Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mayor Ken Sim announces major updates to City of Vancouver Patios Program

Darpan News Desk , 28 Nov, 2025 05:35 PM
  • Mayor Ken Sim announces major updates to City of Vancouver Patios Program

Today, Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim was joined by local business leaders to announce updates to Vancouver’s Patio Program that will streamline applications, reduce costs for operators, and create a more vibrant and accessible patio culture citywide.

“Vancouverites love patios. They create welcoming spaces for people to gather, support local businesses, and help make our city more vibrant and connected,” said Sim. “We are creating a simpler, faster, and more predictable patio process that supports businesses of all size.”

These updates include eliminating engineered drawings for simple patio designs, expanding eligibility so more businesses can participate, introducing a new basic low-cost design template, and offering more flexible options for weather protection and design features. Patio fees for storefront seating have also been eliminated.

Councillor Mike Klassen, Chair of the Vancouver Business Growth Task Force, introduced an amendment, shaped directly by business community feedback, that strengthens the City’s patio program by directing staff to develop a fully coordinated patio permitting framework.

“Businesses have been clear that the system needed to be simpler and easier to navigate,” said Councillor Mike Klassen. “By modernizing the framework and removing barriers, we are supporting entrepreneurship and helping patios remain an important part of Vancouver’s culture.”

Staff will report back to Council in January 2026 with the full framework, implementation plan, and recommendations on which existing patio pilots should become permanent. The coordinated framework would include a single set of guidelines, a unified timeline, consistent design requirements, and one point of contact for businesses.

The program also includes new accessibility requirements for curbside patios, including an accessible seat, a clear path of travel, and accessible entry points. Existing patios will have up to three years to upgrade and will receive a one-time 100% reimbursement of their patio permit fee once accessibility improvements are completed.

Councillor Sarah Kirby-Yung, who introduced an amendment to freeze patio permit fees in this year’s budget, emphasized the importance of affordability and predictability for Vancouver’s business community.

“Affordability and predictability continue to be top priorities for local businesses,” said Councillor Sarah Kirby-Yung. “Freezing patio permit fees gives operators stability at a time when every dollar matters and ensures they can plan with confidence.”

The City engaged operators, BIAs, and hospitality leaders through three rounds of consultation, with more than 80% of participants expressing support for the proposed updates to the Patio Program.

Picture Courtesy: vancouver.ca 

MORE National ARTICLES

City welcomes new Burnaby RCMP Officer in Charge

City welcomes new Burnaby RCMP Officer in Charge
Chief Superintendent Parmar brings nearly three decades of distinguished service with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, having served in communities across British Columbia including Powell River, Kelowna and Surrey. His career has spanned frontline patrol, major crime investigations, operational leadership and strategic transition planning. 

City welcomes new Burnaby RCMP Officer in Charge

B.C. public service job action escalates with overtime ban at liquor warehouses

B.C. public service job action escalates with overtime ban at liquor warehouses
The BC General Employees' Union says in a statement that the overtime ban is effective today and applies to distribution centres in Delta, Richmond and Kamloops as well as at the Liquor Distribution Branch's head office in Burnaby.

B.C. public service job action escalates with overtime ban at liquor warehouses

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk
Smith says the shooting should be condemned across the political spectrum, while Eby says it's a chance to reflect on the importance of a peaceful political culture.

Premiers Smith and Eby condemn assassination of American activist Charlie Kirk

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says
On Thursday, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the government's new major projects office will work to speed up engineering and regulatory work on the Alto high-speed rail line. 

High-speed rail construction could begin in four years, LeBlanc says

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop
While many audience members pushed back on the province's six proposals with the aim of taking greater control over immigration, policing, taxation and other issues, the crowd joined past town halls by overwhelmingly supporting the ideas in straw polls.

Danielle Smith, Alberta Next panel received warmly by Lethbridge crowd in latest stop

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection
The provincial government said it took the preventive measure after a Lion electric school bus caught fire in Montreal earlier this week.

School bus fire: Quebec pulls all 1,200 Lion electric buses off roads for inspection