Milton Ontario Real Estate, Opinion, & News

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Mortgage can be made tax deductible with a little work

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It might surprise Canadians to know that mortgages can be tax-deductible, if they are willing to do some legwork.

The idea isn’t new in Canada. It’s best known as the Smith Manoeuvre, named after the Victoria resident and financial strategist Fraser Smith who popularized it in his book appropriately called, The Smith Manoeuvre.

“A Canadian mortgage is a very expensive debt,” says Michael Puccini, a mortgage consultant with Premiere Mortgage Centre in Halifax. “You have to service that with after-tax dollars.”

The traditional way of paying off a mortgage quicker was to go with bi-weekly payments, says Puccini.

“We’re saying to clients there’s a different way of doing this.”

This is where the Tax Deductible Mortgage Plan (TDMP) comes in. Puccini says the plan allows you to create tax refunds, pay off your mortgage faster and build wealth for retirement.

Read the full article

Milton Resident Takes On Councillor’s Pay Increases

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This is a snippet of a post over at Mike Cluett’s blog

I find myself fascintated with the whole issue, and am writing my own ‘letter to the editor’ to voice my support for what Mike has written

DEAR EDITOR:

I thought I was reading one of the Champion’s Time Capsule articles about a pay increase, but alas it was real and recent.

Milton councillors have now received three pay increases since taking office in 2006.

I understand completely that Town staff need to have salaries reviewed on a regular basis in order for them to be paid fairly for the work they do.

My only question is why does it have to include our town councillors?

When this council was elected in 2006, the base salary, not including the regional councillors’ portion, was roughly $21,000. From my calculations, they’re now being paid more than $26,000 — and that doesn’t include the council perk of having one-third of that salary tax free.

That’s a substantial increase in pay for a part-time position. Politics is perception, and I don’t think this will sit well with Milton taxpayers.

In the last three years, we have had three higher-than-normal increases in our mill rate — with what to show for it? We now have more Milton Transit buses that run empty throughout town, and for that they have spent more than $3 million in the last three years.

Milton taxpayers are now the proud owners of a Town Hall glass wall, albeit beautiful and majestic, that cost more than $1 million. They couldn’t have found something just as beautiful and majestic locally for much less?

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, as there are many more examples of Milton council spending beyond its means.

Read the rest of the story here

Province offers new home tax break HST-BST

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Ontario to provide 75 per cent tax rebate on first $400,000


QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF
Premier Dalton McGuinty’s Liberals are sweetening the pot in a bid to make the controversial harmonized sales tax more palatable to Ontarians.

In a surprise move this morning, the government announced it was capitulating to homebuilders’ demands by effectively reducing taxes proposed on new homes.

Under the change, buyers of new homes in all price ranges would receive a 75 per cent rebate of the 8 per cent provincial portion of the HST on the first $400,000 of the cost.

In the March 26 budget, Finance Minister Dwight Duncan had said that while people purchasing new homes costing less than $400,000 would be eligible for the tax break, those buying more expensive homes would get little relief.

It would have been a recipe for disaster for consumers and developers because there would be a gradual increase in taxes on homes costing between $400,000 and $500,000 and a massive one on those priced above $500,000.

For residents of Greater Toronto, where homes are more expensive than in the rest of Ontario, it would have been especially onerous.

“During these challenging economic times, the McGuinty government’s enhanced housing rebate would improve affordability for more homebuyers – increasing the most generous housing rebate of its kind in Canada,” Duncan, who was not available for comment, said in a news release.

The Liberals also announced a new rebate to encourage builders to construct rental housing units.

The HST, which will blend the 8 per cent provincial sales tax and the 5 per cent federal GST, is to come into effect July 1, 2010.

Since it was announced early this spring, the government has weathered an avalanche of criticism because the business-friendly levy will increase taxes on gasoline, heating fuel, funerals, newspapers, fast-food value meals, legal services and a slew of other things.

A Toronto Star-Nanos Research poll last month found 67 per cent of people polled have a negative view of the melded tax compared to 23 per cent seeing it as positive and 10 per cent unsure.

HST – Buckle up, it’s going to be a bumpy ride

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Building slump, rise in underground economy expected with arrival of tax, seminar told

TRACY HANES

TORONTO STAR

The introduction of the Harmonized Sales Tax could bring a whole new breed of housing products to the market, such as “white box” homes finished only as a shell for which buyers will hire separate contractors to do landscaping, interior finishing and the like.

And new home builders should expect a four-year slump in new home sales and the underground renovation economy to flourish due to the HST.

Those were the hard realities presented last week at a panel discussion arranged by the Ontario Home Builders’ Association (OHBA) for its members.

“Your greatest challenge isn’t long term, it’s the next four years, if you are still alive,” Paul Pettipas, chief executive officer of the Nova Scotia Home Builders Association said. The HST has been in effect in Nova Scotia since 1997. “You have fertile ground for an underground economy. A lot of skilled people are going to be out of work (former auto workers) and there’s going to be a whole new breed of handy people.”

The tax, which will blend the goods and services tax (GST) and the provincial sales tax (PST), comes into effect July 1, 2010 and will be charged on new home and condo sales and on renovation work.

A new home priced under $400,000 will receive a rebate of 75 per cent of the provincial portion of the tax, meaning that consumers will effectively pay a 2 per cent tax, about they same they pay currently.

The rebate is scaled back on homes priced at more than $400,000, however; for a $500,000 new home, a consumer will be paying the full 8 per cent, or $32,000 more in tax than the buyer of a $400,000 home.

About half the single family and semi detached homes sold in Ontario are priced more than $400,000.

Panelist Harry Herskowitz, real estate lawyer and Tarion chairman, speculated that the transition rules, yet to be announced, will likely exempt any agreements of sales entered into prior to July 1, 2010.

He offered several ideas on how builders could minimize the tax bite and “there will be an incentive for builders to keep below the $400,000 threshold.”

Such measures may include reducing the overall size of new homes or condos; simplifying, downgrading or eliminating costly architectural or design features, such as exterior landscaping.

Herskowitz said builders might also lower the price point by reducing or eliminating green features which are more costly than Ontario Building Code standards, even though that thwarts the province’s Green Energy Act and “is a collective detriment to everybody.” Or they could eliminate all extras and possibly sell the home as a “shell” or “white box” with the finishing work to be done by a separate, third party contractor.

This “white box” approach raises several issues, said Herskowitz: the finishing work may not be covered by Tarion; and builders must be careful that the finishing work be done by separate contract with a different date than the closing, ideally by an arm’s length third party supplier, so it’s not seen as a builder’s tactic to avoid paying a higher HST rate.

Or he said, perhaps some developers/builders will sell lots separately and the home building will be done in a separate contract.

The government is treating houses like luxuries,” observed Herskowitz. “In the City of Toronto, there will be $80,000 in taxes (including land transfer tax, HST, etc.) on the typical half million dollar house, which most of the time is owned by people with a $150,000 household income. It’s not a luxury, it’s a necessity. More and more buyers will be opting for resale so they don’t have to pay HST.”

“This has the potential to change the way we do everything,” noted moderator Brian Johnston.

“And the huge issue is the impact on renovators and incentifying the black market economy.”

“I can tell you in no uncertain terms consumers are going to pay more,” said Pettipas. “The people that will hurt the most are the renovators as they will have to make the decision whether to join the cash economy and go underground. Consumers don’t consider cash deals as wrong.”

With the HST, the 8 per cent tax will be added to labour costs, pushing renovation costs higher. Pettipas says in his province, about one-third of the reno work is done under the table, with homeowners doing one-third themselves and professionals doing the rest.

He told builders to brace for a bumpy transition.

“Yours is the worst of the worst with the ($400,000) threshold and the government will try to make it seem palatable up front, but it won’t last,” said Pettipas.

“Batten down the hatches, have some money salted away for the next few years, you’re going to need it. You’ve got to get through the next four years. After that, it will be irrelevant.”

What’s frustrating, said Johnston, president of the Monarch Corp. is that no plan has been announced for how the tax will be phased in.

“We thought we’d have a solution by now, we thought we’d have an answer to the transition; we don’t,” said Frank Giannone, president of the OHBA.

Giannone said the OHBA has been lobbying the provincial government for two changes for implementation: one, that buildings under construction before the HST comes into effect be exempt; and secondly, that the 2 per cent rate applies to the first $400,000 of any new home sale, even if the price is higher, then the cost beyond that be taxed at 8 per cent.

Toronto Star

Rage Against The Machine!

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aka The Law of Unintended Consequences.

Driving home last night, I tuned in to CFRB, to hear the host railing about how residents of St. Catharine’s Ontario had really taken to heart the municipalities pleas to reduce their water consumption. The proud folks did just that, and ended up reducing their water consumption by 10%. That is a fine achievement, to be sure, and one that a great many lessons can be learned from.

What came next was a real gob-smack! Those same fine residents, as a reward for heeding the call and helping the municipality are to be hit with an increase in their property taxes &/or water rates that is equivalent to the dollar-amount saved on their water bill! Yes, you read that right – they did as asked, and are being heavily penalized for doing so.

According to the municipality, the plants that process water need to be kept running, and the workers there need to keep their jobs, etc., so to preserve things, the revenue lost due to reduced water consumption has to come from somewhere. Hmmmmm.

Talk about a dis-incentive to conserve!

What do you think? If Milton asked you to reduce your water use, then nailed you with new taxes, would you sit quietly by? Would you fight them on it? Please comment.

Below is an article from the St. Catharines newspaper . .

Residents deserve reward, not penalty

pointof view

Posted By KALVIN REID KREID@STCATHARINESSTANDARD.CA

Posted 1 day ago

This is not how conservation is supposed to work.

If you make sacrifices, scrimp, save and cut back, the idea is there should be some sort of reward for the effort.

St. Catharines residents, under pressure from municipal governments to be smarter with water — perhaps the natural resource we take most for granted — put in an exemplary effort.

In the past decade, water use in the city has dropped by 34 per cent. Between 2007 and 2008 alone, use dropped 10 per cent.

That is an excellent example of conservation at work.

The reward?

It will likely come in the shock of a significant increase in their water and sewer bills.

The city is proposing a 16 per cent jump in the average St. Catharines water bill, to $778 per year.

It’s not exactly what residents had in mind when they fell in step with requests from these very same municipal governments to conserve — use rain barrels, scale back how often you water your lawn, shorten your showers, put off washing your cars and so on.

The rationale behind the proposed water bill hike is easy to understand; because St. Catharines residents are using less water, the money flowing into the city’s (and Region’s) water budget has similarly dropped — you use less, you pay less.

But that means a financial shortfall in a department that isn’t cheap to operate and requires ongoing costly upgrades. Thus, it has forced the city into a situation where it will be asking residents to pay more for using less.

It’s an absurd premise that quite obviously shows this system of municipal water distribution is broken.

Finding a better alternative, however, is no easy task.

Municipalities are charged with the responsibility of providing residents with clean drinking water, and must follow strict standards imposed by the provincial government in the wake of the Walkerton tainted water tragedy.

Maintaining that system is expensive.

It’s easy, and maybe a little cliche, to suggest that provincial grants should be offered to offset the cost of conservation. After all, what is happening in St. Catharines is a horrible incentive to conserve water.

But the province isn’t exactly swimming in money these days.

This situation should also spark a renewed look at the two-tier water and wastewater system in Niagara, and whether it is the most efficient.

Something has to be done. Residents should be lauded for helping preserve one of our more precious resources, not penalized.

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