Thursday, July 16, 2026

New Mural Coming to Douglas Park Washroom Building

Over the years, the City has installed murals on several park washroom buildings throughout our community, such as the Inturban-themed mural in Linwood Park and two murals in Rotary Centennial Park. On Monday night, Langley City Council approved $12,000 from the City’s Public Art Fund to install a mural on the new Douglas Park washroom building.

Douglas Park Washroom Building

The City will now put out a call to artists. The mural should illustrate the diversity of park users, events, and activities that take place at Douglas Park, and it should wrap around the four sides of the building.

Still on the topic of murals, Langley City regulates private murals in our community that would be of a more commercial nature. A Bread Affair currently has a mural on its building on the Langley Bypass and is looking to have it repainted with a fresh design. As per the City’s bylaws, it must be reviewed by the Arts, Recreation, Culture and Heritage Committee and approved by Council. On Monday, Council approved the mural. As this is a private mural, it is not funded by the City.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Langley City Council Gives Approval in Principle to $661,601 in Property Tax Exemptions to Non-Profits and Houses of Worship for 2027

There are two ways that Langley City Council provides financial support to non-profit organizations in our community. One is through our community grant program, and the other is through permissive property tax exemptions.

The community grant program is funded through casino revenue, while the permissive property tax exemption program is funded through property taxes. On Monday, Langley City Council gave approval in principle to grant $661,601 in permissive tax exemptions for the 2027 tax year. Without these exemptions, the City would be able to lower property taxes overall by about 1.5%.

While Council has not contemplated removing a non-profit organization's permissive tax exemption, it has not approved any additional permissive tax exemptions since 2022. Personally, I consider this a legacy program and am not supportive of its expansion.

Houses of Worship receive a statutory property tax exemption from the provincial government for the land on which their physical buildings occupy. The City also grants a permissive tax exemption for the remaining portions of the land they own.

The following table lists the permissive tax exemptions for the 2027 tax year.

Organization Amount
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Vancouver 75,196
Vineyard Christian Fellowship 68,617
Langley Seniors Resource Society 62,168
Langley Lawn Bowling 52,358
Langley Care Society 41,650
Town & Field Church 41,396
Langley Memorial Hospital Auxiliary 40,547
Vancouver Global Mission Church 40,170
Anglican Parish of St Andrew's 36,006
Church of the Nazarene Canada Pacific District 32,365
Langley Community Music School 29,658
Encompass Support Services Society 27,709
Inclusion Langley Society 23,965
Bridge Community Church 23,620
Langley Food Bank 23,097
Langley Community Services Society 13,101
Langley Stepping Stones 11,532
New Apostolic Church Canada 9,088
Langley Hospice Society 5,784
Council of the Salvation Army 3,574

Council will need to adopt the 2027 permissive tax exemptions at its next meeting.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Langley City Joins the Call to Action for Renewing Flood Protection in the Lower Mainland

With climate change, flooding events are becoming more common in the Lower Mainland. In Metro Vancouver, about half of the dikes that protect us from flooding “are in a poor state of repair, and most do not meet modern flood protection standards.” These dikes also do not meet seismic design standards, which is critical as our region is in an earthquake zone.

The 2021 Fraser Valley flooding resulted in $675 million in insurance claims and disrupted the movement of goods and people from the Lower Mainland to the rest of Canada. This is significant given that the Port of Vancouver is Canada's largest port. All this to say that our region is a trade corridor of national significance.

Nicomekl River Flooded onto 208th Street Causeway in 2021

The provincial government has created a B.C. Flood Strategy, which is pending implementation.

Langley City Council received a presentation last night from the Lower Fraser Floodplains Coalition, which includes First Nation and local governments in the area. Their report noted that “a single major flood in the Lower Fraser could wipe out over $350 billion in economic value.”

With that in mind, they are calling on First Nation and local governments in the Lower Mainland to sign onto a joint statement which includes calling on the federal and provincial governments to:

Recognize the Lower Fraser’s resilience as a matter of national and provincial significance: urgently requiring attention, but manageable with practical measures, and essential for the long-term safety, and the cultural and economic well-being of all communities, the province and the country;
Recognize that collaboration, not competition for piecemeal funding, is the foundation for resilience in the Lower Fraser, and that enabling First Nations and local governments to work together to meet responsibilities to their communities that flow from title and rights and jurisdictions, is part of that foundation.
Address federal and provincial responsibilities to ensure the resilience of critical infrastructure essential for the region, for British Columbia and for Canada; and
Develop a sustained, long-term investment program for the Lower Fraser adequate to support collaborative work across federal, provincial and local governments, First Nations and the private sector to achieve regional floodplain resilience that works with nature, not against it.

Langley City Council approved the City's signing onto this joint statement last night. Other local governments that have signed onto the joint statement include the Metro Vancouver Regional District, Squamish-Lillooet Regional District, Port Coquitlam, and the Township of Langley.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Each New Resident Requires $80,039 in New Public Infrastructure in Metro Vancouver

When building a new home, there are costs for construction, including land, materials, and labour. There is also the cost of providing public infrastructure to the home and the people who live in it. The Metro Vancouver Regional District recently commissioned a study to determine the amount of provincial and local infrastructure required per household and per capita to support population growth in our region.

Pump room inside Langley City’s Water Reservoir

The per capita cost is $80,039. The per-household cost varies by density. For lower-density housing, such as detached homes, the new infrastructure cost is $272,568 per unit. For medium-density housing such as townhomes, the new infrastructure cost is $242,339 per unit. And for higher-density housing such as apartments, the new infrastructure cost is $152,535 per unit.

Local governments in our region are responsible for about 60% of the infrastructure required for new homes, with the remian 40% delivered by the provincial government.

In Langley City, we charge fees for each new housing unit to help cover some of these infrastructure costs. The total local government fees and contributions for a new apartment are around $50,000 per unit. For a detached home, it is around $80,000 per unit. The costs are nowhere near the cost of providing the infrastructure.

Table of infrastructure considered in the study. Select the table to enlarge.

A simple suggestion might be to increase the fees for building new homes. For example, to reach a break-even point, the City and region would have to charge an additional $40,000 in fees per new apartment unit, raising the fee from $50,000 to $90,000 per unit. Of course, this would affect housing affordability.

Local governments do rely on property taxes and user fees as well. We also have aging infrastructure in all municipalities. Generally, property taxes and user fees are used to fund the renewal of existing infrastructure and to support ongoing municipal operations, such as police officers, firefighters, and people who maintain our parks.

Another suggestion might be to increase property taxes and user fees to pay for new infrastructure. This would also have affordability implications.

While property taxes, user fees, and municipal fees charged for each new housing unit will need to increase, the federal government has a role to play. They really do need to step up and increase federal funding for the infrastructure required to support population growth.

There are some limitations to the data, including regional variations in costs. For more information, please read the Regional Planning Committee Regular July 2, 2026 agenda starting on page 168.