Juan_Lennon416
Senior Member
no road tolls as I am currently being dismantled by the HST (Horse Sh*t Tax)
no road tolls as I am currently being dismantled by the HST (Horse Sh*t Tax)
Given that they significantly dropped income tax, and the corporate tax rates, when they replaced the 13% PST/GST with the 13% HST, there isn't really anything left over for anything. I suppose there's the $billion of bribery they got from the feds to do this ... but that all went out in the transition payments we are all receiving.With the HST instead of GST applied to gas now (13% instead of 5%), those extra 8 percentage points should really go to public transit. That's not chump change.
Given that they significantly dropped income tax, and the corporate tax rates, when they replaced the 13% PST/GST with the 13% HST, there isn't really anything left over for anything. I suppose there's the $billion of bribery they got from the feds to do this ... but that all went out in the transition payments we are all receiving.
The whole thing is pretty neutral in tax revenues.
But you do raise a point. Rather than simply having tolls, we could look at other taxation sources. Perhaps increasing the HST from 13% to 15% to pay for transit. Or we could go for the high fuel taxes many countries have ... which is why gas is so much cheaper here than most countries.
Its been really hard to get them to change.
I do
Haven't read the pdf, but from what I've read in The Star it comes off as anti-car rhetoric with little thought.
Why shouldn't we charge for highways at the point of use? Any time you give away anything for no marginal cost, it is over-consumed. There is no god-given right to state provided highways to support 100 km commutes.
Works in theory. But I disagree that it's fair in practice. Is it fair to ding a Barrie-Mississauga business traveller who happens to get caught in the congestion on the 400 from Toronto bound commuters?
As a frequent business traveller ... it's 100% fair. The cost of lost time is huge - far more than the toll. Say the cost of lost time is $100 per hour. If one is driving 100 km/hr, then the cost of one hours driving is only $10. If the $10 toll to drive an hour, saves time, and it would take 1 hour and 6 minutes on an untolled highway, the business traveller is ahead.Is it fair to ding a Barrie-Mississauga business traveller who happens to get caught in the congestion on the 400 from Toronto bound commuters?