This remote B.C. island hopes a tax on short-term rentals will solve its housing crisis - Action News
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British Columbia

This remote B.C. island hopes a tax on short-term rentals will solve its housing crisis

In an effort to combat the lack of housing for Cortes Island residents, the Strathcona Regional District is applying a three per cent municipal and regional district tax to short-term vacation rentals.

District representative says 10% of Cortes Island residents are living in unstable housing

Two images of Heather's house. A wooden tiny home with one window in a forested area and the interior of the tiny home.
Heather Smith has been forced to move four times in her four years on Cortes Island. She's currently living in a tiny home that has a garden hose for a shower. (Heather Smith)

Heather Smith has lived on Cortes Islandfor four years, and in that time she's been forced to move four times after her rent was raised each time.

"Some people move every six months," she said of the remote community, whose population ofaround 1,200 can double during the summeras tourists flock to the island, according to the regional district.

That popularity combined with rising rent has left many residents struggling to find suitable homes, with a 2019 report saying more than a third of housing onCortes one of the Discovery Islands northeast of Vancouver Island is now tourist accommodation.

Arecent housing survey conducted by the communityfound 10 per cent of residents are living in unstable housing, said Mark Vonesch, the Strathcona Regional District representative for the island.

"So it's either unsuitable or too expensive," Vonesch told CBCOn The Island guest host Kathryn Marlow, addingthat some tenants even have an agreement with their landlord to move out during tourist season.

In an effort to combat the lack of housing for residents, the regional district is now applying a three per cent municipal and regional district tax (MRDT)on vacation rentals, with the money raised going toward affordable housing projects.

The tax applies to Airbnb, VRBOand other short-term rentals that make more than $2,500 in profitannually.

Vonesch says it's the first time in the province's history a community is using all of the funds collected from the MRDT towardhousing.

A close up image of some sort of plant with the ocean and a sail boat in the background, on Cortes Island.
Cortes Island is a remote community of about 1,200 full-time residents, but its population doubles with tourists during the summer, the regional district says. (Doug Husby/CBC)

CBChas contacted the Ministry of Finance for comment but has yet to receive a reply.

Short-term rentals mostly empty: Vonesch

A 2019study conducted by McGill University found short-term rentals displaced nearly 14,000 units from B.C.'s long-term housing market.

Vonesch says there are over 100 short-term rentals on Cortes, most of which are unavailable to full-time renters and remain empty most of the year.

According to a 2019 report, rental homes made up 34.6 per cent of total households on the island. It also found the median monthly rent was $694 and nearly half of the renters spend 30 per cent or more of their income on housing.

Smith says housing is either too expensive or substandard, with many homes not even having a bathroom.

She says the tiny home she rents has minimal electricity and a garden hose in place of a shower.

"I feel like [finding] better housing is impossible," she said.

The lack of affordable housing has also caused significant labour shortages on the island, said Smith, asupervisor at Cortes Natural Food Co-op and Cafe, which she says is chronically understaffed.

Tax funds directed to housing initiatives

Vonesch said he does not want to ban short-term rentals and acknowledgedtourism is an important part of the community's economy; instead, he wants to better regulate short-term rentals to ensure the market is fair for local residents.

The MRDT was initially set up by the provinceto raise money for tourism advertising, but as of July 1,following legislation amendments, Cortes Island has beenputting the proceeds of the tax towardaffordable rental housing development in the community.

Voneschsaysthe tax, which should bring in about $50,000 per year, will go to the non-profitCortes Housing Society, which is spearheading affordable housing initiatives in the region.

The funds will support the development of the society's 24-unit Rainbow Ridge rental project. Sixteen units, each containing between one and three bedrooms, will be priced below market value, and eight will be prioritized for professionals such as doctors or nurses.

About 175 people are already on the waitlistfor the project, Vonesch said.

With files from On the Island