Advocates urge Ottawa to extend ‘no-brainer’ tax incentive for employee ownership
OTTAWA — It took Peter Deitz eight years to figure out the best way to sell his business. But it wasn’t until the federal government opened up a new option for succession planning that he found the right buyer: his own employees.
Deitz — co-founder of Grantbook, a Toronto-based firm that supports organizations doling out grants to non-profits — said he dreaded the idea of simply selling to an outside buyer who couldn’t see beyond his company’s bottom line.
“I could not foresee a scenario where I would sell the company to a third party that might change that culture or change that special quality within the business,” he said.
Deitz found an alternative he could live with in an employee ownership trust — a vehicle that sees employees of a business get a stake of the firm without having to pay for shares while the owner is paid out over a period of time, typically through the company’s profits.

