Toronto Star

In Richmond Hill, you can soon pay property tax in bitcoin

Lone opposing councillor, some residents question why option was priority for council

- SHEILA WANG YORKREGION.COM

RRRichmond Hill residents are expected to be able to pay property taxes in bitcoin as an alternativ­e payment method in 2020.

City staff will hold discussion­s in the coming weeks to enter into an agreement with Coinberry Limited, a Toronto-based digital crypto platform, enabling residents and businesses to pay with bitcoin and convert it to Canadian dollars before transferri­ng it to the city.

It will make Richmond Hill the second Canadian city to offer the payment option after Innisfil, which approved a oneyear yyoneyear cryptocurr­ency pilot project earlier in March.

There wasn’t a time frame for offering the service in Richmond Hill.

“For Richmond Hill residents, it means they have another option to pay their property taxes. It increases our service wwwithout any risk or cost to the city,” wwwrote Deputy Mayor Joe DiPaola, who put forward the motion at a council meeting on July 9.

Currently, the city accepts property tax through online payments via banks, cash and cheques in person or by mail, according to a staff report. The report recommende­d the use of cryptocurr­encies as an alternativ­e form of tax payment on the grounds digital tokens can be transferre­d at a lower cost than convention­al currency transfers.

As an emerging form of virtual currency, the cryptocurr­ency runs on a blockchain, a decentrali­zed system, and is exchangeab­le directly between two users without any central authority outside of traditiona­l banks.

“For what purpose is the city adding such payment option when there is no evidence whatsoever to support this new service?” asked Councillor Godwin Chan, the lone vote against the motion.

Chan has spoken strongly against allowing bitcoin payment since the idea was first brought up earlier this summer.

He said he’s concerned about the

volatile nature of the nascent cryptocurr­ency industry, which may result in delayed payment of property tax in full amount if the value changes during the transactio­n.

While it holds a clear advantage of low transactio­n cost, the digital currency’s value fluctuates subject to the supply and demand in the market, as well as a number of other factors.

“The value will go up and down just like a stock does. However, instead of going up and down a few dollars, it can go up and down thousands of dollars,” said Dave D’Silva, who founded bitcoin North, a York Region community organizati­on for blockchain education and innovation.

Only in the last month or two has the cryptocurr­ency market started to stabilize, D’Silva said.

But the market doesn’t necessaril­y pose a risk to the municipali­ties that accept bitcoin as a payment method, he added.

“The city is not on the hook,” D’Silva said, noting customers who pay in bitcoin are responsibl­e for making up on any shortfalls if the price changes during the transactio­n process.

The city won’t hold any bitcoin, eliminatin­g the risk of tax implicatio­ns and value fluctuatio­n, he said.

Abitcoin was valued at around $15,500 as of Aug. 8.

The city’s spokespers­on, Libbi Hood, said Coinberry will “immediatel­y convert the digital currency to Canadian dollars, limiting value fluctuatio­n” when a payment is made with bitcoin.

“I, more than anything else, was surprised by how this was identified as a priority for the council,” said resident Ramin Faraji, who works as the process improvemen­t manager at George Brown College. Faraji was among many who were flabbergas­ted by council’s move and reached out to the Liberal after a previous article was published July 11.

He said the property tax payment method has never been a major concern among residents, citing a 2019 community survey that listed the most important issues in Richmond Hill.

Faraji, who works with emerging technologi­es and digital transforma­tion, was among the candidates running for a regional and local councillor seat last October.

He raised a number of questions: “How was this identified as an opportunit­y? Is there a sound business case supporting the recommenda­tion to adopt this payment method? What are the true costs and risks, and, most importantl­y, who is benefiting from this arrangemen­t?”

Deputy Mayor Carmine Perrelli said he started looking into the cryptocurr­ency payment option following requests by some residents, but he wasn’t aware of any company in the city currently dealing in bitcoin.

He said there’s no cost or risk associated with the new payment method.

“This is the future, right?” Perrelli said. “It’s no different than going to your financial institutio­n converting your euros or your liras or pounds into Canadian currency.”

Created in 2009, bitcoin is the first and most well-known type of cryptocurr­ency that can be used to buy merchandis­e anonymousl­y and pay internatio­nally in an easy and cheap way.

While bitcoin is often used as a way to avoid currency deflation in some countries like Venezuela, D’Silva said that in Canada, the digital coin is getting popular for very different reasons.

“In Richmond Hill, the only reason you want to buy into bitcoin is the same reason you want buy into stock. Investment,” he said, and predicted the overall value will continue to rise.

However, the anonymous digital currency also has a negative reputation as it has been used for fraud and other nefarious purposes. The crypto industry is currently unregulate­d in Canada.

Acknowledg­ing the risks associated with trading bitcoin, D’Silva said it’s important to find a reliable crypto exchange that’s unlikely to disappear overnight.

 ??  ?? Dave D’Silva, founder of Bitcoin North, applauds Richmond Hill for accepting bitcoins.
Dave D’Silva, founder of Bitcoin North, applauds Richmond Hill for accepting bitcoins.

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