Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

First-time Home Buyer Program Attracting Applicants: B.C. Housing Minister

The Canadian Press, 17 Jan, 2017 01:00 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's housing minister says a program to help first-time homebuyers received applications within hours of launching.
     
    Rich Coleman said that within six hours of the provincial loan program's launch on Monday, 29 applications had been submitted.
     
    He said the province would be ready to approve eight of the applications by Tuesday for the loan that is interest- and payment-free for five years.
     
    "This opportunity will change a number of lives," Coleman said.
     
    The B.C. Home Owner Mortgage and Equity Partnership announced last month gives first-time buyers a maximum $37,500 loan toward a down payment.
     
    The loan matches a first-time buyers' down payment up to five per cent of the purchase price on homes with a maximum value of $750,000.
     
    The loan must be paid off over the subsequent 20 years past the interest-free period, with payments scheduled at current interest rates.
     
     
    After the program was announced last month, some economists criticized the move saying it would only drive up housing prices by creating more competition in the market.
     
    "They're wrong," Coleman said when asked about the program's potential to raise housing prices.
     
    "Let's say 10,000 people took advantage of this ... This isn't going to fuel the market. It's not large enough to change the market."
     
    The program wasn't designed to respond to sky-high housing prices in Vancouver, Coleman said, but to help first-time buyers across the province.
     
    "The market prices are different, but the ability to get into your first home and stabilize your family in home ownership is a good thing," he said.
     
    The program could also open up the rental market, by transitioning renters into home ownership, he said.
     
    The province previously announced that it is spending around $500 million to increase rental housing.
     
    Coleman said the combination of the loan and rental programs would ideally make both real estate and rental markets more affordable.
     
    He said the anticipated cost of about $703 million for the first-time buyers program is not being funded by taxpayers.
     
     
    "We already have the dollars from where we're at with the property transfer tax," he said, adding funds generated from taxes introduced last year on luxury homes and foreign buyers helped make the program possible.
     
    Over 40,000 families are expected to benefit from the province's first-time buyers program over the next three years.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

      Health Minister Terry Lake and Public Safety Minister Mike Morris make the announcement this afternoon in Vancouver.

    New Overdose Data In B.C. Expected To Show Numbers Down Slightly, Says Terry Lake

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office
    Peter Schilling, who saw the shooting from his second-floor office on Tuesday afternoon, said he was on the phone with a colleague staring out the window when he saw J. Randall Barrs get out of his car in the driveway of his Yorkville law office.

    Criminal Defence Lawyer Wounded In Shooting Outside Toronto Law Office

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop
    Const. Matthew MacGillivray, a former police sergeant, was demoted in January after a Halifax Regional Police disciplinary officer found he had used unnecessary force and engaged in discreditable conduct.

    Halifax Police Officer Challenges Demotion Over Incident During Traffic Stop

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa
    Taxpayers forked out $1.1 million to move some four dozen political staffers to Ottawa after Justin Trudeau's Liberals won power last fall.

    Ministers, PMO Staffers Get $1.1 Million In Expenses For Relocating To Ottawa

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    A man and his common-law wife are dead after what police believe was a targeted, gang-related shooting in Calgary.

    Suspect Being Sought After Deaths Of Two People In Calgary Shooting

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes
    Hours before the editor-in-chief of Forbes business magazine spoke to a conference of Quebec financiers in Montreal, Trudeau told the UN General Assembly in New York to reject politicians who exploit people's fears and anxieties.

    Donald Trump As President Can Work With Canada Despite Trudeau Comments: Steve Forbes