Government decisions must consider downtown
Let’s be clear about an issue that’s sparking plenty of conversations.
Downtown Victoria is facing a crisis.
That’s not to deny the natural beauty or economic power of downtown, which remains a gem for our region. Anyone who visits our destination can see how special this area is among the world’s small cities.
But most can also see that warning bells are ringing ever louder, and, if immediate action is not taken, we could face an even more dire situation. Businesses downtown are fed up with crime, social disorder, increasing costs and labour shortages, Chamber CEO John Wilson told Global News.
Wilson was speaking about the cumulative impact of all levels of government not doing enough to invest in downtown. The ongoing BCGEU strike signals another pain point. The issue is not with public sector workers seeking to continue working from home, but with a government that has allowed its workforce to flee downtown without a real plan for the hundreds of businesses that have evolved to serve these workers.
“The public sector workforce in the downtown core is instrumental in supporting some of these small and mid-sized businesses. Some of them were put in place to support that workforce, whether it be coffee shops, lunch shops, things like that,” Wilson told Global News. “The downtown core needs these workers back in the office space, the private industry, the economy and the vibrancy of downtown Victoria is being greatly affected — I think it has a trickle-down effect on the safety and disorder in the downtown core, too, with the lack of busyness down here.”
With the federal government and most other provinces bringing workers back to offices, The Chamber is calling for BC to do the same — or provide a pragmatic plan for filling vacant or underutilized offices downtown. The province must do better than adding another burden to the private sector without considering the consequence.