Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

No B.C. Style Tax, Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Will Make Small Change To Help First Time Home Buyers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Nov, 2016 12:27 PM
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says her government's plan to help first-time home buyers will involve a "small change," not a radical shift in the way the housing market works in the province.
     
    The provincial Liberal government will announce the strategy in Monday's fall economic statement, but Wynne is downplaying expectations of broader action to address soaring home prices in the Greater Toronto Area.
     
    There were a record 9,768 properties sold in the Greater Toronto Area last month — up 11.5 per cent year-over-year— while prices jumped 21 per cent in the same period to an average of $762,975.
     
    Wynne says first-time buyers have a real challenge saving a big enough down payment to get into the market, so the government will make "some small adjustments" to help them out.
     
    She says the province doesn't have all the data it would need to make larger changes, and insists Ontario will not follow British Columbia's lead to impose a 15 per cent tax on foreign buyers in Vancouver.
     
    Home sales in Vancouver began to dip before the tax was introduced in August, but those declines have accelerated since, plunging nearly 39 per cent last month compared with October 2015.
     
    The Ontario Real Estate Association has asked the government to exempt first-time buyers from the land transfer tax to help them get into the market.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Doctor Committed Sexual Act On Patient, College Of Physicians Rules

    Toronto Doctor Committed Sexual Act On Patient, College Of Physicians Rules
    The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario's discipline committee found that Dr. Donato Anthony Ruggiero, 70, put his penis in a patient's vagina during an exam in or around 1986.

    Toronto Doctor Committed Sexual Act On Patient, College Of Physicians Rules

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird
    MONTREAL — The votes are in and, if Canadians have their way, the common loon could one day join the beaver and maple leaf as an official symbol of Canada.

    Canadians Pick Common Loon As Favourite To Become Country's National Bird

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum
    TORONTO — Ontario's Progressive Conservatives won a provincial byelection Thursday in northeast Toronto, but it may have come at a cost.

    Ontario Tories Win Toronto Byelection After Flip-flopping On Sex-ed Curriculum

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer
    OTTAWA — Federal Conservative leadership hopeful Kellie Leitch stood firm Friday amid criticisms of a survey from her campaign that asked whether would-be immigrants should be screened for "anti-Canadian" values.

    Screening Immigrants For 'Anti-Canadian' Values Will Make Canada Safer

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police
    Police say two victims were found at the scene with gunshot wounds.

    Targeted Shooting Leaves One Dead, Says Chilliwack, B.C., Police

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators
    The team targets the "worst of the worst offenders" using the Internet to lure children for sexual purposes.

    RCMP Urge End To B.C. Vigilante Groups Targeting Online Predators