The Volokh Conspiracy
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Canadian Indigenous Nations Use Exemptions From Zoning Rules to Build Affordable High-Rise Housing
They are to be commended. But other property owners should also be freed of exclusionary zoning.

Like many parts of the United States, several major cities in Canada have severe housing shortages caused by exclusionary zoning - rules that forbid or severely restrict the construction of relatively low-cost multifamily housing. In some places, however, Canadian indigenous nations (known as "First Nations") have been able to get around these rules. A recent article in the Canadian publication Maclean's has an interesting description of one such project in Vancouver (one of the cities most severely impacted by zoning restrictions):
Vancouver has long been nicknamed the "city of glass" for its shimmering high-rise skyline. Over the next few years, that skyline will get a very large new addition: Sen̓áḵw, an 11-tower development that will Tetrize 6,000 apartments onto just over 10 acres of land in the heart of the city. Once complete, this will be the densest neighbourhood in Canada, providing thousands of homes for Vancouverites who have long been squeezed between the country's priciest real estate and some of its lowest vacancy rates.
Sen̓áḵw is big, ambitious and undeniably urban—and undeniably Indigenous. It's being built on reserve land owned by the Squamish First Nation, and it's spearheaded by the Squamish Nation itself, in partnership with the private real estate developer Westbank. Because the project is on First Nations land, not city land, it's under Squamish authority, free of Vancouver's zoning rules. And the Nation has chosen to build bigger, denser and taller than any development on city property would be allowed.
The project and others like have come under fire from a coalition of NIMBY interests and left-wingers angry that First Nations has deviated from "indigenous ways of being":
Predictably, not everyone has been happy about it. Critics have included local planners, politicians and, especially, residents of Kitsilano Point, a rarified beachfront neighbourhood bordering the reserve. And there's been an extra edge to their critiques that's gone beyond standard-issue NIMBYism about too-tall buildings and preserving neighbourhood character. There's also been a persistent sense of disbelief that Indigenous people could be responsible for this futuristic version of urban living. In 2022, Gordon Price, a prominent Vancouver urban planner and a former city councillor, told Gitxsan reporter Angela Sterritt, "When you're building 30, 40-storey high rises out of concrete, there's a big gap between that and an Indigenous way of building."
…. In 2022, city councillor Colleen Hardwick said of [a similar development], "How do you reconcile Indigenous ways of being with 18-storey high-rises?" (Hardwick, it goes without saying, is not Indigenous.)
…What chafes critics, even those who might consider themselves progressive, is that they expect reconciliation to instead look like a kind of reversal, rewinding the tape of history to some museum-diorama past. Coalitions of neighbours near Iy̓álmexw and Sen̓áḵw have offered their own counter-proposals for developing the sites, featuring smaller, shorter buildings and other changes. At the January hearing for Iy̓álmexw, one resident called on the First Nations to build entirely with selectively logged B.C. timber, in accord with what she claimed were their cultural values…That attitude can cast Indigenous people in the role of glorified park rangers.
The Squamish Nation is right to ignore both the NIMBYs and left-wing naysayers. NIMBYism should not be allowed to undermine property rights and block much-needed housing development. In places where demand is high and housing construction severely restricted, even many current homeowners have much to gain from legalizing new development.
As for the idea that First Nations should stick to "indigeneous ways of being," the right response is that they should be able to build whatever type of housing they want. White progressive critics of the Squamish project surely would not accept similar constraints for themselves. Should descendants of white Europeans also be limited to building the types of housing their ancestors built centuries ago, using the same sorts of materials? If it was good enough for your medieval peasant ancestors, it's good enough for you!
Economist Alex Tabarrok (my George Mason University colleague) notes that the Vancouver project is an example of the "charter city" concept at work, and highlights similar developments in the US:
The Catawba Indian Nation, for example, established the Catawba Digital Economic Zone (CDEZ), where I serve as an advisor. The CDEZ is based on US law but tailored for digital entrepreneurs, freelancers, FinTech, digital assets, Web3, and other exponential digital technologies. The progressive left probably isn't happy about that either. Personally I am delighted to support initiatives that empower indigenous communities through capitalist ventures. More broadly, however, I support the introduction of new governance models to encourage competition in governance—bring on a new era of discovery and Tiebout competition!
My only complaint is that indigenous groups should not be the only ones exempt from exclusionary zoning rules. Those restrictions should be abolished for all property owners, regardless of race or ancestry.
In the US, that should, I believe, be accomplished by a combination of legislative reform and stronger judicial enforcement of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms does not include protection for property rights. So the optimal reform strategy there is likely to be different.
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And when one of those buildings catches on fire, the City should say "sucks to be you" -- you didn't get our permits, we ain't putting the fire out."
Want to be a foreign nation? Get the UN to help you...
As if the buildings can't possibly be built to modern fire codes without being built within arbitrary, restrictive limits put in place by know-nothing bureaucrats?
Building codes are unlawful takings, haven't you heard?
The last I heard, the bird bird bird, the bird is the word.
Although phrased as snark, this is a serious argument. Professor Somin is supremely confident he can distinguish between necessary regulations and unnecessary ones, so he can easily get rid of all unnecessary regulations and leave all necessary ones undisturbed.
I have long had two issues with this. The first is that policy – establishing what’s necessary – requires predicting the future. This is something that human beings are singularly bad at doing. We are much better at being confident of our abilities and knowledge than at actually having them. For this reason, in criticizing Professor Somin I have consistently argued that his confidence, like most people’s, is false confidence. Like the rest of us, he doesn’t really know as much as he thinks he does about what the consequences of the policies he advocates will be.
The second is that because nobody really knows what the future will bring, but all of us think we do, then one of the principles of ancient skepticism – the skeptic may as well go along with the majority and take the conventional approach – carries some weight. I think a Republican system of government gives it greater weight. When the people make decisions as a public, at least they are responsible, and have to blame themselves, for the consequences of being wrong.
If we accept the ancient Socratic precept that all of us are convinced we know better, but the wise person is the one aware he doesn’t know, we become less convinced of the need to overrule everybody else when we think they are mistaken.
Professor Somin is convinced he knows, those he disagrees with are ignorant. I don’t always disagree with Professor Somin. But nonetheless, at the basis of Republican forms of government is the idea that people are capable of thinking rationally. Amd when other people disagree, it is at least possible that, rather than being ignorant, they know something you don’t.
These principles have guided a form of intellectually-oriented conservativism on a thread including Burke and Chesterton. It is quite different from, indeed it hardly seems to resemble the form of conservatism that motivates conservative politics today. But it is also quite different from Professor Somon’s classical liberalism, which credit human reason – at least ones own – with greater powers than skeptics have warned, over millennia, are actually warranted.
It’s worth mentioning modern thinkers like Nassim Nicholas Taleb who have proposed a revival of this form of ancient skepticism.
What's this got to do with the article?
Some jealous racists are mad that the First Nations people get to build bigger buildings than they can, or that their "not Indian enough" buildings will block their beach view.
This isn't structural engineers pointing out that the new developments are being planned with cheap materials, or not to code, or any safety concerns. Just racist NIMBYs and dumb bureaucrats.
If autonomous regions exist within a state, their autonomy should be complete, with concomitant border control and financial separation. If the Great White Father has granted semi-autonomy to descendants of pre-Columbian residents of the Western Hemisphere, then both parties should either (a) agree to a divorce or (b) dissolve the partition and require the "autonomous" region to adopt the law and property practices of the governing state. That such a question was not resolved in the 19th Century is just beyond comprehension.
This just so perfectly exemplifies Dr. Ed: a mindless lashing out whenever things don't go his way, with a complete inability to be anything other than a sore loser. Someone on the other side of the aisle does something he disapproves of, and his thinking immediately to murder, coups, truckers trying to starve people, or even civil war. And now, letting people burn.
And emphasis on the mindless in my above paragraph. For obvious reasons, cities are not going to refuse to put out fires within their borders (even in an enclave) out of spite; fires do not adhere to political boundaries.
You don't have to go north of the 49th to find irrational policies. My state has parks that depend on county first responders for emergency response to help visitors, and the state government sees no harm in the taxpayers of the county paying for these services without any compensation from the capitol. Curiously, the airport and most of the hotels that support visitors to the park aren't in the same county as the park, and the park provides most of the revenue to the state park system. But, who cares? Is this relevant? Yes, because unequal treatment is baked into government, and unequal treatment is even more pronounced when the residue of bad 19th Century decisions persist in modern policies.
Good grief! The blatant condescension is amazing. I'm surprised the NIMBYs didn't accuse the Squamish Nation of cultural appropriation.
I live in Vancouver. The current mayor and city council have adopted a watered down Canadian version of anti-progressivism and anti-wokeness as their brand. They’re not yelling about drag brunches, but you can reliably expect them to oppose density, bike lanes, police reform, public transit projects, etc. The previous mayor was the opposite. This has really emboldened the NIMBY crowd because they see the last election as proof that they’re right and that everyone agrees with their view of how the city should be. Which is making this project, and the fact that they're not able to exert influence to stop it the way they usually can, extra infuriating to them.
NIMBY isn't partisan.
Land use zoning was invented in Manhattan to exclude Jews from neighborhoods. It is uncompensated taking of value by local government and on its face a violation of the Constitution. The second most amazing thing to this goy is the persistent advocacy by certain legal practitioners whose ancestors were victimized by this practice of its continuation. The most amazing thing about land use zoning is that the only difference between places where it is practiced and places where it is not practiced is the difference in political contributions and concomitant spot zoning...