The Province

Expert ‘surprised’ by Wilkinson letter

Liberal leader may have ‘crossed’ line by encouragin­g residents to crash Eby’s town hall

- MATT ROBINSON AND CHERYL CHAN mrobinson@postmedia.com chchan@postmedia.com

B.C. Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson may have crossed a line when he encouraged homeowners opposed to higher school taxes to crash a community discussion that Attorney General David Eby had planned for Tuesday night, says one political scientist.

Eby cancelled the town-hall meeting in his Vancouver-Point Grey constituen­cy hours before it was slated to start, citing concerns that the meeting could not be held safely. Earlier, Wilkinson had sent letters to Vancouver-Point Grey residents who live in multi-million-dollar homes subject to the new tax, urging them to attend the meeting “whether you have a ticket or not.”

In his letter, Wilkinson said the 0.2-per-cent tax on homes over $3 million and 0.4-per-cent tax on those over $4 million had nothing to do with schools and amounted to a “potentiall­y devastatin­g propositio­n for ordinary homeowners.”

Max Cameron, a political-science professor at the University of B.C., said it was not unusual for party operators to attend events held by other parties or to send hecklers.

“But I do think that sending people to crash an event — essentiall­y suggesting they should go even if they don’t have a ticket to it — is a significan­t escalation and I’m a little bit surprised to see that Andrew Wilkinson was willing to have his fingerprin­ts on this,” Cameron said.

“The line that’s being crossed there is that you’re actually creating a potential crowd-control problem. I think it’s risky. Were something to happen, people would rightly say, ‘Well, this was actually being encouraged by Wilkinson.’”

Meghan Pritchard, a spokeswoma­n with the B.C. Liberals, said in an email that residents affected by the tax “are not security risks — they are simply David Eby’s constituen­ts trying to make their voices heard by their MLA.”

There has been significan­t interest in Eby’s constituen­cy over this issue, she said. “If the original facility he booked is too small, the right thing to do would be to get a proper one and soon.”

In an interview, Eby said the initial distributi­on of links to the event went through the Point Grey Residents Associatio­n, then “to a lesser extent” his constituen­cy office list, but most tickets were gone by that time, he said.

Eby said there were two groups of people he had hoped would show up Tuesday — those who had bought homes with no intention of selling and had never asked for their huge appreciati­ons and those having a hard time finding housing and are happy to see initiative­s funded in part by the tax.

“The two groups, I thought, would benefit from hearing each other,” he said, adding that he did think there were legitimate concerns about the tax and important questions to be asked.

Despite the cancellati­on, the rally went ahead at a new venue. A large crowd gathered at Trimble Park with children and pets in attendance as well as local politician­s, including Vancouver mayoral hopefuls Wai Young and Glen Chernen.

Many in the crowd said they weren’t motivated by any political leanings — some even said they had voted NDP — but attended to speak out against what they believe is a “cash grab” that unfairly penalizes seniors and longtime residents who have seen the value of their properties increase exponentia­lly on paper.

There were nearly 43,000 residentia­l properties assessed at more than $3 million in the province as of March, according to the Ministry of Finance. Nearly 85 per cent of those are located in Metro Vancouver.

The increased school tax will apply to about two per cent of all homes in B.C. and should raise $50 million in 2018-19 and $200 million in 201920 and 2020-21, according to the finance ministry. Some homes are exempt from the school tax.

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