BC: CTF Launches Contract with Taxpayers to take back City Halls

CTF Challenges BC Municipal Candidates to sign Contract with Taxpayers

VANCOUVER, BC: As hundreds of municipal politicians gather in Vancouver today for the start of the Union of BC Municipalities conference, the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) released the Contract with Taxpayers they will be challenging B.C. candidates to sign ahead of the November  19th municipal elections.

“Taxpayers are stretched thin and every level of government needs to do its part to lighten that burden,” said Jordan Bateman, the CTF’s B.C. director. “Property taxes have been an increasing drag on homeowners for years and our supporters are demanding a new, tougher approach on taxation from municipal candidates. This Contract with Taxpayers is a big step in that direction.”

The Contract with Taxpayers includes ten points, including keeping tax increases at or below the provincial rate of inflation, encouraging direct democracy, supporting transparency in expenses and a Municipal Auditor General and resisting downloading from senior levels of government.

Candidates signing the Contract are also committing to introducing a Taxpayer Protection Bylaw in their community if elected. This bylaw would enshrine the Contract’s principles and enforce a provision for a 15 per cent mayor and council pay cut if property taxes are raised beyond the rate of inflation without explicit public consent.

“It’s not enough for politicians to talk tough on taxes during election time—we need to raise the bar,” said Bateman. “The Taxpayer Protection Bylaw would instruct municipal staff to come forward with budgets that are in line with the rate of inflation and ensure taxpayers’ rights are put first and foremost in every civic decision. This has to be part of the DNA of city halls across B.C.”

A list of candidates who sign the Contract with Taxpayers will be widely circulated by the CTF through email, web, press releases and social media, although this is not an endorsement by the organization.

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Contract, Backgrounder and Draft Taxpayer Protection Bylaw can be found here.

For more information contact: CTF-BC director Jordan Bateman (jbateman@taxpayer.com), c: 604-999-3319

By: Jordan Bateman
Posted: September 26, 2011
Topic: British Columbia

Type: News Releases

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Comments

Contract???

There has to be some stop to contracting out as it does not save money.Garbage pick up should not be a choice or we will have garbage dumped all over the place.City water needs to stay as a public utility not for profit.We definitely do not need P-3 projects.P-3 project are a disaster waiting to happen.We need our elected officials accountable.We need to get rid of contracting out and get a good sound municipal team of employees that listen to our needs not wants.We also need to stop baiting people with grants.We need to streamline our municipalities and municipal worker to work with people and be user friendly.Help people improve and develop there property and buildings stop hindering and gouging them.

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