CBRM official wants tax cap program to include duplexes - Action News
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Nova Scotia

CBRM official wants tax cap program to include duplexes

A senior official with the Cape Breton Regional Municipality says a cap put in place by the Nova Scotia government to protect homeowners from sharp increases in property taxes should also apply to smaller income properties like duplexes.

CAO Marie Walsh says program is dissuading developers from building rental duplexes

CBRM's chief administrative officer, Marie Walsh, says the province's capped assessment program is dissuading some contractors from building new rental units. 'They've come to me saying the business case is no longer there,' she says. (Tom Ayers/CBC)

A senior official with the Cape Breton Regional Municipality says a cap put in place by the Nova Scotia government to protect homeowners from sharp increases in property taxes should also apply to smaller income properties like duplexes.

Marie Walsh, the chief administrative officer with CBRM, said developers are less likely to build new income properties because of this exemption.

"They've come to me saying the business case is no longer there," she said."[The]rent would have to be so high that it wouldn't be affordable for people to move in."

The capped assessment program was implemented in 2005.

Walsh said fewer duplexes are being constructed, which means there aren't as many rental options for seniors looking to downsize.

A senior official with the Cape Breton Regional Municipality says builders are reluctant to build new affordable rental units, such as senior's duplexes, because the property taxes on new units are too high. (George Mortimer/CBC)

She said she's heard from developers that the property taxes on a new duplex are twice what they are on existing ones they have, "so they've stopped building them."

The Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalitieshas alsoraised concerns about the capin the past and said it creates inequalities for homeowners across the province.

Kevin Russell, the executive director of the Investment Property Owners Association of Nova Scotia, said when owners have to pay higher property taxes, they pass those costs along to the tenants.

The association wants a review of the capbecause they believe it discourages contractors from building and owning small investment properties.

The association has asked for a review of the capin the past, suggesting it should apply to all residential buildings.

A older white man with brown hair is wearing rectangular glasses and a blue button up shirt.
Kevin Russell, executive director of the Investment Property Owners Association of Nova Scotia, says when property owners have to pay higher taxes, those extra costs are passed on to tenants. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation's market statistics show Sydney's vacancy rate is 5.1 per cent, which is an all-time low, said Russell. He said the number will drop ifthe capcontinues to discourage new construction.

In an email, Department of Municipal Affairs spokesperson Krista Higdon defended the program.

"The intended beneficiaries of the program are homeowners, not investment properties," she wrote.

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