| 03/04/08 Enterprise in the Welsh countryside will be stifled and unlisted
                buildings put at risk due to an additional tax, rural economy
                expert CLA Wales has warned Welsh Assembly Government Heritage
                Minister, Rhodri Glyn Thomas.
               CLA Wales Chairman, Ross Murray, says the Rating (Empty
                      Properties) Act 2007 removed exemptions from empty property
                      rates from April 1 this year, with the effect that landowners
                      and farmers who have sought a change of use in the hope
                      of supplementing income from agriculture will now lose
                      money. And he has written to Rhodri Glyn Thomas outlining
                      the impact of ‘a wholly unwelcome additional tax’."People
                      now need to be much more certain that they are going to
                      be able to consistently let these buildings where the use
                      has been changed from agricultural to commercial",
                    added CLA Wales Chairman Ross Murray. "In my view, the Government has scored a major own
                      goal through the rates levy on empty property. This will
                      merely stifle diversification in rural Wales, where the
                      investment and employment associated with new business
                      is so critical to the rural economy. "It’s also a failure of the devolution process
                      because the Welsh Assembly Government was incapable of
                      setting its own policy on this issue. If it wasn’t
                      so serious I’d say that this was a very poor April
                      Fool joke". In his letter to Rhodri Glyn Thomas, Ross Murray wrote:"I
                      must put it to you that, in both a rural and urban context,
                      Wales' unlisted built heritage is unlikely to now receive
                      the investment you would desire as Heritage Minister. "The implications for Wales are as follows: 
                      Owners
                        will be deterred from speculative development without
                        significant pre-lets (unlikely in areas of low demand
                        viz Rural Wales).Investment, if any, will be concentrated in
                        areas of demand (again, I suggest not Rural Wales). If
                        development is reduced over a long period of time the
                        market could become two-tiered, with disproportionate
                        rental increases as demand outstrips supply, and conversely
                        falling rents in low-value areas.Prospering businesses may be forced to delay
                        expansion plans with fewer properties to choose from.The pressure to abandon or demolish buildings
                        will inevitably increase.The additional tax burden on business can only
                        damage the flexibility and competitiveness of the Welsh
                        economy". Mr Murray stressed
                      his disappointment that WAG had passed on the opportunity
                      to modify the Act as it applies to Wales under its autonomous
                      powers. The chance to reduce the 100% liability to a lower
                      percentage and to increase the rate free period had been
                      missed. 
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