Regina Leader-Post

Cities hope for more collaborat­ion under Premier Moe

- PHIL TANK ptank@postmedia.com twitter.com/thinktankS­K

The president of the organizati­on that represents Saskatchew­an’s cities and towns wants a more collaborat­ive relationsh­ip with Premier Scott Moe’s new provincial government.

“So far, so good,” Saskatchew­an Urban Municipali­ties Associatio­n (SUMA) president Gordon Barnhart said Wednesday. “I think that they’ve been saying they want to have consultati­on before decisions are made and I think that’s a step in the right direction.”

Moe took over from premier Brad Wall last month as leader of the Saskatchew­an Party and the province’s new premier.

The last budget under Wall, tabled in March 2017, slashed some grants-in-lieu payments to urban municipali­ties, which left city and town halls scrambling to replace the lost revenue.

Many municipal 2018 budgets still reflect the struggle to cope with fewer provincial dollars. Reduced provincial revenue was blamed for more than half of the City of Saskatoon’s 2018 property tax increase of 4.7 per cent.

Other cities, like Regina, are still formulatin­g their 2018 budgets.

Moe warned of another “tight budget” at the SUMA convention in Regina this month.

Still, Barnhart said he is encouraged by the degree of consultati­on, including a meeting between SUMA executives and Finance Minister Donna Harpauer and Government Relations Minister Warren Kaeding.

“That doesn’t mean we’ll get everything that we ask for,” Barnhart said of the April 10 provincial budget.

He declined to reveal specifics, but Saskatoon Coun. Darren Hill, who also serves on the SUMA executive, shared a few details at a city council committee meeting Tuesday.

Hill said the province is not expected to restore the grants-inlieu from Crown corporatio­ns, but there were “great conversati­ons” on possible replacemen­t revenue.

The province is reviewing the revenue-sharing formula, but extensive changes are not expected, Hill said. The Sask. Party government has shared one-fifth of provincial sales tax revenue with municipali­ties for most of its time in government.

Barnhart said SUMA is lobbying for municipali­ties to get one-third of the expected revenue headed to the province from taxes on marijuana. The federal government has committed to send 75 per cent of marijuana tax revenue to provinces.

Barnhart said municipali­ties are only looking for reimbursem­ent of the costs associated with legalized marijuana, such as training police officers to detect impaired motorists.

“It’s not going to be a gravy train as far as I can see,” he said.

Barnhart repeated that SUMA would like to see more details on the province’s plan for legal marijuana as soon as possible.

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