Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver City Council Passes One Per Cent Tax On Empty Homes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2016 10:01 AM
    Vancouver has voted to implement a one per cent tax on empty homes in a bid to alleviate the city's crunched rental housing market.
     
    The tax, which is the first of its kind in Canada, will apply to non-principal residences that are left empty for six months of the year or longer.
     
    Home owners will be required to self-declare whether their property is vacant and could be subject to fines up to $10,000 for false reports.
     

     
    Properties under renovation, owners who are in hospital and condos with strata rental restrictions will all be exempt from the tax.
     
    Eight city councillors voted in favour of the tax Wednesday, while three opposed the levy.
     
    Councillors also directed city staff to work with the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and other organizations to collect data on possible impacts of the tax and report back next year.
     
    Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson has said the main goal of the tax is not to bring in money, but to encourage owners to rent their properties in a city with the lowest rental vacancy rate and highest rents in Canada.
     
     
    He says revenues will go towards paying for the program and supporting affordable housing initiatives.
     
    Staff hope to have the levy in place for the 2017 year, with the first payments expected in 2018.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Teen Apologizes For Promoting Terrorism On Social Media

    Manitoba Teen Apologizes For Promoting Terrorism On Social Media
    BRANDON, Man. — A Manitoba teenager has apologized for promoting terrorist activity on social media.

    Manitoba Teen Apologizes For Promoting Terrorism On Social Media

    Here's How Canada's New Immigration Measures Will Benefit Indian Students

    Here's How Canada's New Immigration Measures Will Benefit Indian Students
    Canada has announced new immigration measures that are likely to prove beneficial to international students in the country, a fair percentage of whom are from India.

    Here's How Canada's New Immigration Measures Will Benefit Indian Students

    This New YVR Autism Access Sticker Gives Expedited Airport Processing

    This New YVR Autism Access Sticker Gives Expedited Airport Processing
    YVR and Canucks Autism Network develop new travel tool for individuals living with autism

    This New YVR Autism Access Sticker Gives Expedited Airport Processing

    Vancouver Asks Court To Order Homeless Campers Off City-Owned Land

    Vancouver Asks Court To Order Homeless Campers Off City-Owned Land
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge is considering the fate of a homeless camp set up on a piece of land owned by the City of Vancouver on the east side of downtown.

    Vancouver Asks Court To Order Homeless Campers Off City-Owned Land

    Parents Of Student Who Died Of Alcohol Poisoning Sue Halifax University

    Parents Of Student Who Died Of Alcohol Poisoning Sue Halifax University
    HALIFAX — The parents of a young Chinese woman who died of alcohol poisoning after a night of drinking inside a Dalhousie University residence are suing the school for alleged negligence

    Parents Of Student Who Died Of Alcohol Poisoning Sue Halifax University

    'No Ill Will': Dead Calgary Woman's Family Blames 'Hideous Illness,' Defends Husband

    'No Ill Will': Dead Calgary Woman's Family Blames 'Hideous Illness,' Defends Husband
    CALGARY — Siblings of a senior found dead in her home last month say a hideous illness, and not her husband of 56 years, is to blame.

    'No Ill Will': Dead Calgary Woman's Family Blames 'Hideous Illness,' Defends Husband