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Sorbara Endorses 1-Cent Campaign

unimaginative2

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Share the wealth, province urges Ottawa
Sorbara backs Miller's campaign to have the federal government give municipalities 1 per cent of GST

JAMES RUSK AND UNNATI GANDHI

October 24, 2007

Ontario's Finance Minister called on the federal government yesterday to share 1 per cent of the GST with municipalities such as Toronto as they struggle to balance their budgets.

Greg Sorbara said that, at a time when the feds are "awash in revenue" from an unprecedented surplus, municipalities across the country are starved for cash and considering service cuts.

"The best way to solve that problem is the proposal to allocate that 1 per cent of the GST through provincial governments for municipal purposes, including building infrastructure [and] new public transit," he said last night in Toronto, backing what Mayor David Miller has been campaigning for this past year.

"And we are going to continue to make that argument until the federal government sees that the notion of simply reducing the GST simply shortchanges and ignores the problems of cities and towns across the country."

Mr. Sorbara's words came as Mr. Miller warned yesterday that property taxes will go up 3 to 4 per cent, even with the new city taxes on vehicles and land sales that council imposed this week.

But the property-tax increase the mayor will actually deliver depends on what he, with the help of Toronto business leaders, can achieve in the annual political game that the city and the province play over the municipal budget.

In the decade since amalgamation, the city has regularly gone cap-in-hand to the province for cash to balance its budget so property-tax increases can be held to the rate of inflation or less.

Although publicly amicable deals were reached, there has been a privately growing frustration at Queen's Park that, while other Toronto-area municipalities have responded to fiscal pressure by raising property taxes by much more than Toronto has, the city's politicians continue to rely on annual provincial bailouts, usually for the subway.

"In some of our budgets, we've paid special attention to the City of Toronto because of its unique circumstances," Mr. Sorbara conceded. "For example, the City of Toronto runs a transit system which really is the system for hundreds of thousands of people that live beyond the boundaries of the City of Toronto.

"There are other unique circumstances that have us make special provisions for the City of Toronto, but every budget that we've presented has increased the viability of municipalities right across the province."

While the province has eased some of the pressure on municipalities by, for example, assuming responsibility for some of the social costs now borne locally, Premier Dalton McGuinty had also signalled that the province expected Toronto to use the unique taxing powers in the City of Toronto Act.

Mr. Sorbara declined to comment on whether the city should be exercising its taxing powers more strongly, saying simply, "It's up to them to decide what they're going to do."

In round figures, the city has to find $240-million through a combination of property-tax hikes, spending cuts or money from senior levels of government.

While the city will be able to say it stepped up to the plate with its new taxes, the province could, if it chose, play hardball by arguing that the city has not tapped into all the revenue sources it gave the city - and that, like its 905 neighbours, it should raise property taxes by significantly more than the inflation rate.

The issue on which the city is most vulnerable is spending.

The perception inside Queen's Park is that the mayor and council are not as careful with the public purse as 905 municipalities are, an impression that was reinforced with this summer's attempt to find cost savings, a botched effort that seriously eroded Mr. Miller's credibility.

"That was not pretty, politically or public-policy wise," said a provincial source.

As a consequence, the source said that Mr. Miller's decision to appoint a blue-ribbon task force to look for savings was an essential step in the mayor's efforts to get money out of the province.

The province hopes the task force will find savings in the city budget, but even if all it does is reassure the public that Toronto is doing a good job of managing tax dollars, it would make it easier for the Queen's Park to untie the purse strings once again.
 
... the summer's attempt to find cost savings, a botched effort that seriously eroded Mr. Miller's credibility.

"That was not pretty, politically or public-policy wise," said a provincial source.

These things don't get said, and published, unless someone senior in the provincial government gives the green light to do so. Although not attributed, this stuff absolutely comes directly from either Sorbara or McGuinty. It's a pretty clear message being transmitted to Miller.

The recent "trial balloon" regarding a possible provincial takeover of the TTC is very much in the same vein, I think, and probably with a similar objective.

The "one cent of the GST" campaign is still going nowhere, as many had predicted from the beginning. Again, not the most politically smart thing for Miller to have done. He set himself up for a public failure, which an experienced politician should know never to do.

A pattern develops ... The province comes to the city's rescue, because they will pretty much have to. But Miller and Co. will become increasingly irrelevant in the larger picture, unless they change their ways.
 
From his standpoint, the federal government is literally swimming in surpluses and is cutting the sales tax anyway. The provincial government is barely managing a balanced budget. The only way he could to it is with a tax hike, and that didn't go over too well last time he tried it.
 
I hope this isn't all Miller secured from the Provincial Liberals for keeping silent during the election. The 1 cent GST issue is going nowhere as said (it doesn't even makes sense as a policy) and it cost the province nothing to endorse it. The federal government has little to do with cities and it could be argued legitimately that they have no obligation and should have no obligation to deal with city issues as part of their mandate. The federal government is vacating GST room so the province is free to increase their PST and give 1 cent to the cities of the province but they can't because that would be politically damaging because it would be seen as a tax increase (even though it is neutral to the tax payer).
 
A quibble, but the GST and PST are not quite the same kind of tax, so raising PST by a point won't have the same effect. I agree with you, otherwise. Ontario should raise consumption taxes (or force municipalities to levy them) to help shore up the municipal tax base.

The reason why PST and GST are different is that they tax different things. The PST is the more economically harmful of the two, so the PST should be harmonized with GST.
 
That's just for the first five months of their fiscal year... it's likely to be in the neighbourhood of $15 billion.
 
I think that it would be much more constitutionally appropriate for the Federal government to set up an infrastructure fund (which has been done many times before) to which municipalities and provinces can apply to fund their projects. Considering the size of the surplus, a fund as big as $50 billion over, say, 10 years seems more than reasonable.
 
Raise the PST by 1 pc would be my vote. The only reason they are going after GST is that Edmonton and Calgary wouldn't get any as Alta. doesn't have PST.

unimaginative2: that's how it works in the European Union, under the Structural and Cohesion Funds.
 
McGuinty tells PM he wants 1¢ of GST
`Turning point' in fight for GST share
Sep 29, 2007 04:30 AM
Robert Benzie
Queen's Park Bureau Chief

Premier Dalton McGuinty has sent a letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper demanding that one percentage point of the GST be given to Toronto and other Ontario cities faced with massive budget problems, the Star has learned.

Ontario's leaders too scared to replace the vanishing federal cent
JOHN BARBER
Posted on 06/11/07

I admit it. The cause is hopeless. The political leaders of this province, from Premier Dalton McGuinty to the Reeve of Coboconk, will never take advantage of the opportunity that now dangles so beguilingly in front of their twitching noses. Like badly trained dogs, they wince at the thought of a potential beating even as they salivate for the nourishment they need. When leadership requires a decisive lunge, they tremble and whimper.

McGuinty willing to study merger with GST
KAREN HOWLETT
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
November 7, 2007 at 5:05 AM EST

Mr. McGuinty ruled out helping municipalities by moving into the tax space created by the reduction in the GST. Ontario New Democrat Leader Howard Hampton has proposed that Ontario raise the provincial sales tax by one point to 9 per cent and then turn over the $2-billion that would raise to the province's cash-strapped municipalities.

Mr. Hampton said yesterday that Mr. McGuinty had been calling on Ottawa to give municipalities one out of every six cents in GST revenue it collects. "He now has the mechanism to have that happen," Mr. Hampton said in an interview yesterday.

However, Mr. McGuinty made it clear that he plans to call on cash-rich Ottawa to help the province's struggling municipalities. "They have the financial wherewithal to be able to do that," he said.

Premier rejects tax increase despite GST cut
NDP calls on province to help cities by using tax room left over by Flaherty's mini-budget
Nov 07, 2007 04:30 AM
Robert Benzie
Queen's Park Bureau Chief

There will be no increase in the provincial sales tax to help struggling municipalities despite the GST cut that creates room for such a hike, Premier Dalton McGuinty says.

In the wake of federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's mini-budget announcement last week that the 6 per cent goods and services tax will drop to 5 per cent as of Jan. 1, McGuinty was asked if he would raise the PST from 8 to 9 per cent and give cities the proceeds.

"Yes, I have given that some thought, and no, we're not going to do that," he said yesterday in Rexdale. "We are now uploading millions of dollars in downloaded social costs and we find ourselves at the table together with our municipal partners looking at what we can continue to do to support one another going into the future."

McGuinty, a supporter of Toronto Mayor David Miller's One Cent Now crusade to get Ottawa to fork over one percentage point of the GST to cities, said it's time for Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government to do its part.

Sigh.
 
It's right at the beginning of the mandate. For all the calls for his head from the knee-jerk anti-tax conservatives, McGuinty survived just fine. I really think it is a shame that he has no desire to put the money where his mouth is, as the uploading and costs he talks about is certainly not enough. The one-cent PST would not be exactly revenue-neutral, but it wouldn't hurt most taxpayers much at all, without compromising the province's goals.

It's just too bad that there's so many boneheads that go Pavlovian for tax cuts and don't understand the real consequences.
 
Maybe they should allow each municipality to have their own sales tax, an MST? That way it is not political suicide for McGuinty...
 
doady said:
Maybe they should allow each municipality to have their own sales tax, an MST? That way it is not political suicide for McGuinty...

It's just too bad that there's so many boneheads that go Pavlovian for tax cuts and don't understand the real consequences.

I have very little sympathy on this for McGuinty. This is his job. Sometimes he has to make decisions that may not be popular, but that are the long-term right thing to do.

That said, are we so sure it would be so unpopular? I did not hear a lot of people jumping for joy about this big one-cent GST downgrade.

And if asked whether they'd trade off the one GST cent for, say, extending the Yonge line up to the 407 and the Sheppard line out to STC and the Spadina line, a lot of 416ers and 905ers would find it a no-brainer.

Why doesn't McGuinty step up? This is what the one-cent campaign, which he claimed to support, is all about.
 

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