Homeowner grant threshold raised to $1.285M

The B.C. government has raised the threshold for homeowner property grant to $1.285 million to accommodate rising property values.

The news comes as hundreds of thousands of annual property assessments are being prepared for B.C. property owners by the government. Last year, the threshold was $1.15 million. The grant effectively reduces the property tax paid by most B.C. homeowners by up to $1,045

Every year the province adjusts the grant to ensure 95.5 per cent of homeowners receive the full amount of the grant. Those with homes above the threshold may still be eligible for part of the grant.

“The homeowner grant provides a maximum reduction in residential property taxes on principal residences of $570 in the Capital, Greater Vancouver and Fraser Valley regional districts and $770 elsewhere in the province,” said a statement issued by the government on Tuesday.

“An additional grant of $275 is available to those who are age 65 or over, permanently disabled or a veteran of certain wars,.”

“We continue to see challenging economic times around the world. By maintaining the homeowner grant, we continue to help families with the costs of owning their homes,” said Finance Minister Kevin Falcon in the statement.

The grant is only available to Canadian citizens and to landed immigrants who normally reside in B.C.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/01/03/bc-homeowner-grant.html

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Moving Manitoba families forward with tax cuts

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk introduced the Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act which would implement Budget 2011 and provide $65 million in tax cuts for families and businesses this year.

We have stayed on track with our five-year economic plan to ensure families have access to vital front-line services and also deliver significant tax savings for families. This year, tax cuts will save a family of four $212 and by 2014 that same family of four will save $374 a year.

The bill will deliver on nearly $110 million in new tax reductions once they are fully implemented and would freeze or reduce major taxes for the 12th consecutive year. Tax reductions proposed for families and property owners include:

• Increasing the basic Education Property Tax Credit by $50 to $700, which would save renters and homeowners an extra $16 million this year.

• Increasing basic personal income tax exemptions by $1,000 over four years, starting with $250 this year. By 2014, an additional 22,000 Manitobans would no long pay Manitoba income tax.

• Implementing a new Children’s Arts and Cultural Activity Tax Credit, to help parents introduce their children to activities such as art, music, drama, language instruction, environmental activities and personal tutoring.

• Increasing the maximum seniors’ Education Property Tax Credit by $150 to $950 in 2011. This credit would rise by $75 to $1,025 in 2012 and by another $75 to $1,100 in 2013.

• Increasing the Primary Caregiver Tax Credit by 25 per cent to a maximum of $1,275 to assist families caring for elderly Manitobans and other loved ones.

• Increasing the Farmland School Tax Rebate to 80 per cent from 75 per cent, which would save farmers an additional $2 million this year for a total of over $35 million annually.

This legislation would guarantee that provincial revenue sharing with municipalities will be no less than one-seventh of provincial sales tax revenue.

The minister noted the provincial small business income tax and the general corporation capital tax were completely eliminated this year. Other tax reductions for business would include:

• Increasing the Green Energy Equipment Tax Credit to 15 per cent from 10 for installations of geothermal heating systems.

• Creating a new Cultural Industries Printing Tax Credit to provide a 15 per cent refundable credit to support Manitoba-based printers.

• Providing a Capital Tax Exemption for small banks to attract and encourage the expansion of small, innovative financial institutions in Manitoba.

• Introducing a new employee share purchase plan tax credit to help business succession planning.

http://www.mysteinbach.ca/blogs/2253.html

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No new mortgage rule changes: Flaherty

There has already been “some softening” in the Canadian real estate market so there is no need for further tightening of mortgage rules, said Jim Flaherty, the finance minister.

Unlike the United States and Europe, the Canadian housing market has continued to rise after the financial crisis, leading some observers to caution we could be headed for a bubble.

Mr. Flaherty said he’s already intervened to toughen mortgage rules three times in the last few years and there’s no need for further action as conditions in the market are finally moving in the right direction.

In his first major public appearance since the election, at Bloomberg’s Canada Economic Summit in Toronto, Mr. Flaherty also said this country continues to weather the ongoing upheaval in the global economy. He said his number one priority is to deal with the budget — likely in June — in order to continue to implement his government’s economic action plan.

The past few months have seen the emergence of a string of new problems affecting the global economy, ranging from conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa and the rising issues around U.S. government debt.

Mr. Flaherty said the best way to protect Canada is for the government to move as quickly as possible to a balanced budget and to continue to take measures to strengthen the economy, such as maintaining low taxes for businesses and individuals.
Canada already has one of the lowest corporate tax rates of any major developed economy and the Conservatives have vowed to bring it lower still.

In the depths of the crisis Canada’s banks remained strong partly because of steps taken by the government aimed at boosting liquidity such as buying more than $70-billion of home loans from lenders. Ottawa also increased the limit on the volume of mortgages banks could sell into the Canada mortgage bond program.

Critics say that one unintended result was that banks were encouraged to make more home loans, which helped push up prices in the market.

But Mr. Flaherty said he does not believe there were unintended consequences from the government’s emergency support for the banks.

As a result of recent fluctuations in global currency markets the Canadian dollar is now trading at close to its highest level since 2008, creating challenges for many companies, especially manufacturers.

But Mr. Flaherty said the private sector is coping. One of the dangers of intervening, he suggested, is a fluctuating currency, which would be even more problematic.
“What we want to avoid is sudden, jerky movements in the Canadian dollar,” he said.
Mr. Flaherty said his government will present a slightly revamped budget in June. It will be changed to reflect an economic update and may include some items from the election platform, but will be largely the same budget he presented in March, Mr. Flaherty said.

http://business.financialpost.com/2011/05/10/no-new-mortgage-rule-changes-flaherty/

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Few cottage owners sign up for tax increase deferral program





Only four Manitoba cottage owners have signed up for the Selinger government’s cottage tax increase deferral program to help cottagers deal with rising municipal and school taxes.

The number was released in Question Period by Progressive Conservative Finance Critic Heather Stefanson after the Tories submitted a freedom of information request to the province.

Stefanson said seven applications were made to the province in 2010-11 for the deferral, but only four were accepted. One was withdrawn and two were rejected because the properties were not cottages. No applications have been received in 2011.

Stefanson said the popularity of the deferral program should be obvious when it’s estimated there are about 14,000 cottages in the province.

She said seven applications represents 0.05 per cent of eligible properties. The four approved applications represent a success rate of 0.03 per cent for the program.

“With success like that, who need failure?” Stefanson said in the house.

The government introduced the cottage tax increase deferral program a year ago in response to the rising municipal and school tax load put on seasonal cottagers. Many cottage properties that had increased sharply in value under the last province-wide property reassessment now pay a greater share of local school division taxes than permanent residents in the same division.

Under the deferral program, the provincial government will pay the increase in taxes on behalf of the cottager to the municipality. The cottager then pays the government back at a nominal interest rate. The amount owing is payable to the government upon the sale of the property, the death of the owner, when eligibility conditions are no longer met or at any time chosen by the owner.

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk defended the deferral program, saying it’s a viable option for cottagers dealing with steep tax increases.

“As we move forward more people may apply and more may take advantage of it,” Wowchuk said.

http://www.brandonsun.com/breaking-news/Few-cottage-owners-sign-up-for-tax-increase-deferral-program-120349949.html?thx=y

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Realtor association targets land transfer tax for first-time homebuyers

The new president of the WinnipegREALTORS is hoping persistence pays off when it comes to the much maligned provincial land transfer tax.Claude Davis and other WR representatives met Finance Minister Roseann Wowchuk to urge her government to exempt first-time homebuyers from having to pay the land transfer tax.

The association made the same pitch last year to then finance minister Greg Selinger, now premier, but to no avail. Davis said he’s hoping this time will be different, although Wowchuk didn’t give them an answer at the meeting.

“She received it as information and said she’d consider it. And that’s all we can ask,” Davis said.

However, Wowchuk didn’t sound like she held out much hope for an LTT reprieve in this spring’s provincial budget.

She said in an interview that although she’ll take this and other tax-change requests into consideration, the province is facing a deficit as a result of the recession and has to find a way to balance the budget, stimulate the economy and maintain health care and other essential services.

Davis said WR representatives pointed out that each house transaction in Manitoba generates about $40,000 in spinoff economic benefits, and exempting first-time buyers as some other provinces do could help stimulate the market by making homes easier for them to purchase.

The tax is intended to pay for the costs of registering a property transaction in the provincial land registry. It is based on a percentage of the value of a transaction, rather than a set fee.

The tax rate is 0.5 per cent for the portion of the selling price between $30,000 and $90,000, one per cent from $90,000 to $150,000, 1.5 per cent from $150,000 to $200,000, and two per cent for anything above $200,000. On a $350,000 sale, the homebuyer pays a land transfer tax of $4,650.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/realtor-association-targets-land-transfer-tax-for-first-time-homebuyers-81304347.html

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RCMP mount up for checkstop season

‘Tis the season for family gatherings, celebrations and checkstops.

Manitoba’s RCMP detachments begin their annual Christmas checkstop campaign today, joining other police agencies in the province, including Winnipeg police.

The RCMP campaign runs until Jan. 4. Officers will be looking for impaired drivers and people who aren’t wearing a seatbelt in locations across Manitoba. Police are urging people to buckle up and not get behind the wheel if they’ve been drinking.

Tories propose land-tax relief

The Manitoba Tories proposed a new law yesterday that would exempt first-time home buyers from the land transfer tax.

Tory finance critic Rick Borotsik introduced a private member’s bill yesterday that would allow anyone who had not previously owned a property, or whose spouse has not previously owned a property, to be exempt from paying the tax, which usually adds a few thousand dollars to a real estate purchase. Borotsik said his bill has the support of realtors’ associations in the province.

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk suggested the bill won’t make the cut as their focus has been on personal income tax and school tax.

Fire victim identity confirmed

Police have confirmed the victim of a fatal house fire in Winnipeg earlier this week is a widower whose wife died last spring.

Millard Haluk, 71, and his pet dog died in the blaze, which was accidental, police said. A fire official previously said the cause was electrical in nature. The fire, at Haluk’s Elmwood home at 598 Talbot Ave., was reported Monday at 6:50 a.m.

Haluk’s body was found near the back of the house on the main floor. It appeared the fire started at the rear.

Friends said Haluk was a hoarder who collected so many objects there was little room to move in the home.

This raised questions whether the home’s condition prevented his escape. Damage is estimated at $250,000, police said.

Friends said Haluk had been heartbroken and depressed since his 62-year-old wife, June, died in May.

http://www.winnipegsun.com/news/manitoba/2009/12/04/12033021-sun.html

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Tax relief for cottagers proposed

The Manitoba government introduced legislation Friday aimed at helping Manitobans who own cottages manage escalating property taxes.

The Cottage Property Tax Increase Deferral Act was introduced by Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk.

The act would create a cottage property tax deferral program for cottage owners whose property values skyrocketed as a result of the 2010 general reassessment. It would allow Manitobans to apply to defer payment of their property tax increases for 2010 and 2011.
The provincial government would pay the tax increase to the municipality on behalf of the cottage owner. A cottage owner would then repay the province the amount of deferred taxes, plus interest charged at a nominal rate, when the property is sold or the owner dies.

Applications for the cottage property tax deferral program would be available prior to owners receiving their 2010 property tax bills.

The Manitoba government bills the tax deferral as a way to keep Manitoba’s image as an affordable recreation destination, but critics say it only highlights the unfairness of the province’s taxation system.

The Manitoba Association of Cottage Owners and the Canadian Taxpayers Federation say if the province really wants to ease the tax burden on cottage owners, it should take education taxes off the property tax bill and fund schools solely through personal income taxes.

Cottage owners on Lake Winnipeg were hit last spring by an eye-popping rise in property values as a result of the most recent provincial reassessment. Victoria Beach cottage owners face an average value increase of 92 per cent, based on market prices in April 2008. The previous assessment was based on 2003 values.

Cottage values went up 79 per cent in Winnipeg Beach and 60 per cent in the Rural Municipality of Gimli, compared to an overall percentage increase of 46 per cent in the value of all single-family dwellings outside Winnipeg.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/tax-relief-for-cottagers-proposed-78587417.html

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Manitoba government projected budget deficit for 09/10

According to a Toronto economist, “A looming provincial budget deficit of about $600 million is more a symptom of a global recession than a government that can’t control its spending.”
Issued on their second quarter financial report Manitoba has projected a $592-million budget deficit for the year 2009/10. It’s a $640-million negative adjustment to the $48-million summary surplus the province projected in the March budget.
Warren Lovely, a CIBC senior economist said that the Manitoba’s shortfall is connected to the recession that occurred in United States. The weaker industrial demand for electricity from Manitoba Hydro was also pinpointed, as this year’s profit of $120 million is $145 million less than budgeted. Aside from this, Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuck has noted spring flooding and the campaign against the H1N1 flu as contributing factors for the economy’s condition.
However, the Manitoban government is still on track to an average pf $221-million surplus for the four year period ending 2009-10, sticking to its commitment of a Balanced Budget, Fiscal Management and Taxpayer Accountability Act. The act states that budgeting is done over a four-year period and allows deficit to be posted in one of those years.

According to a Toronto economist, “A looming provincial budget deficit of about $600 million is more a symptom of a global recession than a government that can’t control its spending.”

Issued on their second quarter financial report, Manitoba has projected a $592-million budget deficit for the year 2009/10. It’s a $640-million negative adjustment to the $48-million summary surplus the province projected in the March budget.

Warren Lovely, a CIBC senior economist said that the Manitoba’s shortfall is connected to the recession that occurred in United States. The weaker industrial demand for electricity from Manitoba Hydro was also pinpointed, as this year’s profit of $120 million is $145 million less than budgeted. Aside from this, Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuck has noted spring flooding and the pandemic H1N1 flu contributed to the economy’s condition.

However, the Manitoban government is still on track to an average pf $221-million surplus for the four year period ending 2009-10, sticking to its commitment of a Balanced Budget, Fiscal Management and Taxpayer Accountability Act. The act states that budgeting is done over a four-year period and allows deficit to be posted in one of those years.

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Transfer tax slammed

Realtors call for exemptions, reductions

Winnipeg’s realtors have asked the province to consider exemptions and reductions to the land transfer tax, which the agents say is an impediment to some would-be homebuyers.

The provincial government keeps a registry of land titles and requires people to pay to transfer the title when they buy a property. That tax can run into the thousands of dollars. The Winnipeg Realtors Association says that can cause some prospective homebuyers to delay an entry into the housing market as they save up enough for the land transfer tax, which is paid up front as part of the closing costs of a sale.

“We feel it’s a very regressive, negative tax,” said Don Cook, chair of civic and legislative affairs for the Winnipeg Realtors Association. “The government’s really getting a good take on it right now.”

A spokeswoman for provincial Finance Minister Greg Selinger said the government has projected it will bring in $43.6 million from the tax this fiscal year, which ends March 31. The cost of administering the land transfers is about 1% of that revenue, she said, meaning about 99% of it goes into the government’s general coffers.

Suggestions

Cook said the realtors met with Selinger on Feb. 18 with a list of suggestions for changes, including an exemption for first-time buyers and affordable housing program participants. Ontario and B.C. exempt first-time home buyers, while Saskatchewan and Alberta have no land transfer tax at all, the Winnipeg Realtors Association said.

Cook said the realtors also suggested changing the rates in Manitoba.

Currently, Manitobans pay nothing on the first $30,000 of sale price, 0.5% from $30,000 to $90,000, 1% from $90,000 to $150,000, 1.5% from $150,000 to $200,000, and 2% on the portion above $200,000.

The realtors have suggested charging 0.5% up to $100,000, 1% up to $200,000, 1.5% up to $500,000 and a cap at the half-million mark. “We’re hopeful it will happen,” Cook said.

However, Selinger’s spokeswoman said the NDP government is “prioritizing initiatives that will stimulate our economy” and focusing on tax measures contained in last fall’s throne speech. The speech made no mention of land transfer tax.

She said the government has instead eased the property tax burden by eliminating the education support levy and increasing the education property tax credit over the past few years.

http://www.winnipegsun.com/news/winnipeg/2009/03/09/8677276-sun.html

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Release the HST analyses

The leaders of Manitoba’s opposition parties are correct to be concerned that a proposal to blend the GST and PST into a single harmonized sales tax could prove to be nothing more than cash grab by a Doer government desperately seeking lucre. But that said, why throw the baby out with the bathwater? Why not see the proposal as an opportunity and formulate a better alternative outcome? Why not, as the Free Press argues, harmonize the taxes and dedicate increased revenues to a fund that would reduce municipal infrastructure deficits and create property tax savings?

One reason Conservative Leader Hugh McFadyen and Liberal Leader Jon Gerrard might not be articulating alternatives were underlined by Mr. Gerrard. He noted that Finance Minister Greg Selinger has been looking at the issue for a decade and must by now have an extensive file on HST, and a thorough analysis of the impacts that would result from harmonization. Mr. Selinger should release that analysis so that an informed and reasoned debate can take place. In the absence of the information, it is understandable that critics — and those are lining up more on the left than the right — will leap to irrational conclusions. Continue reading

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