Calgary Herald

Rail car maker to pursue suit over hydro ‘tax’

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE

A manufactur­er of steel rail cars is pursuing an appeal after its lawsuit challengin­g the constituti­onality of a major Ontario electricit­y fee was struck down earlier this year.

Lawyers for Hamilton, Ont.based National Steel Car Ltd. filed a notice of appeal in July after Ontario Superior Court Justice Wendy Matheson ruled in June that an electricit­y fee, known as the global adjustment, was a regulatory charge, and not an unconstitu­tional tax used to finance policy goals, as National Steel Car alleges.

The company, the decision noted, began its legal crusade last year after seeing its electricit­y bills had “increased dramatical­ly ” since the Ontario government passed green energy legislatio­n.

Under that legislatio­n, the judge wrote, “private suppliers of renewable energy were paid to ‘feed in’ energy into Ontario’s electricit­y grid.” The contracts for these socalled “feed-in tariff ” contracts, or FIT contracts, were the “primary focus” of the lawsuit.

“The applicant seeks a declaratio­n that part of the amount it has paid for electricit­y is an unconstitu­tional tax rather than a valid regulatory charge,” the judge added. “More specifical­ly, it challenges part of the Global Adjustment, which is a component of electricit­y pricing and incorporat­es obligation­s under FIT contracts.”

Chiefly representi­ng the difference between Ontario’s market price for power and the guaranteed price owed to generators, global adjustment now makes up the bulk of the commodity cost of electricit­y in the province. The fee has risen over the past decade — costing electricit­y customers $37 billion in global adjustment from 2006 to 2014, according to the province’s auditor general — because of investment­s in the electricit­y grid and green-energy contracts, among other reasons.

National Steel Car argued the global adjustment is a tax, and an unconstitu­tional one at that because it violated a section of the Constituti­on Act requiring taxes to be authorized by the legislatur­e. The company also said the imposition of the global adjustment broke an Ontario law requiring a referendum to be held for new taxes.

The province, Justice Matheson wrote, had argued “that it is plain and obvious that these applicatio­ns will fail.” In a decision released in June, the judge granted motions to strike out National Steel Car’s applicatio­ns.

“The Global Adjustment,” she added, “is not a tax because its purpose, in pith and substance, is not to tax, and it is a regulatory charge and therefore, again, not a tax.”

Now, National Steel Car is arguing that the judge erred in several ways, including in fact, “by finding that the FIT contracts must be paid, when they can be cancelled.”

There has been a change in government at Queen’s Park since National Steel Car first filed its lawsuit last year, and that change has put green energy contracts under fire. The Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government of new Premier Doug Ford has already made a number of moves on the electricit­y file, such as moving to cancel and wind down more than 750 renewable energy contracts, as well as repealing the province’s Green Energy Act.

The Tories also struck a commission of inquiry into the province’s finances that warned the global adjustment “may be struck down as unconstitu­tional.”

“There is a risk that a court may find the global adjustment is not a valid regulatory charge if shifting costs over a longer period of time inadverten­tly results in future ratepayers cross-subsidizin­g today’s ratepayers,” the report said.

A spokespers­on for Ontario’s Ministry of Energy, Northern Developmen­t and Mines said in an email that it would be “inappropri­ate to comment about the specifics of any case before the courts or currently under arbitratio­n.”

National Steel Car is also prepared to fight its case all the way up to the Supreme Court of Canada, according to its lawyer.

“What is clear from our proceeding with the appeal is National Steel Car has every intention of seeing that lawsuit through to its conclusion if this government isn’t interested or prepared to reasonably settle it,” Jerome Morse said. Financial Post gzochodne@nationalpo­st.com twitter.com/ GeoffZocho­dne

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON ?? National Steel Car Ltd. objects to an electricit­y fee called the global adjustment, which the company claims is an unconstitu­tional tax.
PETER J. THOMPSON National Steel Car Ltd. objects to an electricit­y fee called the global adjustment, which the company claims is an unconstitu­tional tax.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada