Calgary's Ward 7 candidates face off on secondary suites - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:42 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary's Ward 7 candidates face off on secondary suites

Four of the five candidates vying for the Ward 7 council seat discussed some of the hot-button issues facing constituents on Tuesday night at SAIT.

Secondary suites are of special interest in Ward 7 due to the high concentration of students

Candidates present Tuesday included (from left to right) Brent Alexander, Dean Brawn, Marek Hejduk and Margot Aftergood. (Sarah Lawrynuik/CBC)

Four of the five candidates vying for the Ward 7 council seat discussed some of the hot-button issues facing constituents on Tuesday night at SAIT,among them, how council shouldcope with the onslaught of secondary suite applications.

Brent Alexander, MargotAftergood, Dean Brawn andMarekHejdukwere all present for the forum, the only one missing was incumbent DruhFarrell, who told event organizers she couldn't be there because she was attending a good friend's memorial service.

Secondary suites are of special interest in Ward 7 due to the high concentration of students who live in the ward, which includes SAIT and the University of Calgary. Suite approvals have bogged down Calgary's city council due to thetediousness of the application process.

'Everybody else has their head in the sand on this'

Alexander took the opportunity to say he supported blanket legalization of secondary suites, with the exception of R1 neighbourhoods or residential, one dwelling districts where residents would have the opportunity to vote against having secondary suites in their individual neighbourhoods.

He took criticism from the other candidates for supporting blanket legalization because of safety concerns,but Alexander rebutted, saying, "Safety standards are very clear as to what they are, but you can't enforce them if you're in an illegal situation. That's why you have to start with legalization."

"Everybody else has their head in the sand on this," Alexander said.

Meanwhile Brawn said he "loves secondary suites," but that a better definition for what constitutes one is needed andthat council doesn't need to be dealing with applications for individuals just trying to do some cooking in their basement for whatever reason.

"They've got to be in neighbourhoods that are zoned for them, they need to be built legally and they need to get all the proper approvals," Brawn said.

A whistleblower phoneline

Hejdukrecounted a situation where he was living in a secondary suite and because of improper safety standards, there was an accident with the stove. He said suites need to be safer but that shouldn't be on the shoulders of council to deal with.

"It's a waste of council's time and money to be examining the secondary suite issue,"Hejduksaid."There needs to be a separate office with home inspectors. There needs to be a tip line where you can turn your landlord in."

Aftergoodhad taken issue with "blanket legalization" and said secondary suites aren't among her top priorities sincethe downturn changed the housing market in the city.

"There's lots of rentals available, my god, there's so many empty homes," Aftergood said.

Farrell missed the chance to dig into the issue, but earlier this year she teamed up with Coun. Brian Pincott with each chippingin $2,500 from their office budgets for ananalysis of council's dealings with secondary suites. The analysis looked at 265 secondary suite applications from 2014 to 2016, finding that council approved 83 per cent of them.

"Having council make decisions on one suite at a time, it's not council's role," she said in May when the report was released.

"Our role is to be talking about the big hairy issues that the City of Calgary faces and will face in the future."
The new boundary map for Ward 7. (City of Calgary)