said the targets were chosen by “data, not politics,” which included calculations of the current housing shortage and projected population increases over the next five years.
“While the province encourages municipalities to work hard to meet the total housing need, the targets have been set based on 75 per cent of that municipality's identified housing need,” a news release from the ministry reads.
The 10 municipalities will be evaluated in six months, and annually after that, on their progress. The province says the Housing Supply Act includes “compliance options” that can be used “as a last resort” if municipalities are not “aligning their efforts” to achieve the targets.
When asked what would happen if a municipality isn’t meeting its target, Khalon said an “independent person” could be sent in to “identify what the challenges may be.”
Khalon added that eight to 10 more municipalities will be selected for the plan in the coming months, and he estimates 16 to 20 municipalities will be selected for housing targets each year for the next three years.
The announcement comes as Premier David Eby says "it's pretty clear" the federal government is not yet ready to share its renewed housing strategy or how it will work with British Columbia's plans to take on the provincial housing crisis.
Kahlon says the housing crisis is so dire in B.C. that the province is going ahead with its plans without guarantees of federal funding, but he adds that involvement from Ottawa needs to "get into the game in a hurry."
EXPERTS WEIGH IN
One housing expert tells CTV News part of the focus needs to be on speeding up the bureaucracy of building.
“A number of those cities, particularly Vancouver, have a phenomenally slow process,” said Tsur Somerville, a UBC professor who researches housing policy. “(The province's) best tools are forcing municipalities to enable more density at more locations and probably clear out things on the building code side and even address things on the zoning code.”
Brendon Ogmundson, chief economist with the BC Real Estate Association (BCREA), says he believes the province is on the right track.
“Anything we can do to reduce red tape, streamline the whole process, get units to market faster is going to be really beneficial,” said Ogmundson. “So I’m optimistic.”
Ogmundson says the BCREA recently put together a report on Auckland, New Zealand’s housing policy shift, which included up-zoning, meaning more homes were allowed to be built on a single lot to increase density. According to the report, zoning changes helped increase housing permits by 50 per cent in less than decade, greatly improving the region’s housing supply. Ogmundson believes B.C. should follow a similar blueprint.
“We’re starting to see really encouraging evidence that the type of reforms do work,” said Ogmundson. “They do take some time to work. It’s not an overnight solution but it does have an impact on affordability.”
With a file from The Canadian Press.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

BREAKING Dodgers beat out Blue Jays, sign coveted free agent Ohtani
Shohei Ohtani agrees to $700 million, 10-year contract with Los Angeles Dodgers.
Mideast ministers in Ottawa to discuss Israel-Hamas war with Joly, Trudeau
A group of foreign ministers from the Palestinian Authority, Saudi Arabia and Turkiye are in Ottawa today for a quietly planned meeting with Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly to discuss attempts to end the Israel-Hamas war.
A pregnant Texas woman asked a court for permission to get an abortion, despite a ban. What's next?
Kate Cox, a mother of two in Texas, became pregnant again in August but soon after learned devastating news: Her baby has a fatal condition and is likely to either be stillborn or die shortly after birth.
Thousands of revelers descend on NYC for annual Santa-themed bar crawl SantaCon
Here come Santa Clauses. Again. Throngs of people dressed as jolly Old St. Nick descended on New York City for the annual SantaCon charity pub crawl on Saturday.
Extremely rare white alligator is born at a Florida reptile park
An extremely rare white leucistic alligator has been born at a Florida reptile park. The 19.2-inch (49 cm) female slithered out of its shell and into the history books as one of a few known leucistic alligators, Gatorland Orlando said Thursday.
Minnesota grocery store clerk dies after customer impales him with a golf club, police say
A Minneapolis store clerk died after a customer beat him and impaled him with a golf club, police said. The 66-year-old clerk was attacked Friday at the Oak Grove Grocery, a small neighborhood store in a residential area near downtown Minneapolis. A 44-year-old suspect is jailed on suspicion of murder.
A Soviet-era statue of a Red Army commander taken down in Kyiv
City workers in Kyiv on Saturday dismantled an equestrian statue of a Red Army commander, the latest Soviet monument to be removed in the Ukrainian capital since Russia launched its full-scale invasion last year.
Ibrahim Ali found guilty of killing 13-year-old girl in B.C.
A jury has found Ibrahim Ali guilty of killing a 13-year-old girl whose body was found in a Burnaby, B.C., park in 2017.
Protests at UN climate talks, from ceasefire calls to detainees, see 'shocking level of censorship'
Activists designated Saturday a day of protest at the COP28 summit in Dubai. But the rules of the game in the tightly controlled United Arab Emirates meant sharp restrictions on what demonstrators could say, where they could walk and what their signs could portray.