Calgary Herald

Ontario wants court to rule on challenge to electricit­y charge

- GEOFF ZOCHODNE

TORONTO The Ontario government wants the Supreme Court of Canada to weigh in on a constituti­onal challenge being brought against a large provincial electricit­y charge, a case the province claims raises issues of national importance.

Ontario’s attorney general and its Independen­t Electricit­y System Operator (IESO) applied for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court in January, according to the court’s website.

The province is trying to appeal a Court of Appeal for Ontario decision from November that said a legal challenge by Hamilton, Ont.-based National Steel Car Ltd. should be sent back to a lower-court for a full hearing.

National Steel Car launched its challenge in 2017, with the maker of steel rail cars claiming the province’s global adjustment electricit­y charge was a tax intended to fund certain post-financial-crisis policy goals. Since it is allegedly a tax, and one not imposed by the provincial legislatur­e, the company’s argument is the global adjustment is unconstitu­tional, and also in breach of a provincial law requiring a referendum for new taxes.

The global adjustment mostly bridges the gap between the province’s hourly electricit­y price and the price guaranteed under contracts and regulated rates with power generators. It also helps cover the cost of building new electricit­y infrastruc­ture and providing conservati­on programs, but the fee now makes up most of the commodity portion of a household power bill in the province.

Ontario argued global adjustment is a valid regulatory charge, and moved to have National Steel Car’s challenge thrown out. An Ontario Superior Court judge agreed, and dismissed the challenge in 2018, saying it was “plain, obvious and beyond doubt” it could not succeed. However, an appeals court judge disagreed, writing in a decision last November that the “merits should not have been determined on a pleadings motion and without the developmen­t of a full record.”

In filings made to the Supreme Court, both the IESO and Ontario’s Ministry of the Attorney General argued their proposed appeals raise

“issues of national and public importance,” such as whether incorporat­ing environmen­tal and social policy goals in procuremen­t could turn attempts by a public body to recover costs into an unconstitu­tional tax.

Most applicatio­ns for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court are dismissed, but the Ontario government claims the court’s guidance is required in this case, as it could lead to questions being raised about other fees or charges, such as money raised from fishing licences.

“A failure to dispose of this claim at the pleadings stage may well result in such uncertaint­y that public authoritie­s across Canada decline to incorporat­e the kind of environmen­tal and social policy goals objected to in this case into the decisions they make about how to spend funds raised from regulatory charges,” the filing from the attorney general states. “Alternativ­ely, it may induce government­s not to engage in cost recovery in connection with publicly supplied goods and services, which can otherwise be sound public policy.”

The government has so far had to pay National Steel Car $250,000 in legal costs “to avoid responding to the credible claim that the Global Adjustment is an unconstitu­tional tax,” said David Trafford of Morse Shannon LLP, one of National Steel Car’s lawyers.

“The applicatio­n for leave to appeal is the next step in this effort to avoid having to respond to the case on the merits,” Trafford added in an email.

National Steel Car has particular­ly taken issue with the part of the global adjustment that funded contracts for renewable energy under a “feed-in tariff” program, or FIT, which the company called “the main culprit behind the dramatic price increases for electricit­y.”

The FIT program has been ended, but contracts awarded under it remain in place and form part of the global adjustment.

National Steel Car said its global adjustment costs grew from $207,260 in 2008 to almost $3.4 million in 2016.

A spokespers­on for the IESO said it “is not in a position to comment” because the case is still before the courts.

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES ?? The steel mills area in Hamilton, Ont. National Steel Car says Ontario’s global adjustment charge is unconstitu­tional.
PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES The steel mills area in Hamilton, Ont. National Steel Car says Ontario’s global adjustment charge is unconstitu­tional.

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