BCBusiness

June 2017 Fed Up With House Prices?

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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36 BCBUSINESS JUNE 2017 went out and splurged on the strength of their theoretical wealth. One bought a Porsche Boxster. Then everything collapsed. "We've been through this before, so we're careful," Helen says. But they have spent $1 mil- lion on their new home just north of Comox, in Seal Bay, building a new house and cottage, and installing a hot tub from which Helen can watch the deer walk by. Their property is where the Watkinsons chose to splash out a little. Back in New Westminster, the Sauers also splurged with their real estate winnings—but only a tiny bit. Avid recreational- vehicle travellers for the past 30 years, they upgraded to a slightly less old and slightly larger ride this spring. B U Y I N G A N E W B O A T – A N D D R O W N I N G I N D E B T ? Those are two examples of how di'erently the residents of various communities choose to spend their mad money. While people in Comox and Courtenay spent only about $2,000 on average in 2015 on recre- ational equipment and vehicles, the gung-ho resi- dents of Fort St. John dropped $4,700 in those categories. Perhaps that isn't too surprising, since Fort St. John households had the fourth-highest incomes in B.C.—but their spending on boats and RVs outdid even the three cities higher on the income list, West Vancouver, Oak Bay and North Vancouver. Another city that ranks high for recreational- equipment spending is Kelowna, even though income levels are considerably lower than in oilpatch Fort St. John. Is it because people there don't have so much mortgage debt, so they have more play money? Mike Stang doesn't think so. A 39-year-old who divides his time between his businesses in Alberta and his life beside Okanagan Lake in Kelowna, he says it's more about what residents see as a priority. "Per capita, recreation is just more valued Fort St. John households had the fourth-highest incomes in B.C.— but their spending on boats and RVs outdid even the three cities higher on the income list, West Vancouver, Oak Bay and North Vancouver ++ DREAM HOME Kelly and Helen Watkinson built a place in Comox after selling their Burnaby house

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