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The ABCs of Property Assessment - Part 3 of 3 - A sound solution

Author: Adrienne Batra 2004/11/01

Property taxes are unfair because they consider neither a person's ability to pay, nor the quantity of government services which a person consumes. Taxes on a particular property must be paid regardless of whether your annual income is $10,000 or $110,000. Property taxes are the same whether your household has six people using municipal services or just one.

Property taxes are also unfair because they can increase rapidly and unexpectedly with the market value of one's home, as much as 5 per cent or even 10 per cent in a single year.

The question is not whether the Current Value Assessment System must be reformed, but how. Recently the Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) polled its supporters on different models of municipal taxation. Based on survey results and on additional research, the CTF advocates a Municipal Property Tax Cap - the slayer of "assessment creep."

As a maximum, annual increases to property taxes should be limited to the rate of inflation. Manitoba's Municipal Government Act should be amended to make it illegal for municipalities to raise taxes on property by an amount which exceeds the inflation rate. If local politicians want to increase taxes further, they would have to ask taxpayers' permission in a referendum. Taxpayers themselves would be able to use similar initiative provisions to get a property tax reduction proposal on the ballot.

Residential property values themselves would be based on a combined formula including lot size, house size, and habitable square footage. Unlike market value or current value assessment, properties would not fluctuate in value each year. Any "assessment growth" would only result from the construction of new residential properties. Because properties would still be assessed relative to each other, changes to one's property and differences in lot and house size would retain progressive elements found in the existing property tax system.

Another important change is toward a more user-based or user-pay system, by lowering property taxes and instituting more fee-for-service arrangements for water, sewage and garbage collection. But this kind of change must be revenue neutral, and not increase the overall tax burden.

Unfortunately, change will probably not come without a fight from municipal politicians. They would prefer to maintain a system which allows them to set budgets first and raise taxes to pay for them later. Under the current system, politicians and bureaucrats have little incentive to reign in their spending.

Ultimately, the responsibility rests with Premier Doer's government to replace the Current Value Assessment System with a fairer, more predictable form of property taxation. Cities, towns and districts are not the only ones taxing property.

However, until the Municipal Government Act is amended, nothing stops Winnipeg, Brandon, and other municipalities from imposing a Municipal Property Tax Cap on themselves, as a matter of policy.

Finding real ways to reduce property tax burdens will increase in importance as more Canadians will be living on fixed retirement incomes. Ensuring users pay what it costs to deliver services they use is an important concept in reducing property tax burdens. There are other opportunities to shift financing burdens from the current property tax base to other tax bases - provincial and federal fuel taxes and general taxes for social services. Revamping the property tax system to a capped property tax with unit based assessment will go along way to taking volatility and unpredictable increases out of the system. Property taxes are not levied based on economic attributes, but rather are based on real estate. Canadians need provincial property tax systems that are fairer and more predictable.



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Federal Director at
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