Vancouver Mayor's Bitcoin Investment Proposal Blocked by City Law

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Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim’s plan to invest city funds in bitcoin is blocked by local law, per a staff report. The Vancouver Charter and BC’s Municipal Finance Authority Act restrict city investments to conservative assets, excluding cryptocurrencies. The report advises closing a 2024 motion to make Vancouver a bitcoin-friendly city. Section 201 bars bitcoin from city portfolios. A narrow question remains if the city could accept bitcoin for taxes, provided it is immediately converted to CAD. The bitcoin ETF approval debate continues to influence regulatory discussions, with a spot bitcoin ETF still pending.

Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim’s plan to invest city reserves in bitcoinBTC$70,614.48 is not permitted under the Vancouver Charter and British Columbia’s Municipal Finance Authority Act, a staff report says.

The briefing released ahead of a March council meeting recommends closing a 2024 motion to make Vancouver a “bitcoin-friendly city,” after staff determined the plan violates municipal investment rules embedded in the city's charger. Staff wrote they “conclusively determined that under the Vancouver Charter, bitcoin is not an allowable investment asset for the City.”

The conclusion reflects the highly restrictive framework governing how Canadian municipalities can invest public funds. Section 201 of the Vancouver Charter allows the city to invest idle funds only in a narrow set of instruments, such as federal or provincial government securities, government-guaranteed bonds, municipal debt, bank-guaranteed investments, credit union deposits and certain pooled investment vehicles.

British Columbia’s Municipal Finance Authority Act reinforces the restriction.

Municipal investment pools are limited to conservative assets such as government bonds, municipal securities, bank deposits and highly rated commercial paper.

The law defines eligible securities as bonds, debentures, deposit certificates and promissory notes, reflecting a framework built around fixed income and cash equivalents. Stocks, commodities and cryptocurrencies are not included.

A narrower question remains unresolved: whether Vancouver could still pursue the softer branding goal embedded in the motion by accepting bitcoin for taxes or fees, provided the cryptocurrency is immediately converted into Canadian dollars.

While the charter regulates how city funds are invested, it does not necessarily govern how payments are processed.


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