The Welland Tribune

Infrastruc­ture a mess, but tax hike not the fix

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Ontario municipali­ties’ idea of raising provincial sales tax to help fix aging infrastruc­ture got a quick thumbs down from provincial party leaders recently.

That was no surprise. Raising a highly visible tax less than a year before an election, to benefit another level of government, adds up to three strikes for provincial leaders.

That doesn’t mean there isn’t a problem that requires a solution. Municipali­ties say they need an additional $4.9 billion a year to keep the public’s roads, bridges and arenas in good condition.

Property taxes generate only $20 billion in total, so that’s a big gap.

Raising provincial sales tax by one percentage point would close just over half that gap, generating $2.5 billion a year. It would be an easy solution for municipal politician­s, but it’s never going to fly.

At their core, municipali­ties are glorified condo corporatio­ns that keep our roads, sewers and water pipes in good repair. That’s the most basic function a city has. Politician­s aren’t going to get much sympathy when they say it can’t be done, especially since Ontario’s property taxes are the highest in the country.

The argument the Associatio­n of Municipali­ties of Ontario has mounted seems a little overwrough­t. Without provincial help, AMO predicts, property taxes will go up about eight per cent a year for the next decade, nearly half of that to pay for the infrastruc­ture gap.

It’s a scary projection, but not one that will become reality. No politician who wants to get re-elected is going to propose an eight per cent property tax increase one year, much less every year.

Saying no to AMO’s sales tax proposal was right — but that doesn’t mean the province doesn’t have a role to play in making sure municipali­ties can do their job and still keep property taxes affordable.

Rather than imagine municipali­ties can find $4.9 billion in cuts to cover the repair bill, the public should be asking why things like social housing, long-term care and education are on our property tax bill. These are provincial responsibi­lities. The education property tax alone is $6 billion a year.

The province needs to narrow what property taxes cover, so that our cities and towns can do their main job. — Postmedia News

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