Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Proposed Class Action Against B.C. Says Foreign-Buyers' Tax Unconstitutional

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Mar, 2017 12:56 PM
    VANCOUVER — A proposed class-action lawsuit says British Columbia's 15-per-cent tax on foreign nationals who buy homes in the Vancouver area is unfairly prejudiced against people from Asia, who have historically faced discrimination in the province.
     
    Amended documents filed in B.C. Supreme Court last week argue the so-called foreign-buyers' tax is unconstitutional because it violates equality rights by making an "arbitrary" distinction between those who are citizens and permanent residents of Canada and those who are not.
     
    The lawsuit, which was originally filed in September, says the tax unfairly assumes foreign nationals are wealthier than Canadians, and argues it violates dozens of international treaties guaranteeing equal treatment to non-Canadian citizens and permanent residents.
     
     
    The B.C. government introduced the foreign-buyers' tax last summer in an effort to quell Metro Vancouver's overheated real-estate market, which saw July prices for detached homes soar 38 per cent over a single year.
     
    The representative plaintiff in the proposed class action is Jing Li, a Chinese national who learned she would have to pay an additional $83,000 on a $587,000 home in Langley that she agreed to purchase days before the government announced the new tax.
     
    Earlier this year, Premier Christy Clark tweaked the rules around the law exempting anyone living in B.C. on a work permit and who pays taxes in the province.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    No Cause Of Death Yet For Aquarium Belugas, But Facility To Expand Its Exhibit

    No Cause Of Death Yet For Aquarium Belugas, But Facility To Expand Its Exhibit
    Vancouver aquarium officials say they still don't know what killed two beluga whales last year, but the facility is pushing ahead with plans to expand its beluga conservation program.

    No Cause Of Death Yet For Aquarium Belugas, But Facility To Expand Its Exhibit

    Newly Open Trump Tower A Beacon Of Controversy In Multicultural Vancouver

    Newly Open Trump Tower A Beacon Of Controversy In Multicultural Vancouver

      VANCOUVER — When developer Joo Kim Tiah announced in 2013 that his spiralling sk...

    Newly Open Trump Tower A Beacon Of Controversy In Multicultural Vancouver

    Police Arrest Suspect After Montreal Mosque Hit By Vandalism

    MONTREAL — A mosque in east-end Montreal was the apparent target of vandalism early today.

    Police Arrest Suspect After Montreal Mosque Hit By Vandalism

    Petition Pushes Back Against Move To Exclude Police From Vancouver Pride Parade

    VANCOUVER — A campaign to exclude police from Vancouver's Pride Parade is experiencing pushback from a group that says not allowing officers to take part risks undermining the positive relationship between the LGBTQ community and law enforcement.

    Petition Pushes Back Against Move To Exclude Police From Vancouver Pride Parade

    Man With Cancer Wants New Treatment But Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't

    Man With Cancer Wants New Treatment But Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't
    REGINA — A Saskatchewan man with pancreatic cancer is campaigning to have a new type of equipment made available for his treatment, but the province says it isn't yet covered by medicare.

    Man With Cancer Wants New Treatment But Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't

    B.C. Teen Handed Probation For Directing Sexualized Truth Or Dare Game

    B.C. Teen Handed Probation For Directing Sexualized Truth Or Dare Game
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A teenage girl won't spend time behind bars after admitting that she orchestrated a sexualized game of truth or dare involving her 18-year-old foster brother and a 12-year-old girl.

    B.C. Teen Handed Probation For Directing Sexualized Truth Or Dare Game