LATEST NEWS
July 2, 2009
Canadian Construction Association secures partial victory on vehicle-use tax
CALGARY
As a result of lobbying from the Canadian Construction Association, the federal government will allow a reduced benefit calculation on employer-provided vehicles.
“This announcement by the minister on June 11 is a bit of a surprise and good news,” CCA president Michael Atkinson said during recent board meetings of the CCA in Calgary.
“However, it falls short of the ultimate goal. The benefit applies only to non-automobiles and doesn’t apply to a king cab.
“There can only be a driver and two passengers.”
The reduced valuation is 24 cents rather than the current 52 cents.
This benefit can be applied when a vehicle is not an automobile, within the meaning of the Income Tax Act.
This means the vehicle is necessary for employment duties and is driven from home to the work site.
The employer must have business reasons for requiring the employee to take the vehicle home at night, such as security concerns with regard to keeping the employers tools and equipment at the worksite or employers premises.
The vehicle should also be designed or suited for the employers business or trade and is essential for performance of employment duties.
The CCA believes this new development is not all that helpful for several reasons.
First, it applies only to non-automobiles, which is defined as a vehicle that has room for a driver and two passengers.
So, a truck with an extended super cab is deemed an automobile and would not be eligible for the reduced benefit valuation.
It does not address a situation where the employee is required to travel greater distances to a work site than they might otherwise travel to an employer’s place of business.
It is still assessed as a taxable benefit to the employee.
The CCA has hired a government-relations consulting firm specializing in tax matters to seek legislative reforms that would see the elimination of taxable benefits.
The CCA is focusing its lobbying efforts on Finance Canada rather than the Canada Revenue Agency, since it appears nothing can be advanced on this issue without Finance Canada’s agreement.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Four companies short-listed to renovate London, Ontario hospital
- Delcan to provide enegineering services for Highway 407 extension
- Hamilton water treatment plant stays in service during rebuilding operation
- Plenty of work ahead as Ontario construction-site safety blitz ends
- Construction, engineering companies mergers increased in Q2: Report
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 263 projects with a total value of $8,919,878,049 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on yesterday.
$120,000,000 Ottawa ON Negotiated
CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT BUILDING
$120,000,000 Toronto ON Negotiated
$50,000,000 Ottawa ON Prebid
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Ground broken on Halifax RCMP headquarters
- Fanshawe College’s new Centre for Applied Transportation Technologies goes green
- Vanbots continues work on York University Life Sciences Building in Toronto
- Manitoba introduces new farm building code
- Heavy rains wash away bridges to Nova Scotia fishing village
- South Korea calls for financial safety net
- Jobsite safety a shared duty: Mechanical Contractors Association
- New technology could help find Jimmy Hoffa: Study
- Crane operator certification deadline looms in British Columbia
- High-tech oil sands project near Fort McMurray, Alberta could change industry
- Saskatoon bridge closed indefinitely over structural concerns
- City of Regina project turns up all sorts of surprises
- Awareness about qualifications-based selection lacking: Survey
- Canadian Institute of Steel Construction launches Steel Day
- Saskatchewan bridge collapses, causing crane to topple
- Crane tips over, killing worker and injuring two
- Saskatoon man pulled from hole at construction site
- Churchill airport gets government cash for infrastructure upgrades
- Stantec acquires health care architectural firm
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Canada’s construction starts in a transition phase (August 27, 2010)
- U.S. initial jobless claims rise to half a million again (August 19, 2010)
- It’s been 35 years since institutional construction starts as strong (August 6, 2010)
- More










