Frances Stone had never lived in a home that requires a security fob or a building that has an elevator.
When the landlord of her walkup building in Uptown New Westminster informed Stone she needed to move so their daughter could move in, she considered uprooting to Alberta where the provincial government is offering financial incentives to newcomers and rents are much cheaper.
Then a friend told her about a partnership between the Affordable Housing Society and Vancouver-based developer Anthem Properties that would make 18 rental homes in two new condo towers in Coquitlam available at rates geared to tenants’ income.
According to the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.(CMHC), that means a tenant pays 30 per cent or less of their gross income for rent.
Stone and her teenage daughter moved into their gleaming two-bedroom-plus-den unit in in August.
She said it’s the first time in her adult life she’s felt secure about her future.
So much so, Stone said she’s in the final stages of adopting a rescue dog to add to her family, something she’s wanted to do for years but failed to pursue because of her ongoing housing uncertainty.
That’s music to the ears of Stephen Bennett, CEO of the Affordable Housing Society.
He said being able to live in a safe, affordable home impacts every aspect of a person’s life.
“We don’t understand what a lack of choice means for people,” he said. “Because it’s so unaffordable out there, people are stuck.”
As municipalities across B.C. strive to , they’re also wrestling with the challenge of ensuring those homes can be accessed by a broad spectrum of residents.
“We still have to predicate all of our decisions based on what is in the best interest of our community as a whole,” said Port Moody Mayor Meghan Lahti about the pressure to approve the construction of more homes.
Bennett said affordability can only be achieved when all levels of government work together to provide necessary funding because the cost of constructing homes has spiralled so high. He said without subsidies and grants from programs through agencies like BC Housing, BC Builds and CMHC, rent for apartments could be as much as $5,000 a month.
Melissa Howey, Anthem’s vice-president of development, said companies like hers are feeling the pressure as well, as they look to deliver housing stock that meets communities’ needs.
“It is balancing the costs, the availability of density,” she said. “It can often be a tightrope to walk.”
Howey said inflationary pressures and constraints on capital are making that tightrope even tauter.
Inclusionary zoning policies and negotiations for additional density can help spur developers to find creative solutions that will allow them to include affordable units in their projects, but the long process to get approvals means the landscape is always shifting.
“Every municipality operates differently,” Howey said, adding the navigation of those varying procedures comes with more layers of expense.
“It can be a challenge to deliver the other forms of housing in a project at somewhat affordable rates.”
In fact, Anthem recently had to scale back a plan to designate half the 128 units in to just 13. The company said its original intent proved “financially unviable.”
Bennett said his society is always working to devise new models to help fund affordable units, sometimes pooling financial contributions from several agencies.
But, he said, “to pull all those pieces together is exceedingly complicated and it takes a lot of work.”
Stone said she’s keenly aware of the challenge to provide enough affordable housing.
Prior to losing her apartment in New Westminster, she’d been on the BC Housing waiting list for five years. She said she’d also applied to every co-op in Metro Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»but “nothing was available.”
“It was pretty hopeless,” Stone said.
Now that she’s settled in her new home, though, Stone is starting to take advantage of her building’s host of luxurious amenities, like its indoor basketball/badminton court, the games and community room that features a full kitchen, a gym and yoga studio as well as an outdoor garden atop the parkade with seating areas, play structures and several gas barbecues. She said she’s keen to start a podcast that she can record in the building’s special sound room as well.
It’s a lifestyle Stone, an addictions counsellor, never imagined for herself.
“I would never have been able to work hard enough to live in a building like this,” she said. “It changes your perception of yourself.”
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