The Vancouver City Council Monday night took several steps to expand the coverage area for a developer tax break meant to spur the construction of affordable housing.
Read more…
Source: The Columbian
Vancouver moves toward expanding developer tax break to more parts of the city
More from Affordable HousingMore posts in Affordable Housing »
- Senior housing in Felida to include medical and social services
- ‘Not in my backyard’: Vancouver officials, neighborhoods clash over placement of higher-density housing
- Report finds half of Southwest Washington residents can’t afford housing, food, other necessities
- Habitat for Humanity program helps first-time homebuyers in Clark County
- Mobile home residents ask Rep. Perez for consistency on rules
More from Clark County NewsMore posts in Clark County News »
- Vancouver police arrest man in suspected assault of jogger in Ellsworth Springs neighborhood
- Vancouver man held on $200,000 bail, accused of felony hit-and-run and driving under influence
- Clark Public Utilities approves budgets for 2026
- 2 Oregon men ordered held without bail in fatal shooting at Hazel Dell apartment complex
- Residents respond to ‘equitable access’ language in FVRLibraries’ strategic plan
More from Clark County PoliticsMore posts in Clark County Politics »
- Battle Ground to again run a school levy on Feb. 10 ballot
- Effort to replace Interstate 5 Bridge reaches milestone as four river users OK agreements
- Clark County Council approves new 5-year homeless plan
- Vancouver has spent $15.55M in 2025 to improve transportation network
- Investigation faults county council, manager for Belkot decision
More from housingMore posts in housing »
- Clark County Council pulls financial support for housing, addiction recovery program Lumen Fidelis
- Clark County-based property company to pay $2,000 for violating WA rent-increase rules
- Buyer’s market? Real estate agents say it’s a good time to snag a house in Clark County
- Multifamily housing among the new developments coming to 136th Avenue in east Vancouver
- Housing post-COVID: Tight market, low inventory in Clark County
More from Latest NewsMore posts in Latest News »
- Vancouver police arrest man in suspected assault of jogger in Ellsworth Springs neighborhood
- Vancouver man held on $200,000 bail, accused of felony hit-and-run and driving under influence
- Clark Public Utilities approves budgets for 2026
- 2 Oregon men ordered held without bail in fatal shooting at Hazel Dell apartment complex
- Residents respond to ‘equitable access’ language in FVRLibraries’ strategic plan
More from NewsletterMore posts in Newsletter »
- Vancouver police arrest man in suspected assault of jogger in Ellsworth Springs neighborhood
- Vancouver man held on $200,000 bail, accused of felony hit-and-run and driving under influence
- Clark Public Utilities approves budgets for 2026
- 2 Oregon men ordered held without bail in fatal shooting at Hazel Dell apartment complex
- Residents respond to ‘equitable access’ language in FVRLibraries’ strategic plan
More from PoliticsMore posts in Politics »
- Battle Ground to again run a school levy on Feb. 10 ballot
- Effort to replace Interstate 5 Bridge reaches milestone as four river users OK agreements
- Clark County Council approves new 5-year homeless plan
- Vancouver has spent $15.55M in 2025 to improve transportation network
- Investigation faults county council, manager for Belkot decision
More from VancouverMore posts in Vancouver »
- ‘Not in my backyard’: Vancouver officials, neighborhoods clash over placement of higher-density housing
- For the birds: Vancouver Audubon celebrates its 50th anniversary
- Vancouver woman accused in starvation death of puppy that died in June
- Vancouver police search for man accused of ramming rideshare driver’s car
- Rental assistance available for those affected by ICE detentions, deportations
More from Vancouver City CouncilMore posts in Vancouver City Council »
- ‘Not in my backyard’: Vancouver officials, neighborhoods clash over placement of higher-density housing
- Busy Friday planned: Vancouver to raise new city flag, light Christmas tree, rededicate Salmon Run Bell Tower
- Vancouver has spent $15.55M in 2025 to improve transportation network
- Vancouver’s new flag ‘a powerful reflection of who we are’
- Vancouver City Council mulls pausing, reformatting community forums after seeing decline in attendance and behavior issues
Be First to Comment