Incumbent Mayor Lisa Helps chats with her supporters at her Fort Street campaign headquarters Aug. 7. Helps recently announced details of her official campaign. Kristyn Anthony/VICTORIA NEWSIncumbent Mayor Lisa Helps chats with her supporters at her Fort Street campaign headquarters Aug. 7. Helps recently announced details of her official campaign. Kristyn Anthony/VICTORIA NEWS

Incumbent Mayor Lisa Helps chats with her supporters at her Fort Street campaign headquarters Aug. 7. Helps recently announced details of her official campaign. Kristyn Anthony/VICTORIA NEWSIncumbent Mayor Lisa Helps chats with her supporters at her Fort Street campaign headquarters Aug. 7. Helps recently announced details of her official campaign. Kristyn Anthony/VICTORIA NEWS

Mayor Lisa Helps prioritizes speed limits, garden suites at campaign launch

Incumbent mayor announces two commitments as campaign for re-election kicks off

  • Sep. 8, 2018 12:00 a.m.

Mayor Lisa Helps announced two key platform commitments at the kick off for her re-election campaign, Friday.

While talk of bike lanes or homelessness might have been expected, Helps instead focused on two residential-based issues.

Her first priority would be to lower speed limits on local neighbourhood streets from 50 km/h to 30 km/h and “tactically enforce new rules.”

On her campaign website, Helps said the reasoning behind this move comes from two months’ worth of “kitchen table talks” with Victoria residents, both in small groups and in casual meetings with her.

“One key recommendation that came up at almost every gathering was: make our local neighbourhood streets safe for our children,” she wrote.

RELATED: Lisa Helps opens campaign headquarters, a ‘space for the community’

Helps stated that she will work with city council, School District 61, the provincial government and the Greater Victoria Integrated Road Safety Unit to accomplish this.

Her second priority is to allow family-sized garden suites on Victoria’s plus-size property lots.

The application process for garden suites changed when Helps was first elected to be quicker and less expensive, but at this point garden suites are limited to one-bedroom suites.

With Helps’ proposed changes to the zoning process, she hopes to see multi-bedroom garden suites for families on plus-size lots, adding that there are currently 5,600 potential lots available.

This would help with the housing crisis, she said, while still sustaining the character of Victoria’s neighbourhoods.

To see more details of these commitments, head to lisahelpsvictoria.ca

nicole.crescenzi@vicnews.com


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