Fruitvale to celebrate daycare’s completion, housing project’s start

Fruitvale will simultaneously celebrate the completion of one major project and the start of another on Friday.

A sod turning will be held for a 31-unit affordable housing complex followed by a ribbon-cutting next door for a newly-completed 37-seat daycare.

The projects are being built in partnership between the Village of Fruitvale, Lower Columbia Affordable Housing Society, BC Housing, and the Columbia Basin Trust.

“We’ve been working towards this for a few years now,” mayor Steve Morissette said.

“These projects are huge for Fruitvale. We’re really excited to fill a big need in the area. We, like everyone else, are struggling for affordable housing and daycare as well. Our daycare operator already has 100 applicants for the 37 seats. So it’s badly, badly needed.”

Morissette said the daycare is “99 per cent complete” but is still being set up for kids. It’s expected to open around the beginning of January.

The three-storey housing project, meanwhile, is expected to open in mid-2025 and will serve what Morissette called “a full spectrum of tenants” including families, seniors, and people with disabilities.

The projects are going up adjacent to the former Beaver Valley Middle School, which the village acquired several years ago.

“These two projects involve the biggest investment in Fruitvale by the province since that derelict middle school was built in 1969,” Morissette said.

While the village originally planned to demolish the school, they haven’t been able to secure grants for that purpose, so now they plan to repurpose it for housing.

Friday’s ceremony is from 3:15 to 4:15 p.m. Invited dignitaries include MLA Katrine Conroy and Columbia Basin Trust CEO Johnny Strilaeff, among others.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Zoey – a dog with a mix of everything!

This weeks Summit Radio Pet of the Week from the BCSPCA is Zoey!

B.C. boosts funding to expand RCMP hate crime unit

British Columbia is significantly expanding the RCMP’s provincial hate crimes unit.

This year’s West Kootenay-Boundary Move to Cure ALS Walk raises over $20k

West Kootenay-Boundary Move to Cure ALS is walking the talk, all the way to $20,176.

Does the Kootenay-Boundary Regional Hospital need a second access?

The West Kootenay-Boundary Regional Hospital District Board has raised the long-standing issue of the need for a second access to Kootenay-Boundary Regional Hospital in Trail.

Pape signs with Smoke Eaters

The Trail Smoke Eaters have signed another German defenseman.
- Advertisement -