Penticton Herald

Summerland taxes are too expensive

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Dear Editor:

By now property owners in Summerland will have received their tax notices. The page on how our taxes are used is certainly entertaini­ng.

I worked out an approximat­e percentage expenditur­e based on the example given.

• 55% of our taxes go to municipal services; 32% go to our schools. The other 13% goes to useful (?) miscellane­ous.

• 28% of our municipal tax dollar goes to roads, sidewalks and drainage.

• 22% to recreation, parks and cultural facilities

• 17% to policing

• 10% to fire protection

• 8% to general government

• 15% to useful (?) miscellane­ous. My family has been in Summerland since 1968. We have an orchard and a couple of small rental homes.

And even though we qualify for homeowner’s grant, we still have a substantia­l tax bill for which the municipali­ty has graciously extended payment to Sept. 30.

We don’t have a view of the lake, just a massive greenhouse operation, which is OK. The roads in our area are in a sad state of disrepair and we don’t have sidewalks, and only recently got a fire hydrant within a half mile.

I’ve used the police once, a long time ago, to register my hunting rifles which turned out to be a waste of time. We’ve never had call to use fire protection, but do use the landfill and recycling, which, incidental­ly, we also pay for on a monthly basis through our utility bill.

We all like to help out our neighbours, but it is my opinion that perhaps our taxes should be based on a more equitable footing, establishe­d on our use of municipal services rather than supplement­ing new developmen­t, which results in additional police and fire protection, more roads, more services, more taxes, etc.

Frank Martens

Summerland

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