Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's Empty Homes Tax To Be Self-Declared, Up To 2 Per Cent Of Value

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Sep, 2016 11:07 AM
    Vancouver is proposing to tax homeowners by as much as two per cent of assessed value for units that they declare as vacant.
     
    Mayor Gregor Robertson announced new details of the tax ahead of its introduction to city council next week, with the aim to have it in place in 2017.
     
    He says the most conservative estimate of what the tax could generate is $2 million, which will primarily go towards cost recovery to administer the tax.
     

    The purpose of the tax is to encourage owners to rent out their empty homes in an effort to improve Vancouver's vacancy rate, which has hovered near zero for years.
     
     
    In July, the British Columbia government gave the city the authority to create the tax, which is separate from the province's 15-per-cent tax on foreign purchases of Metro Vancouver real estate.
     
     
    A study commissioned by the city earlier this year found that as many as 10,800 homes were sitting empty in Vancouver, most of them condominiums.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Out-Of-Control Semi On Coquihalla Highway Causes Multi-Car Collision And Injuries

    Out-Of-Control Semi On Coquihalla Highway Causes Multi-Car Collision And Injuries
     One Person With Serious But Non-life Threatening Injuries Was Airlifted To Hospital Following The Crash On The Coquihalla Highway, Between Hope And Merritt, B.C. 

    Out-Of-Control Semi On Coquihalla Highway Causes Multi-Car Collision And Injuries

    Meet South Asian Grand Marshals Of Toronto, Montreal, And Vancouver Pride Parades This Year

    Meet South Asian Grand Marshals Of Toronto, Montreal, And Vancouver Pride Parades This Year
    Below is a brief biography of the three South Asian Grand Marshals this year.

    Meet South Asian Grand Marshals Of Toronto, Montreal, And Vancouver Pride Parades This Year

    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