Close X
Saturday, November 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s Proposed Foreigner Tax To Help Fund Metro Vancouver Housing Projects

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jul, 2016 01:39 PM
    VICTORIA — A new tax on foreign home buyers in Metro Vancouver is already being earmarked to fund B.C. government housing initiatives that will be announced in the coming months.
     
    Housing Minister Rich Coleman and Finance Minister Mike de Jong say housing initiatives for renters, low-income earners and first-time buyers are set to roll out in the fall, months before an next election that is expected to feature housing as a major battleground.
     
    Coleman says the government wants to offer builders, local governments and first-time buyers incentives to invest in property projects.
     
    De Jong cited Burnaby's Metrotown area where housing and commercial developments surround transit routes as an example of what the province wants to achieve in other neighbourhoods and cities.
     
    Legislation introduced this week would impose a property transfer tax of 15 per cent on foreign nationals who buy property in Metro Vancouver, effective Tuesday. It also includes a $75-million fund to support housing developments.
     
    The Finance Ministry says residential and commercial real estate sales in B.C. neared $94 billion last year and during a five week period starting June 10, foreigners spent more than $1 billion on B.C. property, with more than 86 per cent of it in Metro Vancouver. 
     
     
    Coleman said he expects much of the housing plan to be made public in September.
     
    He said he has had conversations with mayors, including Vancouver's.
     
    "The city's got 20 sites that they have that they'd like to do some innovative stuff with. So, we're looking at those sites and we'll be looking at where we can do affordable rental or a mix of affordable home ownership and rental."
     
    De Jong said the province is working on partnership agreements with local governments and developers, adding that the amount of money it spends will partly be determined by how much additional revenue is generated by the tax.
     
     
    Premier Christy Clark said the government is introducing the tax to help British Columbians own homes. She has rejected calls from the real estate and home building industries to exempt property deals from the tax that were already in the works.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend

    Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend
    The agency says two of the twisters were rated EF-1 wile the others were EF-0, meaning moderate to light damage.

    Environment Canada Says 5 Tornadoes Hit Alberta Over Canada Day Weekend

    A Look Beyond His Books: Dr. Seuss Secret Artwork Displays Author's Private Mind

    A Look Beyond His Books: Dr. Seuss Secret Artwork Displays Author's Private Mind
    VANCOUVER — Late at night, with the world asleep, Theodor Seuss Geisel to his studio would creep. The author and illustrator stashed his unfinished prose and unrolled artwork that nobody knows.

    A Look Beyond His Books: Dr. Seuss Secret Artwork Displays Author's Private Mind

    Federal Banking Regulator Steps Up Supervision Of Mortgage Underwriting

    OTTAWA — The federal banking regulator says it's stepping up its scrutiny of mortgage lending amid concerns about rising home prices and the consequences for lenders if the economy weakens.

    Federal Banking Regulator Steps Up Supervision Of Mortgage Underwriting

    Mounties Revamp Witness Protection Program Following Secret Review

    Mounties Revamp Witness Protection Program Following Secret Review
    The changes come less than two years after a full-scale overhaul of the program prompted by high-profile controversies.

    Mounties Revamp Witness Protection Program Following Secret Review

    Nova Scotia commits to cleaning up the polluted LaHave River

    Nova Scotia commits to cleaning up the polluted LaHave River
    BRIDGEWATER, N.S. — The Nova Scotia government has come up with a plan to stop 600 homes from dumping raw sewage into the LaHave River — but the cleanup won't happen without federal funding.

    Nova Scotia commits to cleaning up the polluted LaHave River

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Student Abhayjeet Singh Sachal Selected For Prestigious Ice Arctic Expedition

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Student Abhayjeet Singh Sachal Selected For Prestigious Ice Arctic Expedition
    Beginning July 21, Abhayjeet Singh Sachal will travel along with a team of more than 100 high-school and university students from around the world to the eastern Canadian Arctic and western Greenland

    Indo-Canadian Sikh Student Abhayjeet Singh Sachal Selected For Prestigious Ice Arctic Expedition