Prairie Post (East Edition)

Alberta Municipali­ties says province lagging on infrastruc­ture

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The Alberta Municipali­ties organizati­on has concerns about funding for infrastruc­ture in the 2024 provincial budget and wants residents to realize the provincial portion of property tax bills will rise faster than that with cities’ control.

The organizati­on represents municipali­ties where 85 per cent of Albertans live, and last fall called for a $1-billion increase for capital grants to fund constructi­on.

That comes as a new program replaces the former Municipal Sustainabi­lity Initiative that will provide $722 million in the Local Government Fiscal Framework.

Alberta Municipali­ties wanted that funding to start at $1.75 billion, media was told on Friday.

“Provincial funding for community infrastruc­ture has not kept pace with Alberta’s population growth, nor changes in inflation,” ABMunis staff said during a briefing.

“In 2011, the Government of Alberta was investing $420 per Albertan into municipal infrastruc­ture programs but that has trended downward over the years and will only be $186 per capita in 2024.”

The organizati­on says while it appears capital funding has significan­tly increased in this year’s proposed budget, tabled on Feb. 29, it is below average. In 2021-22 the province frontloade­d a large portion of the remaining three years of MSI as the program wound down.

That “resulted in abnormally low funding in 2022-23 and 2023-24 leading into this year.”

LGFF Capital starts at the same three-year average – $722 million – which is higher than last year, but below the longer-term average.

Education property tax is also a concern, media were told. In 2023, ABMunis recommende­d that the province’s education tax amount should be maintained at $2.5 billion.

But the province will collect $229 million more from Albertans through property tax bills this year as it froze rates but will rise from higher assessment value.

ABMunis says this is a 9.2 increase on provincial education property taxes which will have to be collected by Alberta’s municipali­ties, putting more pressure on councils to collect that tax and address taxpayer concerns if taxes have to be raised even higher for municipal needs.

“Provincial investment in municipal infrastruc­ture seems detached from population growth and inflation,” said Rachel De Vos, chief policy and advocacy officer of ABMunis. “Budget 2024-25 signals further downloadin­g of the tax burden onto municipal government­s and property taxpayers of Alberta.”

She said inflation is also cutting into every municipali­ty’s purchasing power, De Vos added, citing “a 130 per cent increase in the cost of cement” to replace sidewalks.

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