Monday, May 10, 2010

When higher taxes are not an option

Maureen Bader, Special to the Vancouver Sun May 10, 2010

High municipal tax burdens drive business out of town, but a tax revolt in British Columbia has shown that municipal governments are able to do more than just raise taxes -- if left with no other choice. Small businesses and large industries toil under an unsustainable property tax burden. With small business, the effects slowly come to light, but with large industries, the effect is more obvious. However, when a municipal government is no longer able to just increase business or industrial property taxes, it finds new ways to work with business to solve its tax-and-spend problem. That's exactly what we're now seeing in Powell River, one of the towns with a Catalyst mill.

In the summer of 2009, Catalyst Paper said it could no longer afford to foot the massive property tax bills charged to it by the four towns where its mills operate. The company said it was more than happy to pay for the services it received, but that was only $6 million of the $23 million in taxes it paid. It took the case to court and lost, but the mill town councils have woken up to the fact that if the mill shuts down and moves its factory to China, there will be no tax revenue at all, ever, from that mill again. The Powell River city council made a deal with Catalyst to have the mill treat the city's liquid waste and biosolids using the mill's effluent system and waste water boiler. The city will pay Catalyst for this service, which will be subtracted from its property tax bill, and this will bring the bill down to the level Catalyst wanted. This also saves the city from having to spend about $20 million on a new waste treatment facility.This is a win for Catalyst, a win for the city council and, best of all, a win for the taxpayer.

Maureen Bader is B.C. director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.

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