As the city of Camas plans for growth and development coming to the city over the next two decades, many community members have questioned how Camas might retain its small-town charm, increase housing affordability and protect its natural beauty, parks and open spaces.
Residents who participated in in-person and online community visioning events as part of the City’s “Our Camas 2045” long-range planning said they wanted city officials to maintain Camas’ “small-town community feel,” keep the downtown as the center of the community; support more community events; maintain quality schools; have access to nature and recreational amenities; improve water quality in the city’s lakes; preserve Camas’ natural beauty and green spaces; enhance the city’s trails and parks; plan for better infrastructure, including more non-motorized transportation infrastructure such as sidewalks, bike lanes, pedestrian-only areas and safer road crossings; support infrastructure investments downtown to make room for more diverse businesses, restaurants, pedestrian-friendly infrastructure and more parking; and support for more downtown housing options.
Meanwhile, the county has allocated population and employment targets for each city to plan for in the coming two decades. Camas, for instance, will need to accommodate more than 4,400 new residents and plan for thousands of new housing units that might be affordable for residents earning less than 120% median income.
City planners have pointed out that simply zoning for more multi-family housing, which traditionally is more affordable, does not guarantee that developers will want to build those types of units. In fact, many of the multi-family developments that have popped up in downtown Camas, on the Camas-Washougal waterfront and in Vancouver and Portland often rent for market rates that are cost-prohibitive to many middle- and lower-income earners.
Local officials have an obligation to embrace a more diverse community, including a diversity of income levels. Otherwise, Camas, like so many popular-but-pricey communities before it, runs the risk of becoming yet another high-end bedroom community lacking the vibrancy of a city that not only accommodates corporate executives, doctors and lawyers but also teachers, restaurant staff, artists, retail workers, nonprofit staff, social workers and others who provide valuable community services while earning wages that often fall below the definition of a “livable wage” in areas like Camas.