BCBusiness

October 2016 Entrepreneur of the Year

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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government to help." Earlier this year, Latif submitted a proposal to both the province and the feds to help develop 20 city-owned sites; the city, which has announced a target of 2,500 a‚ordable new homes by 2021, rezoned four of them this summer. Earlier this year, the province also stepped up—matching a $150-million federal contribution as part of a program to create new affordable housing and renovate existing housing; it has also committed $350 million to the Provincial Investment in A‚ordable Housing pro- gram to create 2,000 rental units throughout B.C. On the federal side, the 2016 budget included $200.7 million over two years for 5,000 low- income seniors housing units. The feds have also started an A‚ordable Renting Housing Innovation Fund to encourage the construction of a‚ordable housing and are o‚ering $500 million in loans to developers and municipalities over the next "ve years. But in both governments' case, holding onto public land seems a less important part of that overall housing strate¯y. Nei- ther the provincial minister responsible for housing, Rich Coleman, nor the fed- eral minister in charge of housing, Jean- Yves Duclos, agreed to be interviewed for this story. A federal spokesperson, when asked about the government developing federally owned land, said: "The minis- ter will be working with the minister of public services and procure- ment to conduct an inventory of all available federal lands and buildings that could be repurposed, and making some of these lands available at low cost, or no cost, for a‚ordable housing." Meanwhile a provincial spokesperson, on the sale of public land, wrote: "Non-pro"ts have asked the prov- ince to transfer housing assets to them for many years because owning the land will help them to improve long-term planning co-op creeK The multi-family housing of False Creek South was considered edgy and progressive in the '70s Education grad student, Mike Irvine, presented his master's project underwater and started the Fish Eye Project, an organization that brings marine research to classrooms and the world through interactive livestream shows. DaviD Drucker

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