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91ƵShow us the money91Ƶ for cannabis, local governments tell B.C.

Municipal tax, transit revenues falling as costs rise
22797456_web1_20200923-BPD-UBCM-maja-Tait-sept23.20
Sooke Mayor Maja Tait, outgoing president of the Union of B.C. Municipalities, speaks to the video-conference session on member resolutions for the provincial government, Victoria, Sept. 23, 2020. (UBCM)

B.C. local government leaders have voted almost unanimously at their annual convention to call on the province to start sharing legal cannabis revenues with them, as Alberta, Ontario and Quebec have done.

Sooke Mayor Maja Tait, outgoing president of the Union of B.C. Municipalities, was visibly frustrated as she introduced the executive91Ƶs now-annual resolution on cannabis revenue sharing. She cited sales and tax figures that show B.C. is reaping millions from its monopoly wholesale and tax revenues as cannabis stores continue to open in communities around the province.

The latest data suggest previous claims by Finance Minister Carole James that B.C. is still losing money on legal cannabis due to its regulatory and enforcement costs are out of date.

91ƵNotably, during the most recent fiscal year, the province collected $14.4 million in excise tax revenue, more than double its projection,91Ƶ Tait told delegates at the convention Sept. 23. 91ƵThis current fiscal year, the province expects to collect more than $90 million in revenue from the excise tax, and the additional 15 per cent [wholesale] markup as it applies to cannabis. If this continues, the province91Ƶs cannabis-related revenue will exceed costs by a large margin.

91ƵThis is the fifth year in a row that our membership has considered this resolution, looking for an equitable share of the revenue. It91Ƶs time for them to show us the money.91Ƶ

The 99-per-cent vote in favour was cast by phone or online, as the convention is being broadcast from an almost empty Victoria Conference Centre due to COVID-19 restrictions. B.C. cabinet ministers would normally be hosting hundreds of meetings with local mayors and councillors to hear their concerns directly, but that was abandoned as NDP leader John Horgan called a surprise election on Monday as the convention got underway.

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Tait noted that Ontario has already provided $40 million to local governments, which are dealing with declining business taxes, transit fare revenues and other impacts of the pandemic.

91ƵIn B.C., UBCM91Ƶs request to negotiate a revenue sharing agreement has been repeatedly declined,91Ƶ Tait said. 91ƵWe were asked to prove our costs, so last year we administered a survey to quantify local costs. Survey data, when extrapolated, showed an expected $11.5 million per year in local government incremental costs for the first three years following cannabis legalization.91Ƶ

Those costs include cannabis enforcement by police and bylaw officers, land use planning, licensing and other duties.



tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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