Real estate flatline

The relentless climb of Nanaimo property values paused for a breather last year. Assessment notices went out to all Nanaimo property owners last week and many are finding the value little changed from 2011.

Average values for single-family homes, based on property assessments done by the agency on July 1 are down 1.27% from 2010.

Values rose slightly in several areas, but most neighbourhoods saw values down.

The most noticeable drops are clustered in north-end neighbourhoods, though central and south Nanaimo did not go unscathed.

One central-Nanaimo area saw average values down more than 10%.

A decade-long period of almost continuous growth was sidelined in 2011 by events outside local market forces. Housing sales slipped, especially at the higher end of the scale, where there are fewer buyers. Property values that doubled during the 2000s stopped rising. For the smart buyer, it creates a rare opportunity to get an ocean-view or waterfront property.

It isn’t the first time Nanaimo’s housing industry has skipped a beat and it is the nature of real estate markets to run in cycles.

“You look at the pressures in the market – unemployment, challenges with new builders, with HST, overall higher-end market challenges, it’s got to come out,” said Jim Stewart, Vancouver Island Real Estate Board past-president.

Realtors saw 2011 end with an average home selling price of $362,680, just $305 less than a year earlier, or essentially unchanged.

“Late last spring there was waiting with anticipation for the outcome of the HST vote, and (then) everyone was waiting to know who the next premier was to set the agenda for the year. Then in the fall everyone was concerned about the world market. Is Greece going to fail? You look at little Vancouver Island, there are places elsewhere in Canada prices are down doubledigit,” Stewart said.

The 2012 assessment roll puts a total value on all Nanaimo property at $12.742 billion, the bulk of which, $10.769 billion, is residential.

Those numbers are down slightly from 2011′s $12,683 billion total and $10.786 billion in residential. Those totals include about $1 billion in churches, downtown revitalization, pollution-control and other taxexempt property classes.

The B.C. Assessment Authority divides the city into 17 neighbourhoods, and the numbers it produces for each neighbourhood are what matter to homeowners.

Excluding apartments, vacant lots and condominiums, Jingle Pot/College Heights and Hawthorne saw average property values rise the most, at 1.14%. Average home values rose by less than 1% in Chase River/Cinnabar, Uplands/Sunshine Ridge/ Country Club, Hammond Bay and the extended downtown core areas.

The most noticeable drop was in the Commercial Industrial Bowen/Northfield area, where assessments fell 10.28%.

All other areas saw average values drop, with decreases of greater than 4% assessed in Townsite/Hospital, Dover/Dickenson, Long Lake North Island Highway and Protection Island areas.

For most homeowners, this year will be easier than most to figure out their property taxes simply by looking at their property’s assessed value.

Because the average value is so close to 2011, anyone whose assessment is close to last year’s can expect to pay close to the tax rate set by city council this spring.

“Assessments are unchanged, so it should be relatively easy to tell,” said Bill MacGougan, Nanaimo assessor.

While the HST and a sluggish economy are both hurting sales in higher-end properties classes, some see it as an opportunity to buy that dream property.

“When you think the average waterfront home is $800,000, if you get something for less than $800,000 it’s probably a pretty good buy,” Stewart said. Those deals exist because “there’s not that many buyers in that range.”

First-time buyers would be wise to make 2012 a year to renovate, rather than sell.

“If you bought in the last year or so it’s going to be challenging for you to exit on the profit side,” Stewart said.

http://www.canada.com/Real+estate+flatline/5983621/story.html

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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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Burnaby landlord questions city budget, tax increases

Burnaby landlord Gabriele Cocco couldn’t believe the numbers.

Upset at his increasing property assessments, he started looking at his taxes and making inquiries at Burnaby city hall, including a Freedom of Information request.

The figures he got back in response were, he said, “a little bit astonishing, quite honestly.”

According to the information sent to him by the city finance department, the population of Burnaby increased 15.8 per cent between 2000 and 2009.

During that period the number of city employees grew by 17.8 per cent. But the overall city budget grew from $208.5 million in 2000 to $327.3 million in 2009, an increase of almost 57 per cent.

The city portion of residential property taxes went up 56.3 per cent.

But for Cocco, who owns several light industrial and commercial properties, he was most aghast at the 191.6 per cent jump during that period in property taxes the city received from owners of light industrial properties and the 57.3 per cent jump in the taxes received in the business, or commercial, category. The city saw an almost 30 per cent increase in taxes paid by owners of major industrial properties.

“It’s obscene,” said Cocco. “I couldn’t believe the discrepancy between the consumer price index and the increase in property taxes. There’s no correlation.”

On one of his light industrial properties, at Waltham Avenue and Kingsway, the total taxes went up almost 52 per cent between 2004 and 2011, he said. However, the portion that goes to city hall saw less of an increase, at 27 per cent.

The budget increases “don’t relate to the private sector increases,” he said. “You couldn’t afford to stay in business with these kinds of [cost] increases.”

In the end, Cocco stressed, it’s not the landlords who suffer, but the tenants to whom the tax increases get passed. He’s lost at least one tenant who simply found the increases too onerous.

“I’m a frugal guy,” he said. “I don’t believe just because we’re in our heyday here and there’s a lot of building and a lot of money coming into the city that you should just go out and spend it.”

For his part, Cocco admits he’s raising his concerns now in hopes it will give voters something to think about as they head to the polls on Saturday. He believes it’s important to at least elect some people that could serve as opposition to the dominant Burnaby Citizens’ Association, which currently has a monopoly on council.

Burnaby Mayor Derek Corrigan responded that there were many things that happened between 2000 and 2009 that has resulted in increased operating costs at city hall, including growth in population and in the business and industrial sectors.

The large increases in property taxes collected include not only inflationary jumps but also more money from a growing tax base, resulting from new housing, commercial and industrial developments.

“So our tax base keeps growing … the actual services and the amount of revenue, will keep increasing but it won’t necessarily mean that your average citizen is paying more on their taxes than the normal rates that they expect” of two to 3.5 per cent per year, Corrigan said.

As for the increase in costs, much of it is due to wage increases and the provision of more services, he said.

The wages paid to the city’s RCMP officers make up much of the almost 55 per cent increase in the city manager’s department budget, which includes fire, police and library services.

RCMP officer wages added continuing costs to the operating budget in 2002 ($750,000 per year), 2004 ($600,000 annually), 2005 (24 new officers at a cost of $2.5 million a year), 2006 ($1.5 million), 2007 ($1.2 million) and 2008 ($245,000 for three additional officers plus $850,000 in wage increases). In 2009, the wage increase totalled $2.8 million, plus the RCMP received new mobile workstations at a cost of $450,000 and four new RCMP clerks ($350,000).

Policing was a big issue in previous elections, said Corrigan. “And we were asked to meet the community desire for more policing. As a result, we have been paying significant tax dollars to enhance our police force over those years.”

Corrigan noted that for several years before this period, RCMP wages were frozen which resulted in the large catch-up increases since then. In addition, RCMP are paid the average for the top three police forces in Canada.

“The problem is we don’t have any choice,” he said. The RCMP contracts are negotiated by senior governments.

Other ongoing cost increases have resulted from four new community police offices opening in 2000 ($750,000), the opening of McGill library branch ($2 million), a new city computer system ($3.7 million), improvements at Riverway Golf Course ($630,000), and the opening of the Tommy Douglas library branch ($1.6 million).

New facilities generally attract more users which creates a need for more staff and expanded opening hours, he said, noting that the Tommy Douglas library saw a 30 per cent jump in users, compared to the old Kingsway branch it replaced, as soon as it opened.

He said it’s expected that the new Edmonds community centre currently under construction, will cost the city $1 million a year in additional staffing, even after revenues are factored in.

There were 10 firefighters added for Fire Hall No. 7 in 2007 ($850,000) and another 10 firefighters and a fire captain added in 2008 ($1 million).

The increase in the city finance department’s budget, which grew by 102.5 per cent from $12 million in 2000 to $24.4 million in 2009, is largely to do with computerization of the city’s operations over that 10-year period, Corrigan said.

The wage hikes of other city workers has also added to the costs, he said, noting CUPE had a four per cent increase in its contract negotiated a few years ago, which is higher than the current rate of inflation. Until contracts come up for renegotiation, the city isn’t able to bring wage hikes in line with inflation.

The 59 per cent increase in the engineering department is largely in the utilities area (almost 97 per cent on its own) which is recouped from taxpayers, said Coun. Dan Johnston, chair of the city’s finance committee.

Those hikes included $7.6 million for watermain replacement, $10.5 million for the cost of water from the regional district, $8.7 million to separate combined sewers (to prevent sewage from accidentally entering local waterways during heavy rainfalls), $2.1 million in the cost of regional sewage services, $2.4 million for yard waste collection, $230,000 in Metro Vancouver garbage fees, $1.4 million for roadwork and $2.62 million for road maintenance downloaded by the province, much of which is recouped from TransLink.

Contracted salary increases accounted for $4 million of the cost increases in the department over the 10-year period.

Johnston stressed that people need to look at both revenues and expenses to get the real picture of the city’s finances.

“I think that you don’t get to be the best run city in Canada in 2009 without having committed to do a lot of things that make for a well-run city,” said Corrigan, referring to the Maclean’s magazine survey,

“You don’t get to where we are without spending some money and certainly that’s been true over the last years. We think that this money’s been a great investment and so far I think it’s proven that’s true.”

http://www.bclocalnews.com/news/133848123.html

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Homeowners receiving property reassessments

WINNIPEG — The City of Winnipeg has sent out its second batch of property reassessment letters to Winnipeg homeowners, notifying them about the 2012 property values city assessors are thinking about assigning to their homes.

Every two years, the city reassesses the value of residential and commercial properties. It used to do this once every four years, but increased the frequency to ensure assessed values are closer in line with market values.

What is your opinion of your city tax assessment?
The city conducted a preliminary reassessment of all residential properties as of April 1, 2010. On that date, residential properties in Winnipeg increased by an average of 12 to 15 per cent over the same date in 2008, city assessor Nelson Karpa said.

But not all properties increased at the same rate. The city began mailing out reassessment notices in November, when 70,000 Winnipeg homeowners received their preliminary notices.

Another 62,000 homes were notified today. The final 76,000 homeowners will be notified in February.

All homeowners will be given a chance to discuss their preliminary reassessments at meetings with city assessment staff, who have the authority to change the assessments on the spot. The next round of meetings is slated for Waverley Heights Community Club on Jan. 24-27. Walk-ins are welcome, but you may also call 311 to set up a 15-minute appointment.

The city plans to mail out final reassessment notices in June. The appeal process will begin after that, Karpa said.

But simply winding up with a higher property assessment does not mean you will pay more taxes in 2012. Generally speaking, you only pay more property taxes if your assessment exceeds the city-wide average, which also includes commercial property assessments.

The city has yet to conduct its commercial property reassessments for 2012.

The other factor influencing tax increases is city council, which could vote to increase property taxes this year and in 2012. But council has not made such a move since 1997.

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City expecting to spend $3.4M less on tax appeals

WINNIPEG is poised to spend $3.4 million less than it expected this year to deal with appeals of property assessments that came before the province’s Municipal Board.
Over the past four years, the city set aside $6.5 million to pay back taxes to property owners who successfully appealed decisions made by the Board of Revision, a city body that deals with property appeals.

But as the current assessment cycle winds down, only about $3.1 million of that money will be spent, as the province’s Municipal Board has ruled in the city’s favour more often than tax assessors expected.

And this property-appeal windfall will help the city post a surplus on its 2009 operating budget, the city’s chief financial officer says in a report that comes before council’s finance committee this morning.

“Our values are standing up to a degree of scrutiny much more than they have in the past,” said Nelson Karpa, the director of Winnipeg’s assessment and taxation department. “I think we’re doing a good job presenting competent evidence.”

Of 766 appeals that have come before the Municipal Board during the current assessment cycle – a period that covers the years 2006 through 2009 – 502 have already been heard or settled some other way, Karpa said.

The end result is a $3.4 million contribution to the city’s bottom line, which is now projected to be a $2.9 million surplus, according to the finance report. One month ago, chief financial officer Mike Ruta forecast a $3.4 million deficit for 2009.

It’s customary for the city to forecast modest deficits until the final few months of the year, when corporate savings in several departments usually translate into modest surpluses instead.

“They generally catch up by about $1 million a month in the latter part of the year,” said St. James Coun. Scott Fielding, city council’s finance chairman.

The windfall from appeals, however, has nothing to do with property owners who have come before the Board of Revision to complain about their assessments for the 2010 assessment year. The city neither saves nor loses money from this new batch of appeals, which are factored into next year’s property-tax rolls.

So far, the Board of Revision has heard more than half of the 8,135 appeals launched over the 2010 property assessments. The city has about 205,000 parcels of property in total, of which about 178,000 are single-family dwellings.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/property-assessments-standing-up-city-expecting-to-spend-34m-less-on-tax-appeals-78399222.html

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Property Reassessment Underway in Manitoba

Property reassessment for the 2010 tax year is now underway to support fairness in property taxation, Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Steve Ashton announced today.

“Frequent reassessments are necessary to keep our property tax system equitable,” said Ashton. “While property assessments across the province are increasing, it is important to remember this does not necessarily result in an increase in your property taxes.  Usually only properties with above?average assessment increases may see a property tax increase.” Continue reading

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