Province says no to T.O. municipal sales tax
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ctvtoronto.ca
Date: Thursday Nov. 5, 2009 7:43 PM ET
The province has shot down an idea out of Toronto city hall to add a municipal sales tax to city-bought goods.
Municipal Affairs Minister Jim Watson told CTV Toronto On Thursday he will not give the city the power to introduce the tax.
The idea to introduce a new tax was one of many touted by city Budget Chief Shelley Carroll in a report going to Toronto's Government Management Committee for debate on November 9.
"Every other major city in the world have tools that we don't have," Carroll told reporters, giving Chicago and New York as examples.
"I'm not discussing exact percentages because I'm not making a request to Minister Watson right now. I'm making a request to the people in this city who want to discuss its future in an election year."
Among the recommendations were several increases to user fees, including a $50 charge for residents to set up an account to pay their property taxes.
"I'm speechless," said Toronto Coun. Denzil Minnan Wong. "We have a spending problem in city hall and (Carroll) should realize that first and foremost."
But the report says the new user fees and fee increases will guarantee the city an extra $1.95 million in revenues in 2010 -- funds that will help Toronto tackle a huge budget shortfall.
Other suggestions in the report are:
- an administrative fee of $35 to reflect a change of ownership on existing utility accounts
- an increased charge for those who want a copy of a tax receipt from a prior year (from $6 to $15)
- an increased charge for people paying parking tickets over the phone or Internet (from $1.50 to $2)
All new user fees would come into effect Jan. 1, 2010.
In addition, the TTC is considering an across-the-board fare boost, and there is also at tax on billboards under consideration.
"There are additional taxes -- a tax upon a tax upon a tax," Minnan-Wong said. "We don't need more taxes in this city. We need smarter spending."
Coun. Doug Holyday said he does not support the price increases, especially while Toronto is trying to recover from an economic recession.
"That's the last thing we need at this time," he told CTV Toronto. "I appreciate that they've gotten themselves into a hole but the way to get out of the hole is to cut the spending."
With a report from CTV Toronto's Janice Golding and files from CTV Toronto's Paul Bliss
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Ken S
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KB in GTA
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A 2000 sq ft home in York Region pays ~ $4000/yr. some of which is funneled to TO. Same size home in Rosedale ~$1800/yr.
Imagine the financial freedom that the city would have if they woke up to the realization that the people who live in TO should have to pay their fair share, rather than York Region and the other surrounding regions subsidizing them.
DON
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Gord
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Whadda expect fellow hogtowners. Elect an NDP Mayor and a majority of councillors and then its spend spend spend.
SavPrato
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Edb
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Joel From North York
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The property tax rates are for residential locations and include education and city taxes:
Toronto property tax: City 0.60%, Education 0.25% = 0.85%
Oshawa property tax: Region 0.76%, City 0.74%, Education 0.25% = 1.76%
On the surface it seems as if Toronto residents are getting a huge tax break, but you have to consider the inflated prices for housing in Toronto, which is approximately 3x that of Oshawa. This means my 1 bedroom condo that costs $300k in Toronto would only be $100k in Oshawa. Ask yourself the question, do you receive 3x the amount of services in Toronto because our housing costs are higher? No. For the same square footage, the tax rate in Toronto is 3x 0.85 = 2.55%, which is higher than the suburbs.
On top of that it is the city's responsibility to maintain the DVP, Allen Expressway and Gardiner as they are municipal highways, where the province maintains all suburb highways, such as the 404, 401, 400, etc. It is the commuters from the 905 region that make use of the municipal highways in Toronto, so lets make them pay their fair share.
Rob2010
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Shelley Carrol needs to go. Her spending priorities are out of touch with Torontonians, and she's even more out of touch with her own ward constituents.
Jeff
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Vic
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brian in nl
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kb in GTA
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Yes, TO maintains their highways, but the inividual regions around TO also maintain the portion of the highways around and through their region.
It would be nice if TO paid ALL their welfare costs, but York, Durham, and Peel contribute quite a lot of money to cover your welfare rolls, but receive nothing in return.
Yes, you can spin your figures any way you want, but a $300K property in TO still pays less property taxes than a $300K property in the 'burbs. It's a fact, not fiction.
Bear Patrol Tax?
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Matt
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All you Miller minions on council: Enjoy your last 12 months in office!
Anne Gillis
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Buck
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Matt
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Tony
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