
If approved, the levy would provide dedicated funding for housing and housing services for people with low and very-low income, including those with disabilities, veterans, seniors, and families with children
VANCOUVER – On Monday (Sept. 19), Vancouver City Council unanimously voted to approve a resolution to submit a ballot measure to voters that, if approved, would replace the city’s current Affordable Housing Fund Levy that expires at the end of 2023.
“We’ve had tremendously rewarding and positive results over the last six years with the voter-approved Affordable Housing Fund,” said Mayor Anne McEnerny-Ogle. “The levy has supported well over 1,000 units of affordable housing, provided rental assistance and services to prevent homelessness for more than 1,400 households and created or supported hundreds of temporary shelter beds, but our work is not done. With a continued housing deficit and rising costs, our housing emergency is still very real, and we are asking voters to consider a replacement levy to provide continued funding.”
The replacement levy will be on the ballot for the special election scheduled for February 14, 2023. The proposition seeks voter approval to replace the expiring levy with a property tax levy of approximately $0.30 per $1,000 of assessed value per property owner. The proposed levy replacement would raise $10 million annually, totaling $100 million over a period of 10 years starting in 2024.
If approved, the levy would provide dedicated funding for housing and housing services for people with low and very-low income, including those with disabilities, veterans, seniors, and families with children. The replacement levy, if approved, is projected to assist 2,500 households with rent assistance and housing services, help 150 households with home ownership, preserve or construct 2,400 affordable units, and support 550 shelter beds over the life of the levy.
Over the seven-year lifetime of the current levy that will expire in 2023, $42 million will have been raised. To date, the current levy has awarded $36,041,884 to support 52 projects related to the construction, acquisition, and preservation of affordable housing as well as rental assistance, and temporary shelter for Vancouver residents earning less than 50% of the area’s median income. Over the lifetime of the current levy, 1,064 units of affordable housing have been produced or preserved with support from the Affordable Housing Fund, 1,409 households have received rental assistance and services to prevent homelessness, and 405 temporary shelter beds have been created or supported with operating costs. Funding generated in the final year of this levy has been allocated to housing production and preservation as well as ongoing rental assistance programs and temporary shelter for people who are homeless.
“The burden of the affordable housing crisis is very real for many Vancouver residents,” said Councilor Diana Perez. “Many households with low and very low income are at risk in their current living situation, struggling to keep pace with housing and other cost of living expenses. The city is committed to continuing and strengthening its work in supporting safe, affordable housing and services for those most vulnerable in our community.”
Read the Affordable Housing Fund Report to learn more about the city’s work to address affordable housing and homelessness in Vancouver. Visit the Affordable Housing Fund website to learn more.
Information provided by city of Vancouver.
Also read:
- Signatures filed for initiatives on parental rights, blocking trans athletes from girls’ sportsSupporters of two initiatives on parental rights and transgender participation in girls’ sports filed signatures Friday, moving the measures closer to consideration by Washington lawmakers.
- Vancouver Police investigate shootingVancouver Police are investigating a fatal shooting reported early Jan. 3 outside the Off-Ramp Sports Bar on Northeast 112th Avenue.
- Vancouver Police release critical incident video from Dec. 28 officer-involved shootingVancouver Police Department released a Critical Incident Video related to a December 28 officer-involved shooting while the Office of Independent Investigations continues its review.
- Opinion: Transit agencies need accountability not increased state subsidyCharles Prestrud argues that Washington transit agencies face rising costs and declining ridership due to governance structures that lack public accountability.
- Letter: ‘For years, American foreign policy too often felt like a blank check’Vancouver resident Peter Bracchi argues that the 2025 National Security Strategy marks a long-overdue shift toward clearer priorities, shared responsibility, and interest-based American leadership.
- POLL: Are you better off than you were a year ago?This week’s poll asks readers to reflect on their personal financial situation and whether they feel better off than they were a year ago as economic conditions continue to shift.
- Opinion: Does tailgating cause speeding?Target Zero Manager Doug Dahl examines whether tailgating contributes to speeding and explains why following too closely increases crash risk with little benefit.









Help me understand….Washington State has a $15 billion surplus yet the politians are asking for more funds. What am I missing?
No No No. No more!
It is an ever-increasing pot of money, funded by local residents, used for a never-ending cause. $10,000,000 EACH YEAR?!?!?! Yet, Vancouver can’t figure out how to maintain streets, fix pot holes, nor pick up trash. TEN MILLION PER YEAR is a helluva lot of money! WTF?
IF YOU BUILD IT, THEY WILL COME
You can NOT keep providing free services and think homelessness will go away. The more free services you provide (at taxpayers’ expense), the more that marginal-people will throw up their hands and say “I quit trying. I’m going to become homeless to get free that which I’m struggling to have now.”
I’m disgusted with the entire Vancouver City Council, and especially Mayor Annie!