
Mayor of Faro, Yukon, hopes surplus housing can attract new residents to the small town
CBC
While many people across the Yukon struggle to find affordable housing, the mayor of Faro says people should consider moving to his town.
Mayor Jack Bowers says the town's population currently sits at around 600 full time residents. He's hoping to increase that by enticing people with the affordable housing options his town currently has.
"We've got the capacity to grow," Bowers told CBC News. "We've got a water, sewer infrastructure system that can support 3,000 people. So yeah, we think we're on the precipice of a boom. We're ready for it, we just need it to start happening."
The remote town in central Yukon has long had surplus housing, with a lot of units sitting empty and abandoned for years after the Faro lead-zinc mine closed in the 1990s.
In 2017, the town decided to try to sell about 170 empty housing units. It sold most of the buildings, which were in various states of disrepair, to seven private property owners who had agreed to repair and restore the dwellings to a livable condition.
Bowers says many of the property owners are accessing government funding to renovate and restore the homes.
Other residents are buying lots and building new homes in town, he said.
While the average price of a single unit of a duplex in Whitehorse is close to $600,000, in Faro, you could buy the entire building for that price.
A triplex in the "lower bench" area has three 3-bedroom units and is being sold by the town for $120,000. The sale is the result of tax recovery by the town, and none of the units are in livable condition and require extensive renovations.
Other local listings include single-family, turnkey homes being sold for just under $300,000.
Bowers said there are homes available for anyone who is willing to live, work, and contribute to the community.
He also referred to a camp being built to accommodate workers with the Faro mine remediation project.
"So what if those 300 or 400 jobs up there, some of those folks have families and they want to come to Faro and bring their families with them, rather than live in a camp? We have the housing to do that.
"We have the affordable housing. That's our spiel — come to Faro, make this your home."













