Banned 25 years ago, rooming houses could play saving role in Fredericton housing - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:44 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Banned 25 years ago, rooming houses could play saving role in Fredericton housing

The chairs of Fredericton's affordable housing committee say they want bylaws allowing the construction of single-room occupancy residences to be in place by next year.

Housing advocates push for speedy passage of laws allowing SROs again

A rooming house in Fredericton is being shut down because the landlord wants to turn it into apartments. (Logan Perley/CBC)

The chairs of Fredericton's affordable housing committee say they want bylaws allowing the construction of single-room occupancy residences to be in place by next year.

This comes after a single room occupancy residence, or rooming house, was shut down after the landlord decided to turn the downtown building into apartments.

The move left many low-income individuals scrambling for housing.

Coun. Kate Rogers, who co-chairs the committee, said city staff told her that 1,100 residents are on waiting lists for affordable housing, and rooming houses could be an answer for many of them.

She's hoping to have work on the proposed bylaw done as soon as possible.

"We're hoping to get the public engagement work done maybe in this fall, and then it's a matter of finalizing the report bringing the recommendation to the affordable housing committee, which then goes through to development and then development making the recommendation to council," said Rogers.

Rogers said the bylaw banning rooming houses was passed in 1995, and the rooming houses that remained were grandfathered in.

She cautioned it will take developers time to adjust to building rooming houses.

"So even after we do develop sort of the enabling bylaw, I think it's going to take developers a while to turn their head to working within that framework," said Rogers.

"But I've spoken to a few developers who are actually quite excited by it."

Multi-pronged approach

There are other things the committee is looking at to increase the amount of affordable housing in the area.

Co-chair Marchell Coulombe said one option would be to remove municipal fees on new affordable housing construction.

"That would really help non-profits who are looking to get into building affordable housing," said Coulombe.

"So that would be things like building permits and sewer hookups and any city fee or process."

Rogers is also calling on the provincial government to update the Community Planning Act.

Updates could allow municipalities to add stipulations to building permits to force developers to build affordable housing.

"I think it's just opening up the act to give more powers to the municipality, what it is that we are allowed to demand and require of developers," said Rogers

With files from Information Morning Fredericton