THE Parliament's Public Accounts Committee (PAC) will meet on November 13 at 10 am at the Red House to discuss the Auditor General's report on the...
Vous n'êtes pas connecté
AMENDED property-tax notices of assessment are currently being mailed out, a notice issued on June 25 said. The notices are being issued through the Ministry of Finance’s Inland Revenue Division. The Ministry of Finance’s website said the public should disregard previous property-tax notices of assessment dated before March 6, as these were now null and void. It explained the Property Tax Act had been amended to change the rate tax payable from three per cent to two per cent, and payments, deferrals and objections would only be accepted on the revised notices. It reminded citizens that payments are due by September 30. In March, amendments to the property tax legislation were laid in Parliament. During a March 15 debate in Parliament, Finance Minister Colm Imbert announced a proposed extension to the time during which owners can lodge objections to the valuations they receive. It was proposed that they should get six months instead of 30 days to do so. Earlier this year, after notices were posted on some doors of revenue collection offices, which said property tax notices had been suspended until further notice. Imbert apologised for this. Initially, the collection of property tax was scheduled to begin on March 1. It was under the amendments that the annual taxable value for residential properties was reduced to two per cent. The property tax and its collection has been widely discussed in Trinidad and Tobago, with the Opposition raising issues in and out of Parliament over the annual rental value of properties and issues related to deferrals, among others. The post Amended property-tax notices being mailed out appeared first on Trinidad and Tobago Newsday.
THE Parliament's Public Accounts Committee (PAC) will meet on November 13 at 10 am at the Red House to discuss the Auditor General's report on the...
Brian Manning, Minister in the Ministry of Finance, says the government is "very close" to reaching the 50 per cent threshold required to implement...
The City of Burnaby has agreed to acquire the Metrotown Place office towers in Burnaby, according to court filings in the Supreme Court of British...
The world’s governments must raise an additional $3 trillion to achieve sustainable and inclusive economic growth goals this decade. The cost in...
The world’s governments must raise an additional $3 trillion to achieve sustainable and inclusive economic growth goals this decade. The cost in...
GOVERNMENT senator Laurence Hislop has said the best path towards greater autonomy in Tobago is a "step-by-step" approach. Hislop was speaking in an...
Head of the National Trade Union Centre Michael Annisette says he has no issues with the Prime Minister, Opposition Leader, President and other top...
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine is calling on Parliament to "do the right thing" and give Tobago "the real deal" when it comes to its autonomy. The...
Chief Secretary Farley Augustine is calling on Parliament to "do the right thing" and give Tobago "the real deal" when it comes to its autonomy. The...
A new incentive program designed to add as many as 20,000 new purpose-built rental housing units to the City of Toronto — including 7,000 through a...