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Raise parking requirements for secondary suites, Township councillor says

Three-space minimum inadequate, creates neighbourhood tension, Richter argues
2011-12-12 submitted
Kim Richter

The current minimum of three parking spaces required for 91原创 houses with legal secondary suites is too small and should be boosted to four, councillor Kim Richter said on Nov. 18.

Richter was able to convince the rest of council to take a look at raising the minimum during the afternoon meeting of council.

But she was unable to convince them to impose a higher minimum on a major new neighbourhood development with secondary suites during the evening meeting.

She said three parking spaces are not enough because owners of most houses with secondary suites tend to have at least two vehicles of their own and are renting to couples who also have two vehicles.

The result has been a spillover of cars and trucks onto local streets, tying up spaces that would normally be used by visitors.

It鈥檚 creating tension between residents who have secondary suites and those who want their visitors to park close by, Richter told council.

鈥淲e鈥檙e creating unhappy neighbourhoods,鈥 Richter said.

鈥淣eighbours are being pitted against neighbours . . . there鈥檚 no place for visitors to park.鈥

The rest of council agreed the matter deserved investigation and unanimously voted to send it to a council committee for study.

During the evening meeting, Richter tried and failed to convince council to require a four-space minimum for secondary suites in a proposed new housing development.

Councillor Michelle Sparrow spoke for the majority when she said that amounted to 鈥渙n-the-fly鈥 policy making.



Monique Tamminga

About the Author: Monique Tamminga

Monique brings 20 years of award-winning journalism experience to the role of editor at the Penticton Western News. Of those years, 17 were spent working as a senior reporter and acting editor with the 91原创 Advance Times.
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