Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
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

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised
    Residents of a Rocky Mountain community are being chastised after nine black bears were killed in a single week for raiding garbage cans and becoming too accustomed to humans.

    Nine Bears Killed In One Week In B.C. Community, Better Garbage Storage Advised

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT
    GURDEV “Dave” Hair, 45, of Abbotsford was killed in a shooting on Wednesday night in the 3100-block of Crown Court of Abbotsford, the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) announced on Thursday. He was known to police.

    Fatal Shooting That Killed Gurdev 'Dave' Hair In Abbotsford Was Targeted, Says IHIT

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently
    US presidential candidate Donald Trump has more psychopathic traits than Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, a new Oxford study has claimed.

    How Much Of A Psychopath Is Donald Trump? Worse Than Hitler, Apparently

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Shergo Kurdi lifts his shirt to reveal a pale, mottled patchwork of burn scars on his belly and chest — a legacy, he says, of years spent ironing fabric in a Turkish clothing factory after he and his family fled war-torn Syria in 2012.

    Tima Kurdi Family Settles Into Life In Canada, But Still No Luck Finding A Home

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana
    VANCOUVER — A study by researchers at the University of British Columbia suggests that while the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana causes laziness, adding a medicinal component of pot doesn't change that behaviour.

    B.C. Study Says Rats Remain Slackers Even When Given Medicinal Part Of Marijuana

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says

    The study, titled "Lovers of the Death"? — Islamist Extremism in Mosques and Schools, says what worried them was not the presence of extremist literature, but that they found nothing but such writings in several libraries.

    Extremist Literature Common In Canadian Mosques, Islamic School Libraries, Study Says