British Columbia

$1B Downtown Eastside plan raises concerns in Vancouver

Vancouver city council is set to discuss its ambitious 30-year plan to overhaul the Downtown Eastside today. Its goal is to reform the neighbourhood without pushing out any of the 18,500 people who call it home.

Local activists gather petitions and plan rally to highlight concerns over neighbourhood plan

Downtown Eastside plan contentious

11 years ago
Duration 2:10
The Oppenheimer District along Hastings is the most challenging

Vancouver city council is set to discuss its ambitious 30-year plan to overhaul the Downtown Eastside today. Its goal is to reform the neighbourhood without pushing out any of the 18,500 people who call it home.

Vancouver city council is set to debate its 30-year $1 billion plan for the Downtown Eastside Wednesday. (City of Vancouver)

The community plan is budgeted to cost just under $1 billion and calls for social housing units, along with affordable market housing, and increased residential and retail — opening the door to developers  without increasing density.

But it is facing attacks on two fronts.

Local business owners say the city did very little consultation with affected community groups. Low income residents are worried the plan will push them out of current housing and want assurances it comes with jobs for them.

By the numbers

  • $13,600 average income.
  • Thirty thousand residents by 2041.
  • One-third of current residents receive social assistance.
  • $1,000,000,000 budget for 30-year plan.
  • 4,400 new units of social housing.
  • $820,000,000 for housing component alone.

The Carnegie Community Action project is presenting council with two petitions totalling 6000 signatures demanding the plan provide for the creation of more housing, more jobs and a slowing of the rate of gentrification by giving low-income residents a say in the approval of new business licenses.

But the city claims the whole purpose of its plan is to improve the lives of the people already living there.

The neighbourhood's low-income history is something planners say they have taken very seriously, after spending two years consulting with residents and the people who work with them.

One half of the plan's 10-figure budget will have to come from outside the city's coffers. The city says other levels of government, non-profits. faith-based groups and the development community will need to get on board to make it a reality.