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Rising costs impacting housing development, says Peachland councillor

'It’s a fundamental structural change in the cost of development'
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Peachland Councillor, Dave Collins, attended a recent Urban Development Institute luncheon and provided a report to council.

Peachland Councillor Dave Collins delivered a sobering update on the state of housing development in B.C. at council’s June 10 meeting.

It followed his attendance at a recent Urban Development Institute (UDI) luncheon. 

“It was a rather grim luncheon,” Collins said, noting that developers are struggling to make projects financially viable amid rising costs. 

“It’s a fundamental structural change in the cost of development,” he said, pointing to soaring prices for materials and labour, as well as fees from all levels of government—municipal charges alone can add up to $100,000 per unit.

Collins, a licensed realtor, said one of the most urgent concerns raised was the impending implementation of Step Code 3, an energy efficiency standard that would effectively invalidate existing building plans and add hundreds of thousands of dollars to project costs. 

“Because if you've got a development file and drawings on file, well, you can throw those drawings out, Step Code 3 wipes that are drawing out,” he said.

He noted that developers aren’t starting new projects—they’re only finishing ones already underway. 

“We’re slowly going down into less and less building starts,” he said, pointing out that, in Peachland, 17 development parcels are up for sale, but no new ground is being broken. “You can’t force developers to lose money.” 

Collins warned that the stalled growth puts pressure on the town’s finances.

“I, for one, do not want to jack property tax rates up because we don’t have a growing tax base,” he said.

Collins suggests that municipalities are going to have to think outside the box, and hopefully, the federal government will come to the rescue with some infrastructure money.

He said the ask from UDI is for the province to stop giving projects to municipalities because it takes up planning departments' time to implement these things. 

Despite the challenges, there was some optimism. Collins noted that Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon has floated federal-level ideas to support housing delivery in BC. The UDI also urged reconsidering restrictions on short-term rentals, which previously helped developers reach pre-sale targets and secure financing.

“There isn’t one development project that doesn’t need investors,” Collins said. “But they’re not in the market right now, because why would they be?”

The government does not have enough money to build housing, he pointed out. 

“They can help, but they just don't. It's trillions of dollars. They're going to have to look at foreign buyers again, which used to help with presales and get projects off the ground.”

Mayor Patrick Van Minsel acknowledged the need for action. 

“This council will have to look at incentive programs for Peachland, and we will do that sooner rather than later,” he said. “We’re already working with federal and provincial governments—they just need to listen.”

Chief Administrative Officer Joe Creron also supported offering incentives like property tax relief for a few years to offset Development Cost Charges. But he said the responsibility doesn’t fall on government alone. 

“We all have to look, not just government,” he said. “I’m getting tired of everybody blaming government. Yes, we are part of the problem, but so is the industry.”



About the Author: Gary Barnes

Journalist and broadcaster for three decades.
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