BC Property Taxpayers Need Protection only a Bylaw can Provide
It could be British Columbia’s biggest employment bonanza this year. City halls will soon be overrun by wannabe mayors, councillors and school trustees as nominations open for municipal elections. More than 1,000 jobs will be up for grabs on November 19th.
Door knocking, mail drops, telephone calls, social media updates, all-candidate meetings, newspaper stories and invasive sign campaigns will sprout as candidates try to get their names out to the public.
Meanwhile, the public will be trying to get their own message through to these politicians. In this municipal election cycle, more than in any previous local campaign, citizens have a focused message: hold the line on property taxes.
A recent Angus Reid poll released by the Independent Contractors and Businesses Association found that 92 per cent of British Columbians want mayoralty and council candidates to be specific in their positions about taxation and spending. More than half (53 per cent) said property taxes are too high, but 81 per cent of respondents said they would support candidates who committed to reduced municipal spending and taxes.
With these numbers in mind, most candidates will preach the gospel of fiscal responsibility and low taxes. Many will dutifully fill out industry and neighbourhood questionnaires and promise to change spending at their city hall.
But talk is worthless. The key to holding the line on property taxes is to identify and elect candidates willing to pass a Taxpayer Protection Bylaw, as proposed by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
The CTF’s Taxpayer Protection Bylaw caps property tax increases at the rate of inflation, unless explicit permission is sought from the public through a referendum. It also legislates a penalty for mayors and councillors who raise taxes above that level, cutting their pay by 15 per cent, similar to what the premier and cabinet face when the provincial government runs a deficit.
The Taxpayer Protection Bylaw also addresses other issues that concern taxpayers. Following the lead of the City of Toronto, B.C. mayors and councillors would publish their municipal expense account receipts online for the public to review. This increased level of accountability and transparency will instil confidence in voters that their elected officials can be trusted with the taxpayers’ cheque book.
The bylaw also supports the creation of a Municipal Auditor General. It’s likely that most of the new candidates will say they back such an office—after all, they are usually running because they are dissatisfied with the status quo.
Most of the incumbents, if they are being true to their Union of BC Municipalities’ tough talk and vote, will not. But while a Municipal Auditor General is important, it should not be the sole litmus test to judge candidates’ fiscal restraint.
Such a bylaw would change the DNA at a city hall by giving staff unequivocal direction on how to prepare the budget, how high taxes can be hiked and what type of fiscal accountability is acceptable to council.
If a Taxpayer Protection Bylaw was in place, municipal staff would be bound to only recommend items and budgets that fit with its limits. It enshrines these principles in a legal form in a municipality, giving taxpayers’ confidence that they will be upheld.
If you are one of those 81 per cent of taxpayers that are demanding property taxes be kept at reasonable levels, ask your local candidate this election if they will pass a Taxpayer Protection Bylaw.
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Comments
Benefit
Yes please save me from the horrors of public parks, community centres, and art galleries.
What we should be hoping for, as your article suggestions, is tax laws like they have in the US. Derelict streets, closing of fire and ambulance halls, parks over ridden with weeds and rows of abandoned houses and crime ridden neighbourhoods. What a great model to follow !! Folks in the US have stood up and have been heard.
You could move to your paradise tomorrow. One example is Colorado Springs :
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_14303473
"More than a third of the streetlights in Colorado Springs will go dark Monday. The police helicopters are for sale on the Internet. The city is dumping firefighting jobs, a vice team, burglary investigators, beat cops — dozens of police and fire positions will go unfilled.
The parks department removed trash cans last week, replacing them with signs urging users to pack out their own litter.
Neighbors are encouraged to bring their own lawn mowers to local green spaces, because parks workers will mow them only once every two weeks. If that.
Water cutbacks mean most parks will be dead, brown turf by July; the flower and fertilizer budget is zero.
City recreation centers, indoor and outdoor pools, and a handful of museums will close for good March 31 unless they find private funding to stay open. Buses no longer run on evenings and weekends. The city won't pay for any street paving, relying instead on a regional authority that can meet only about 10 percent of the need."
A balance is required, artificially limiting tax increases upon an unrelated metric is not the way forward.
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