The Province

Government extends speculatio­n tax exemptions for some strata owners

- ROB SHAW rshaw@postmedia.com

VICTORIA — Owners of multiple condos and apartments who can’t rent their units due to strata restrictio­ns will get an extended exemption from the province’s speculatio­n tax, under changes announced Tuesday.

Finance Minister Carole James said people who own a unit that falls under a strata rental ban will be exempt from paying the speculatio­n tax until Dec. 31, 2021. That exemption had been set to expire this year. But the relief only applies to people who bought before the tax came into effect on Oct. 16, 2018. Anyone who bought since then doesn’t qualify, even if their strata forbids rentals.

“The minister of housing is doing a lot of work around rental properties, and those are things that need more discussion,” said James. “So we felt it was only fair to look at an extension.”

The government introduced the tax in 2018 to crack down on properties left vacant during a rental- and affordable-housing crisis.

Although initially described as a tax that targeted foreign residents, B.C. and Canadian owners of multiple homes face a 0.5 per cent surcharge on the assessed value of their properties in certain areas if those residences aren’t rented at least six months of the year.

The rate for foreign owners and satellite families increases to two per cent this coming year.

The tax applies to Greater Victoria, Nanaimo, Lantzville, Kelowna and West Kelowna, Metro Vancouver (excluding Bowen Island, Lions Bay and Electoral Area A), Abbotsford, Chilliwack and Mission. In Vancouver, the provincial surcharge is on top of the municipal empty homes tax.

James didn’t agree to any of the exemption requests from municipali­ties like Kelowna, Langford, Nanaimo or Belcarra, after a meeting in September. Instead, the province announced on Tuesday new exemptions for “wateracces­s-only properties,” which the government defines as “owners who have residentia­l properties that cannot be accessed by road and are not within a short walking distance to a public or private road.” The exemption will be retroactiv­e to

2018.

“The (speculatio­n) tax is working,” she said. “And I think that was the discussion with mayors that yes I understand not everyone is going to support the speculatio­n and vacancy tax, but the purpose of the tax is to address the issue of affordable housing.”

Belcarra Mayor Neil Belenkie, whose tiny village of 300 homes was set to be particular­ly hard hit by the tax because many cabins are water-only access, said he was happy some properties will get the exemption but had “mixed emotions” overall.

Belenkie said James hasn’t wanted to listen to his arguments, and the local NDP MLA for Port Moody-Coquitlam, Rick Glumac, has only visited the area once since 2018 and hasn’t provided any answers for residents.

 ?? — CP FILES ?? CAROLE JAMES
— CP FILES CAROLE JAMES

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