Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Empty Homes Tax To Include Secondary Units That Are Used For Airbnb

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2016 01:54 PM
    Vancouver's proposed empty homes tax will include secondary units being booked full-time on the vacation rental website Airbnb, with the maximum fine for people who evade the levy set at $10,000.
     
    New details of the tax emerged at city hall where council voted to move forward with public consultation despite staunch opposition of three councillors from the centre-right Non-Partisan Association.
     
    Coun. George Affleck called the tax a "bureaucratic nightmare," while Coun. Elizabeth Ball said the proposal was frightening seniors who may have had to leave home to care for a sick loved one, for example.
     
     
    Mayor Gregor Robertson dismissed their concerns as "fear-mongering" and says the process for enforcing the tax — through self-declaration, audits and complaints — was the same as the income tax process.
     
    Robertson said $10,000 is the maximum fine the city can impose under its charter, but it will consider a combination of the fine plus a higher tax rate for people who fail to self-declare or fraudulently declare.
     
    The tax would not apply to primary residences, only secondary units such as investment condos that are not being used by a long-term tenant or units being exclusively used for Airbnb.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    79-Year-Old Ontario Woman Got Lost On Solo Hike In Alaska But Walked To Safety

    79-Year-Old Ontario Woman Got Lost On Solo Hike In Alaska But Walked To Safety
    JUNEAU, Alaska — A 79-year-old Ontario woman got lost on a solo hike near an Alaska glacier and spent a night in the forest without camping gear but walked to safety the next day.

    79-Year-Old Ontario Woman Got Lost On Solo Hike In Alaska But Walked To Safety

    Transit Police Restrain Man In Violent Incident At Burnaby Station, Chief Commends Injured Officer

    Transit Police Restrain Man In Violent Incident At Burnaby Station, Chief Commends Injured Officer
    New Westminster – Metro Vancouver Transit Police Chief Doug LePard has commended two of his officers for showing compassion and restraint in an extremely difficult, violent situation.

    Transit Police Restrain Man In Violent Incident At Burnaby Station, Chief Commends Injured Officer

    Ontario's Gender-Neutral Health Cards Can't Be Used In Passport Applications

    Ontario's Gender-Neutral Health Cards Can't Be Used In Passport Applications
    TORONTO — Ontario is scrambling to work out a deal with the federal government after learning its new gender-neutral health cards cannot be used to obtain a passport.

    Ontario's Gender-Neutral Health Cards Can't Be Used In Passport Applications

    Full-time Work Takes Big Hit As Canada Loses 31,200 Net Jobs In July

    Full-time Work Takes Big Hit As Canada Loses 31,200 Net Jobs In July
    OTTAWA — The Canadian labour market lost 31,200 net jobs last month as the country suffered its biggest one-month drop in full-time work in nearly five years, Statistics Canada said Friday.

    Full-time Work Takes Big Hit As Canada Loses 31,200 Net Jobs In July

    Aboriginal Rights Not Violated By Some Prison Tests Says Federal Court Of Appeal

    Aboriginal Rights Not Violated By Some Prison Tests Says Federal Court Of Appeal
    VANCOUVER — A panel of the Federal Court of Appeal has unanimously overturned a lower court ruling that found the charter rights of aboriginal inmates were violated by certain psychological tests.

    Aboriginal Rights Not Violated By Some Prison Tests Says Federal Court Of Appeal

    US, Canadian Soldiers Train In Interior Alaska

    US, Canadian Soldiers Train In Interior Alaska
    ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Soldiers from U.S. and Canada have spent much of the last few weeks engaging in war games in expansive interior Alaska, with Iowa National Guard personnel playing the role of the enemy.

    US, Canadian Soldiers Train In Interior Alaska