Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Supports Housing Vacancy Tax In Vancouver To Assist With Rental Shortage

The Canadian Press, 11 Jul, 2016 01:19 PM
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government will support the city of Vancouver's request for a tax on vacant housing.
     
    Finance Minister Mike de Jong has announced the legislature will meet July 25 to consider revisions to the Vancouver Charter that would allow the city to create and collect the tax.
     
    De Jong said the levy is aimed at improving the supply of rental homes across Metro Vancouver's superheated real estate market.
     
    "There's no question that, in addition to the conversations that we have been having about affordability with respect to the purchasing market, there are challenges for folks wanting to rent," he said at a news conference Monday.
     
    "It is ultimately about supply. It is about trying to increase the supply of rental accommodation. You will know that that is something the province and the government take very seriously."
     
     
    A vacancy tax is a reasonable request to try to regulate the rental market while waiting for new construction to come online, he added.
     
    De Jong said the province would also introduce legislative changes to end self-regulation of the real estate industry.
     
    He and Premier Christy Clark announced late last month the province would revoke the privilege of self-regulation after a damning report concluded the sector had lost the public trust.
     
    Mayor Gregor Robertson and de Jong met two weeks ago to discuss the city's demand for an empty homes tax. At the time, the mayor said that if the province wouldn't help, the city was prepared to go it alone and create a business tax using existing mechanisms in the charter.
     
    A recent city-commissioned study found that about 10,800 homes were left empty for a year or more, most of them condominiums. The city's rental vacancy rate is 0.6 per cent.
     
     
    NDP Housing critic David Eby said the province refused to take action on real estate prices over the last 12-week legislative session. The only reason the Liberal government is taking action now is because they're looking at poll numbers in Metro Vancouver, he said.
     
    "The action they're allegedly taking is, as always, the absolute least that they could do," he said.
     
    "They're asking the city of Vancouver to do their job of protecting their interests of Metro Vancouver residents who can't afford to buy a place, simply because they're unwilling to do it themselves."
     
    He said the government needs to take action to address the high price of housing elsewhere. Metro Vancouver cities including Burnaby, Richmond and Surrey have also seen dramatic price spikes.
     
    Eby said the province has the tools to levy taxes on people who are using housing as an investment instead of a place to live, but they have failed to do so.
     
     
    "To stand in front of a sign that says 'Taking action on housing affordability' when the complete opposite is true, after two years of pushing this government, is an insult to the residents of Metro Vancouver," he said.
     
    Eby said he will have to see what de Jong puts forward in the legislature before he decides whether to support it.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions

    Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau flies to Poland on Thursday for his first NATO leaders' summit armed with a promise to help the alliance in its standoff with Russia.

    Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions

    Unrelenting Demand For Luxury Properties In Vancouver, Toronto: Sotheby's

    Unrelenting Demand For Luxury Properties In Vancouver, Toronto: Sotheby's
    Real estate markets remained supercharged in Vancouver and Toronto over the first half of 2016 but a new report from Sotheby's International Realty Canada shows even Calgary's struggling market perked up between January and June.

    Unrelenting Demand For Luxury Properties In Vancouver, Toronto: Sotheby's

    Canadian National Downhill Mountain Bike Championships To Feature Redesigned Course At Sun Peaks

    Canadian National Downhill Mountain Bike Championships To Feature Redesigned Course At Sun Peaks
    The new layout, 100 per cent singletrack, is more technically demanding than in the past, according to the resort, which is hosting the event for the third year in a row.

    Canadian National Downhill Mountain Bike Championships To Feature Redesigned Course At Sun Peaks

    B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group

    B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group
      "It was such an honour, such a privilege to be able to do it," said Bains, a professor of Sikh studies at the University of the Fraser Valley in Abbotsford, B.C.

    B.C. College Issues Cease And Desist Letter To 'Death Midwives' Group

    Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race

    Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race
    Kenney made it clear at a news conference in Edmonton that he isn't interested in the Progressive Conservatives or the Opposition Wildrose taking each other over.

    Jason Kenney Says United Alberta Right Would Face 2nd Leadership Race

    P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It

    P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It
    A Summerside, P.E.I., restaurant has created lobster ice cream, and its owner insists people are enjoying it.

    P.E.I. Restaurant Creates Lobster Ice Cream, Says People Seem To Enjoy It