Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. property values flat across much of province, especially in urban centres

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jan, 2025 03:11 PM
  • B.C. property values flat across much of province, especially in urban centres

British Columbia's latest property assessments show values have been relatively flat in many parts of the province, especially major urban areas such as Vancouver, Victoria and Kelowna.

BC Assessment says the newly updated property values, as of July 1, 2024, show almost all Lower Mainland communities within a three per cent rise or decline from the previous year.

The story is the same in Greater Victoria, where the District of North Saanich is the only community that saw a change beyond the three-per-cent range for single-family homes, with a five per cent drop.

Only three Vancouver Island communities experienced valuation changes beyond three per cent among strata homes, with values falling in View Royal by four per cent, but rising in Courtenay and Campbell River by four and five per cent respectively.

Flat trends continue in the southern Interior and northern B.C., where single-family home values dropped by one per cent in Kelowna and West Kelowna, while Prince George saw a three per cent rise.

Among the few communities that saw values spike by double digits were Williams Lake and Wells, where single-family home valuations rose 10 per cent, while valuations spiked 13 per cent in Tumbler Ridge.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau says G20 leaders' statement on Ukraine is not strong enough

Trudeau says G20 leaders' statement on Ukraine is not strong enough
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday the final leaders' statement from the G20 summit in Brazil is not strong enough on the war in Ukraine.  He is also expressing some concern about the impact U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's return to the White House will have on global support for Ukraine.

Trudeau says G20 leaders' statement on Ukraine is not strong enough

Inflation rate rises to 2% in October, reducing odds of another jumbo rate cut

Inflation rate rises to 2% in October, reducing odds of another jumbo rate cut
Canada's inflation rate climbed back up to two per cent in October, shifting expectations slightly in favour of a quarter-percentage point interest rate cut next month. The report from Statistics Canada on Tuesday said prices in October increased at a faster annual pace in five out of the eight major components of the consumer price index.

Inflation rate rises to 2% in October, reducing odds of another jumbo rate cut

Storm bringing rain and intense winds to Vancouver

Storm bringing rain and intense winds to Vancouver
Environment Canada said it could bring gusts of 120 km/h to the central and north coasts, with winds of 100 km/h or more elsewhere on the coast and Vancouver Island. It said the winds were expected to peak Tuesday night with severe weather likely to continue into Wednesday.

Storm bringing rain and intense winds to Vancouver

Canada Post, union sit down with mediator, but still ‘far apart’ as strike drags on

Canada Post, union sit down with mediator, but still ‘far apart’ as strike drags on
Representatives from Canada Post and the postal workers union sat down with a special mediator Monday, but seem no closer to reaching a deal as a countrywide strike enters its fifth day. In a statement, Canada Post said the parties "remain far apart" but that the Crown corporation continues to aim for a deal hammered out at the bargaining table.

Canada Post, union sit down with mediator, but still ‘far apart’ as strike drags on

'Profit ahead of people's lives': Trial begins in freezing deaths of migrant family

'Profit ahead of people's lives': Trial begins in freezing deaths of migrant family
A family of four from India froze to death while trying to walk across the Canada-U.S. border in a blizzard because alleged human smugglers cared more about money than the risk of people dying, a prosecutor said Monday. The two men are accused of being part of an operation that brought people from India to Canada then across the border from Manitoba into Minnesota.

'Profit ahead of people's lives': Trial begins in freezing deaths of migrant family

Border agency says changes to hours at 35 land crossings coming in January

Border agency says changes to hours at 35 land crossings coming in January
The Canada Border Services Agency says it will be adjusting hours at 35 land ports of entry in January -- a move it says will allow it to deploy officers at busier land crossings. Only one crossing in Alberta will be affected -- the facility at Del Bonita -- where hours will be 9 to 5, seven days a week, beginning January 6.

Border agency says changes to hours at 35 land crossings coming in January