Steven Henderson is not backing down in his decision to pull the Goatâs Peak development in West Âé¶čAV.
The loss of a 1,000-unit housing development that would include an elementary school site, parkand and space for commercial businesses, has been a tough loss for West Âé¶čAV due to the provinceâs planned speculation tax.
After a long and drawn out 15-year process of getting approval and confirming building plans, Henderson is walking away from the project.
âItâs not like we just came to town, we have been working on this for a very long time and now we are faced with a market place that is uncertain about how the speculation tax is going to apply to vacant property such as ours,â Henderson said.
Related:West Âé¶čAV mayor blasts premier over speculation tax
West Âé¶čAV Mayor Doug Findlater said the loss of Goatâs Peak will deprive the city of a great deal of new construction revenue. The young city of West Âé¶čAV has not built up the same level of reserves older municipalities have to offset the loss of revenue Goatâs Peak would have generated.
âThis tax will have a major impact on West Âé¶čAV,â Findlater said. âIf new development disappears, it will really hurt us.â
As a result, West Âé¶čAV council has authorized the mayor to draft a letter to the the premier expressing the cityâs concern about the adverse impacts of the tax on the city, and outlining the reasons why.
Related:Mayors of Âé¶čAV and West Âé¶čAV react to speculation tax
The city is also pursuing a freedom of information bid to find out what criteria was used to include West Âé¶čAV in the list of municipalities where the speculation tax will be implemented.
On May 25, the Âé¶čAV Chamber of Commerce presented itâs Anti-Canadian Tariff â Pressing the Pause Button on BCâs Proposed Speculation Tax policy proposal,â at the 2018 B.C. Chamber of Commerceâs policy conference in Kamloops. It was met with unanimous support.
Adopting the new policy will be a priority of the B.C. chamber during discussions with Finance Minister Carole James.
âWeâre more than pleased at the response of our chamber colleagues in supporting this policyâtaking a strong message to the provincial government to study, clarify, and consult prior to legislating,â Carmen Sparg, president of the Âé¶čAV chamber said.
Related:Central Okanagan builds united front against speculation tax
The Âé¶čAV chamber is calling for the cancellation of what it considers the âmis-namedâ speculation tax.
It also wants the government to establish âclear parameters and key performance indicators that determine whether the tax, as put in place, is temporary.â
âDoes it actually create affordable housing and will it be removed if local indicators (not yet determined) improve.â
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