Vancouver city council prepares to hear from public on Downtown Eastside plan

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      A long-term plan for the Downtown Eastside that has been in the works for two years is set to draw dozens of speakers to Vancouver City Hall this week.

      And as city council prepares to debate the local area plan for the neighbourhood, some members of the committee that helped to develop the strategy say it still lacks crucial details.

      Ray Spaxman, one of the co-chairs of the local area planning committee and a former City of Vancouver planner, said the over 200-page report is “full of very good principles and ideas that have come from two years [of] intense work between the local government and the people of the area”.

      But in his view, “the plan isn’t ready yet to be called a plan”.

      “It’s so big and so full, and yet it hasn’t produced enough evidence to justify many of the suggestions that are made there, nor are some of the suggestions carried far enough for people to have confidence in them,” he told the Straight by phone.

      Spaxman pointed to a number of elements that he said “need to be filled out before you could say this was a complete plan, a plan that could be adopted”.

      “We are concluding that it would be appropriate for the council to at least approve the plan as a draft plan, but they should go on to undertake these other studies that we’re recommending,” stated Spaxman, who represented the Building Community Society on the planning committee.

      Some of those areas that Spaxman said committee members are hoping to see further details on include the housing proposals for the community.

      “Housing is a major issue, in that while the city’s done quite a lot of work in developing new strategies, they haven’t gone far enough to give us confidence that the strategies they’ve defined will be successful in achieving the results that have led the local area planning program,” he said.

      “We are particularly interested in discovering who is affected by what policy in the Downtown Eastside—what numbers and types of people are affected, and how will those numbers and different types of people be accommodated in the proposals set out in the plan,” he added. “And that’s still very ambiguous and difficult to follow, and yet the course is crucial to the future of the people living in the Downtown [Eastside], of which something like 60 percent are low-income.”

      Some of the housing proposals outlined in the plan include 30-year objectives such as creating 4,400 new social-housing units in the Downtown Eastside, in addition to 3,350 units of social housing or rent subsidies outside of the neighbourhood.

      Other long-term targets include requesting provincial rent subsidies for 1,650 Downtown Eastside residents, and encouraging upgrades to 2,200 single-room occupancy hotel rooms. Non-social housing goals include creating 3,000 new units of “secured market rental housing” over 30 years, and accommodating an estimated 8,850 new “affordable homeownership units”.

      Targets for the first 10 years of the plan include 1,400 new social-housing units in the Downtown Eastside, upgrades to 1,900 SRO rooms, 1,650 new secured market rental housing units, and 1,650 new units of affordable market rental housing.

      Vision Vancouver councillor Andrea Reimer, who sat on the local area planning committee as a city council liaison, said the plan needs to work for everyone in the community.

      “I think the single largest challenge is that in order to make the plan work for the middle-income folks and the homeowners, we need the plan first and foremost to work for the low-income community,” she said in a phone interview.

      Reimer noted there are over 18,000 people living in the Downtown Eastside.

      “It stretches from Richards all the way to Clark,” she stated.  “They’re everything from children to their mother and fathers, they’re grandparents, there’s one of the highest populations of seniors in the city is in the Downtown Eastside community.

      “When somebody hears Downtown Eastside, I can’t judge what pops into their mind, but I’m hoping that through this process, what pops into their mind is exactly the same vibrant, diverse community that they live in,” she added. “The live question is how do you make that a healthy, sustainable, affordable, safe community for all of those people, from now into the future, and that’s what this plan is proposing.”

      Housing plans outlined in the document also include a policy for the Downtown Eastside Oppenheimer District (DEOD), which surrounds the Main and Hastings intersection, to allow additional density for projects that contain 60 percent social housing and 40 percent secured market rental.

      Pete Fry, the chair of the Strathcona Residents’ Association, described the “no-condo zone” proposed for the DEOD as “a bit of a red herring”. He noted that the 60 percent social-housing requirement consists of a 20 percent target for people paying the welfare shelter rate—a goal that he sees as underperforming.

      “That said we need to do better city-wide,” he said in a phone interview. “The fact that we have such a lack of inclusionary zoning across the rest of the city puts a great deal of pressure on this neighbourhood, which is obviously subject to a great deal of development pressure because we’re downtown Vancouver.”

      Other elements of the plan receiving criticism include the definition of social housing. Jean Swanson, coordinator of the Carnegie Community Action Project, noted page 94 of the plan outlines a “target for affordability” of new social housing in the Downtown Eastside that would consist of one third of units at the welfare shelter rate.

      “We’re definitely afraid that it’s a target that’s designed to be missed,” she said. “So there’s no guarantee that any of the social housing in the Downtown Eastside is going to be affordable to the current residents who desperately need it—that’s the problem.”

      Scott Clark, the executive director of the Aboriginal Life in Vancouver Enhancement Society, said he supports the Healthy City Strategy principles that the local area plan will fall under.

      “A Healthy City For All is really how do we build healthy, vibrant, inclusive, reflective and engaging communities throughout all of Vancouver’s 24 communities,” he told the Straight by phone.

      “Gentrification’s a real issue in the Downtown Eastside, but so is NIMBY-ism in Vancouver’s other 23 communities,” he added. “And we need to be collectively as one challenging the NIMBY-ism so people have real choice where they live, especially the aging population of the Downtown Eastside, and the vulnerable children and families who call this place home.”

      Other proposals detailed in the Downtown Eastside plan include drawing local-serving retail such as at least two affordable grocers, converting under-used areas into mini-parks or plazas, enhancing the streetscape and sidewalks along commercial streets, and exploring potential new walking and cycling routes on roads such as Keefer, Prior, Water and Cambie streets and Gore Avenue.

      Quick-start actions also include working with the Vancouver Economic Commission and local BIAs to attract “suitable new enterprise", supporting “emerging enterprise clusters and hubs”, and supporting a permanent location for the Downtown Eastside Street Market.

      The local area plan will go to city council on Wednesday (March 12).

      Comments

      4 Comments

      Mark

      Mar 11, 2014 at 2:43pm

      10 years from now, if real estate prices rise or at least are at the same level, the downtown eastside will be packed with condos. Just image downtown Vancouver 10 years ago. I would say that about half of the condo towers were built since then.

      There's no other place to build in such a large amount, so the downtown eastside is the last frontier.

      I'm sure the province and charities can help the people in the downtown eastside better by building affordable housing farther away from the downtown core. Just think of people who are forced to live in Coquitlam and have to commute from there due to the high cost of housing. Why should people from the DTES live so close to downtown when people who work and pay taxes have to commute from so far away?

      G

      Mar 11, 2014 at 2:43pm

      More than $1 billion went into the DES from taxpayers from 2001-2011, most of it channelled through "non-profit" groups, and not counting payments directly to individuals. Most of the "non-profit" groups in the DES can be filed under one of two headings: ideologues or profiteers. Ideologues have no desire to actually change things, they wish to exacerbate problems and avoid softening the hard edges of capitalism. They are convinced that "revolution" is just around the corner and eagerly listen to their leaders spouting 19th century ideology and looking for parallels here in the 21st. The profiteers are the one's who have management paid six-figure salaries and have close ties to various politicians & bureaucrats. Profiteers own property but allow it to deteriorate as they spend more on executive remuneration than on maintainence. Both the ideologues & profiteers want to maintain or even expand the ghetto they have helped create and keep the money flowing.

      Vision Vancouver have relied upon the media running their "green" & " social justice" propaganda in order to minimize publicity of their various plans to enrich their developer friends. Under Vision the taxpayer funded city propaganda department has more than doubled in size to 22 employees of whom we are aware: others could be hidden within different departments. Mayor Robertson & Vision have also spend an additional $200,000 of "discretionary" funds on outside propaganda consultants, one of whom is also working for the Oakridge developer. That developer just happens to be a Vision donor, no word of they are buying one of those $25,000 tickets for face time with the Mayor.

      Vision have the most effective propaganda machine in BC political history. They did a fantastic job co-opting left voters by absorbing COPE and focussing their media message on soft-left issues likes bike lanes & the environment. They promised developers more than the NPA could hope to deliver by leveraging "green" votes into a development agenda. Oakridge was going to have towers around 20 storeys and a public park on ground level, now it has towers up to 40 storeys and a rooftop park. If Vision retain control of council Cambie will look like Kingsway through Metrotown with a boulevard and subway, we will lose half of the Langara green space to development and every neighbourhood shopping area will be lined with 6 storey condos.

      Ken Lawson

      Mar 11, 2014 at 9:38pm

      I know one thing the area is dump like it used to be it needs improved changes!

      Ken Lawson

      Mar 11, 2014 at 9:40pm

      Approval by whom, wing nuts at the Georgia Straight