Vancouver Rules Out Bitcoin as Municipal Reserve Asset
Key Takeaways:
Vancouver city staff have officially ruled Bitcoin legally incompatible with municipal reserve requirements under the Vancouver Charter
A staff report dated March 2 recommends closing the motion entirely; council votes March 10
Bitcoin has dropped roughly 50% from its late-2025 peak, now trading near $70,500
City staff have concluded that cryptocurrency does not qualify as an allowable investment under the Vancouver Charter, recommending council formally abandon the proposal at its March 10 meeting.
Why It Failed Legally
The staff report, dated March 2, 2026, pulls no punches: Bitcoin simply does not meet the asset classification requirements set out under British Columbia’s Municipal Finance Authority Act. Municipal reserves are restricted to conservative instruments — government securities, bank deposits, and highly rated commercial paper. Bitcoin, by any legal measure, fits none of those categories.
The B.C. Ministry of Municipal Affairs reinforced the position, stating that provincial legislation exists specifically to shield public funds from “undue risk.” Staff went further, describing continued study of the proposal as a misuse of resources, recommending it be de-prioritized in favor of more pressing city business.
The proposal had been introduced in 2024 by Mayor Ken Sim, at a moment when Bitcoin had crossed the $100,000 mark and crypto enthusiasm was running high. Sim argued the asset was a hedge against inflation and pointed to its performance over 16 years as justification for municipal adoption. He even pledged a personal $10,000 Bitcoin donation to the city if the plan passed.
Politics, Price, and Pushback
That pitch looks considerably weaker today. Bitcoin is currently trading near $70,500 — down roughly 50% from its late-2025 peak above $126,000. The timing underscores a central criticism from financial experts, who cautioned that municipal reserves must remain stable enough to cover immediate funding obligations, regardless of an asset’s long-term speculative upside.
Opposition within council was never quiet. Councillor Pete Fry cited concerns over money laundering and Bitcoin’s documented ties to organized crime. Environmental critics pointed to the energy intensity of Bitcoin mining and its associated greenhouse gas emissions — difficult optics for a city with climate commitments on the books.
One narrow door remains open. Staff acknowledged the city could potentially accept Bitcoin for tax payments, provided it is converted to Canadian dollars immediately upon receipt — a provision that sidesteps reserve classification rules entirely. Beyond that, the broader picture is familiar — municipal cryptocurrency initiatives routinely collapse at the feasibility stage, undone by the same rigid legislative frameworks that killed Vancouver’s proposal. The city is not an outlier. It is, by most accounts, the rule.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ March 6, 2026 12:22 pm