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Province To Step Up Projects and Offer Property Tax Breaks

By 250 News

Saturday, November 01, 2008 03:50 PM

Victoria, B.C.- Premier Gordon Campbell has outlined several new measures  the Province will take to help B.C. homeowners, seniors and rural residents during these turbulent economic times.

"Our government will act to provide new stability for homeowners who  are worried about fluctuating property values, and give new options to property taxpayers who are facing economic hardship," Premier Campbell
said. "We will also urge the federal government to help seniors make  the most of their investments in RRSPs before being forced to draw them down as Registered Retirement Income Funds. We will move to help rural
residents and construction workers with a 20-fold increase in funding for improvements to rural resource roads over the next 18 months." 

That means funding will  increase from one to $20 million for resource road maintenance and rehabilitation.  Premier Campbell also announced work would be accelerated on key transportation corridors including the Cariboo Connector, improvements to Highway 3, Highway 16, and the Trans-Canada Highway.


New help for homeowners
Property assessments locked in: The Province will lock in the property assessment roll for one year to create certainty for homeowners, businesses and local governments.

"We know that property values have fluctuated widely since assessments were conducted last July," said Premier Campbell. "To avoid confusion, anxiety and unnecessary assessment appeals prompted by higher-assessed
property values that do not reflect current market conditions, we will lock-in B.C.'s assessment rolls at 2007 assessed levels."

This measure will provide time for markets to stabilize and reflect proper market values so property owners know how much they will pay in property tax and local governments know how much they will collect to
provide services. It will help municipalities who otherwise might be forced to make significant adjustments to mill rates and protect homeowners whose assessments would be higher than the market value of their homes. T

his will not apply to new homes that have not yet been assessed. This will not affect municipalities' ability to set their own mill rates.

Temporary property tax deferment program: The Province will create a new, temporary property tax deferment program. The program will allow people with at least 15 per cent equity in their home, who attest that they are experiencing serious financial difficulties due to current economic conditions, to defer their property tax payment for each of the next two years. Homeowners will not have to pay the deferred taxes until they sell their home, but can pay the Province back earlier if they
choose. The Province will charge interest at the prime rate on the balance outstanding on the tax deferment loan, while ensuring local governments receive property tax revenues. This will help homeowners who would otherwise have to try to qualify for a home equity loan during the current credit crunch.

This new program is in addition to the current program, which benefits homeowners who are 55 years or older. The program will not impact the provincial budget because it is considered a secured loan. It does affect taxpayer-supported debt to the amount that it is drawn down. Administrative costs to the program will be minimal.

New help for seniors
Protection of RRSPs from creditors: The Province will act to protect from creditors RRSP investments that are made with banks, just as they are protected now with insurance companies. The Province will introduce legislation to exempt RRSPs and similar prescribed plans from seizure by creditors. Currently, investments with insurance companies are protected from seizure. This will provide the same protection for RRSPs invested in banks. The current law is unfair, as pension and insurance
products that are essentially identical to RRSPs are exempt from seizure. It will also end the inconsistent treatment of RRSPs under provincial law and federal law.

A special national meeting on RRSPs: At the upcoming First Ministers' meeting Premier Campbell will ask that a special national meeting on  RRSPs and Registered Retirement Income Funds (RIFs) be convened to review and amend federal law so people are not forced to convert their RRSPs at age 71. That would mean people could save beyond age 71 and  continue to receive tax benefits for purchasing RRSPs. Currently, people who turn 71 are forced to convert their RRSPs and are not able to continue investing in RRSPs.

"These are unprecedented times for people in or entering their retirement years," said Premier Campbell. "We know people's RRSPs have been hit by the market downturn and those values won't recover until  the market recovers. We should act to give seniors the choices they need to let their RRSPs grow back to pre-September levels."


A number of these measures will be subject to legislative approval.


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Comments

Wow ! More money being spent on the lower main land. First spend a small kingdom of money for the Olympics and then use the economic downturn as an excuse to spend even more money on them. I am so glad I am in the North working my ass off so that the lower mainland and have good roads, good facilities and everything else.
It went from 1 million bucks to 20 million?? 20 won't even make a dent in reapiring and maintaining rural roads. I'm with Lunar...what the heck are the olympics going to do for northern BC? Lets bugger off and join Alberta!
Always the lower mainland. Nothing has changed in the last 50 years.
I would like to add -"how about a little help with our heating bills in the North?"
the lower mainland doesn't have the cold that we have. Hanging onto our homes is not easy with high heating bills and a fixed income.
"..The Province will lock in the property assessment roll for one year.."

Good in one way in that it becomes very clear as to exactly how much the city is planning on collecting in taxes. If everything is the same as last year, except the taxpayers have less money, then it should be easy for the city to meet a target of NOT collecting more money.

Everyone is making do with less, aren't we?
Property assessment locked in. That has nothing to do with mill rate being locked in. If your house is assessed identical to last year, the City can still change the mill rate from the looks of it. Those people who had a vacant property and built on it at the end of 2007 or so will have a very low assessment this year from the looks of it.
Usually the city can collect more in taxes without touching the mill rate because people build stuff. Any improvement in property value causes an upward change in the city's overall tax base, and then the city inevitably collects more money at the same mill rate.

So even if the "new" additions to the tax roll are a little low the year, the city will still be collecting more money with property assessments frozen and the mill rate frozen.

In the past the yearly tax increases we saw in our property taxes are on top of the yearly increase in the revenue that the city automaticly picks up from the yearly increase in city wide value.

In other words an increase in taxes means the city is living beyond the wealth growth rate of the taxpayers of the city.

Taxes are set based on the principle that there is always more where that came from.

You got that one right Yama. And on top of the taxes we still have almost a 200 million debt. And when they add the arts centre and another police building we may as well leave town.

Cheers
And by the way were property values not higher in 2007 and have been dropping in 2008?

Cheers
Lock in Property Assessment values for one year? Great, our property values have declined about 10% this past year. Thanks Premier Campbell. I'm sure everyone in the province can appreciate your efforts, but your timing is a little off.

Canadian Taxpayer Federation reported that BC pays about $6,000,000 per day in interest on our debts. This represents about 3 to 4 days of debt compared to the money they are bragging about increasing 20 fold for resource roadwork and rehab work. Wow, I am impressed.

How about we just get out of debt? Save us the BS and deal with the real problem. Get us out of debt and quit spending money we don't have to spend.
my house is worth about $50k less in 2008, why would I want it frozen at 2007 assessment?