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Venture Capital Programs
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What is an affiliate?
What is an associate?
Who is an employee of a small business?
How do I calculate the number of employees?
What is the formula for calculating the percentage of wages and
salaries paid to employees
who regularly report to work in British Columbia?
What is the calculation period?
How do I determine if a small business is substantially engaged in a
prescribed qualifying activity?
What are the 5 qualifying activities?
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What is an affiliate?
Generally, companies are affiliated if they are in a
parent/subsidiary relationship or are sister companies under common
control. Specifically, affiliate means any corporation where one is
the subsidiary of the other, or both are subsidiaries of the same
corporation. Two corporations are also affiliates if both are
controlled by the same person or group of person; or if one
corporation is controlled by a person and the other corporation is
controlled by their spouse, parent,
grandparent, sibling, child or other their spouse’s relative.
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What is an associate?
Generally,
2 people are associates if they are related. Your associates
include your spouse, parents, grandparents, children,
grandchildren, and siblings. Your spouse's parents,
grandparents, children, grandchildren, and siblings are also
your associates if they live with you. Associates can also be
your business partners and those people who participate in a
joint venture with you. A corporation can be your associate if
you own, directly or indirectly, shares carrying more 10% or
more of the outstanding voting rights for the election of the
company’s directors. Likewise, a trust or estate can be your
associate if you serve as a trustee (or in a similar capacity),
or have a substantial beneficial interest in the trust or
estate.

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Who is an employee of a small business?
Employees are individuals who report for work for the small
businesses, and include all "persons engaged by a small business".
This includes the officers of the small business and persons who
work for or provide services to the small business who are employed
through a temporary help service. Contractors are also employees,
unless they provide accounting, legal or other professional services
on a temporary working or ad hoc consulting basis.
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How do I calculate the number of employees?
The
number of employees may be calculated using either of the following
formulas:
Option A:
Number of Employees = Total Hours
40 x w
Where:
Total Hours = the total hours worked by all
employees each of whom worked for at
least 20 hours (counting all time worked by each
employee whether for the small business, any of its affiliates or
both) during any week of the calculation period, and
w
= the
number
of weeks in the calculation period; or
Option B:
Number of Employees = Employee Costs x
52 divided by $45,000
w
Where:
Employee Costs
=
all amounts
paid or payable by the small business to or on behalf of employees
for work performed or services provided by them during the
calculation period, and
w
= the number
of
weeks in the
calculation
period.
Note: If the small business has any corporate "affiliates" (as
defined in the Act), the number of employees of the small business
together with its affiliates, is the sum of the number of employees
of the small business and each of its affiliates, calculated using
the above formulas.
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What is the formula for calculating the percentage of wages and
salaries paid to employees who regularly report to work in British
Columbia?
Percentage of wages and salaries = Wages (B.C.)
x 100
Total
Wages
Where:
Wages (B.C.) = the total remuneration paid, payable or
to be paid in respect of the calculation period to employees of the
corporation who regularly reported to work during the
calculation period at operations located in British Columbia, and
Total Wages = the total remuneration that was paid,
payable or to be paid in respect of the calculation period
to all employees of the corporation during the calculation period.
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What is the calculation period?
The
calculation period used to determine the number of employees or
percentage of wages paid to employees who regularly report to work
in British Columbia is either:
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where, at the date of the calculation, a corporation has been in
business for a period of less than 12 consecutive months, that
entire period.
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where, at the date of the calculation, a corporation has been in
business for a period of 12 or more consecutive months, the 52
weeks just ended at the date of the calculation.
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How do I determine if a small business is substantially engaged in a
prescribed qualifying activity?
A
business may be engaged in a number of activities, some may be
qualifying activities and others may not. The company’s activities
must be closely examined to determine if the company is
substantially engaged in a qualifying activity. Generally, the
qualifying activities must represent the majority of the business'
total activity.
To be
substantially engaged, more than 50 percent of the assets and
expenses of the business are used in (or more than 50 percent of the
business revenue is derived from) one or more of the prescribed
qualifying activities.
Formula: Activity Assets + Activity
Expenses > 0.5
Total Assets + Total Expenses
Where,
Activity Assets
= the value of assets of the small business used in B.C. in the
prescribed business activity
Total Assets
= the total
value
of all assets of the small business
Activity Expenses
= the expenses of the small business incurred during the
calculation
period with respect to the portion of the prescribed business
activity carried on in B.C.
Total Expenses
= the total of
all
expenses of the small business incurred during the calculation
period with respect to all operations of the small business.
Note: The value of assets and expenses must be determined in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.
Example:
XYZ
Co. is a family business that grows and harvests specialty timber
from its private lands (40% of assets/expenses), mills and processes
the lumber into furniture (51% of assets/expenses) and has a small
factory direct retail outlet (9% of assets/expenses). Even though
the business is engaged in "manufacturing and processing" which is a
prescribed activity, the primary resource extraction and retailing
portions of its operations are specifically not prescribed
activities. Therefore, the harvesting and retailing assets and
expenses could not be included in the numerator of the above
formula. Even so, the business would still be "substantially
engaged" in prescribed business activities because 51% of its assets
and expenses are applied to manufacturing and processing activities.
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What are the 5 qualifying activities?
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Manufacturing, processing or export of value-added goods produced
in British Columbia;
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Destination tourism;
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Research and development of proprietary technology;
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Development of interactive digital new media product; or
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Community diversification outside of the Lower Mainland and the
Capital Region.
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Manufacturing, processing or export of value-added goods produced in
British Columbia
Manufacturing and processing are considered to be activities that
consist of producing, or putting goods or materials into marketable
form by employees of the small business, from raw, unfinished or
prepared goods or materials, by changing the form or content of
those goods or materials into a finished product.
Goods
not wholly produced in B.C. will be deemed to be goods produced in
B.C. if the Administrator is satisfied that substantial value has
been added by the business' operations in the Province.
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Destination tourism
To
qualify under this activity, a business must demonstrate that it
does or will earn 50% or more of its gross revenues from tourists.
A “tourist” is an individual who resides more than 80 kilometres
from the destination resort or attraction.
The
following activities are included:
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The development and operation of a destination tourist resort
(fishing lodge, ski resort lodge or a guest ranch) that is:
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a resort having an accommodation facility, a restaurant, and
a facility providing recreational activity operating that
operate concurrently for at least 120 consecutive days a
year, and
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located outside of the Greater Vancouver Regional District,
the Capital Regional District and the Municipality of
Whistler.
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The development and operation of a tourist attraction that is:
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located outside of the Greater Vancouver Regional District,
the Capital Regional District and, the Municipality of
Whistler; and
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a facility intended to attract and provide recreation to
tourists on a fee for service basis; but not including the
operation of:
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motion picture or drive in theatre;
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video or electronic game parlour;
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bowling alley, ice rink, health club, racquet club or
playing field;
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night club; or
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a facility that is restricted to members;
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Research and development of proprietary
technology
This
category covers business activities involving research and
development of proprietary technologies produced in B.C., including
services associated with marketing or exporting the technologies
inside or outside the province.
Some
industry sectors included under this activity are:
A
proprietary or “ownership” right to the technology is critical for
qualification under this category because it enables the business to
commercially exploit the technology and direct its research and
development.
Services that support the export of proprietary technologies
developed in British Columbia include:
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Marketing the technology to clients outside B.C.,
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Attendance at international trade shows, or
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The operation of a demonstration or prototype facility.
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Development of interactive digital new
media product
In
order to access tax credits reserved for the new media sector a
small business must be substantially engaged in the development,
within British Columbia, of an interactive digital media product for
commercial exploitation, that:
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Educates, informs or entertains and presents information using
at least two of the mediums of text, sound or visual images;
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Is not developed for internal corporate use involving the
promotion of products or services;
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Is not used primarily for interpersonal communication; and
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Is not a product for which public financial support would, in
the opinion of the Administrator, be contrary to public policy.
A
company may still qualify under this category if it is developing a
product under contract for a third-party client. However, the
product must be developed in B.C. and the business developing the
product under contract must still meet the remaining eligibility
requirements.
An
activity will not be considered eligible if it involves the
development of a product that is contrary to public policy.
Examples of content that would be considered “contrary to public
policy” include product that:
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incites hatred against an identifiable group, or
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has a dominant characteristic which is the undue exploitation of
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Community diversification outside of the
Lower Mainland and the Capital Region
A
business located outside the Greater Vancouver Regional District and
the Capital Regional District may be engaged in a prescribed
activity if the business activity promotes economic diversification
within the region.
In
assessing community diversification, consideration will be given
to:
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the impact of the business activity on existing businesses in
the region, and
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how the business activity supports or will support existing
businesses in the community.
It
should be noted that an activity that involves a ‘commercial
service’ or ‘community infrastructure project,’ such as a technology
‘incubator’ centre may qualify under this activity if it can be
demonstrated that the activity supports the economic diversification
and development of a community.
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What is the definition of equity capital?
The Act defines
"equity capital" as the consideration in money received by a
company before or after its registration under this Act as a VCC
for its issued shares or by a small business for its issued
"equity shares". Equity shares are defined as:
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a share of a
class of shares whether or not the share carries voting
rights, but does not include a share having prescribed
rights and restrictions,
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any warrants,
options or rights entitling their holders to purchase or
acquire the shares referred to in paragraph (a), or
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other prescribed
securities.
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