City council, administration wrestle with potential double-digit tax hike for 2025
If you thought this year's 8.9-per-cent property tax increase was steep, wait until you see the numbers Edmonton city council and administration are batting around for 2025.
"What we're saying today is that we're somewhere between 9 and 13 (per cent)," Ward Pihesiwin Coun. Tim Cartmell said during council's executive committee meeting on Wednesday at city hall.
"That is going to be a really difficult number for most people to consume."
Mounting financial pressures have councillors talking about next year's property tax increase already, on the heels of their summer recess.
After this year's nearly nine-per-cent bump, councillors were already wary of the proposed seven-per-cent rise for 2025.
Now city staff is saying major moves are required to reign in what could be a 13-per-cent hike.
"I don't think there's any more tolerance for any additional increases to what we have already approved," Mayor Amarjeet Sohi said at the meeting.
"I would rather see that number go down ... but I think we need to look at every option in order to reduce that pressure on Edmontonians at a time when they're struggling with their own affordability challenges.
"We have to say 'no' to some very difficult and important decisions that will be coming in front of us — legitimate asks, very important conversations ... in order to manage the finances of the city and continue to provide core services that are our responsibility."
The city is earning less and paying more than expected in several departments.
Inflation is increasing costs for fuel and parts, which means maintaining the city's buildings and fleet of vehicles is more expensive.
Earnings from transit fares are short $13 million for what was budgeted, while people aren't buying as many pet licences and construction permits as predicted.
In recent years, city council has also increased spending on police, transit, snow clearing and infrastructure such as roads and recreation centres, areas Sohi says had been falling behind.
After draining the city's reserve fund below its mandated balance, council has to find ways to pay to fill it back up.
There's also the $90 million in accumulated taxes the province refuses to pay plus cuts to provincial infrastructure funding.
"They've cut our infrastructure grants by over two thirds," Ward Dene Coun. Aaron Paquette said. "That represents a massive chunk of our taxes ... that represents four-and-a-half per cent of the tax rate."
City staff has a plan to chip away at the increase for 2025, but at best, those moves will get it to just under nine per cent.
Councillors are urging restraint when budget talks begin in earnest this fall.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Federal government to further limit number of international students
The federal government will be further limiting the number of international students permitted to enter Canada next year. It's the government's latest immigration-related measure to address Canadians' ongoing housing and affordability concerns.
Search for suspect in Kentucky highway shooting ends with discovery of body believed to be his
Authorities say they believe the body of a man suspected of shooting and wounding five people on a Kentucky interstate highway has been found.
Here's why you should get all your vaccines as soon as possible
With all these shots, some Canadians may have questions about the benefit of each vaccine, whether they should get every shot and how often to get them, and if it's safe to get them all at once or if they should space them out.
Bloc MPs will vote confidence in Liberal government next week: Blanchet
The Conservatives' first shot at toppling the Liberal government is likely doomed to fail, after Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-François Blanchet told reporters his MPs will vote confidence in the government.
'I'm here for the Porsche': Video shows brazen car theft in Mississauga
Video of a brazen daylight auto theft which shows a suspect running over a victim in a stolen luxury SUV has been released by police west of Toronto.
Exploding electronic devices kill 20, wound 450 in second day of explosions in Lebanon
Lebanon's health ministry said Wednesday that at least 20 people were killed and 450 others wounded by exploding electronic devices in multiple regions of the country. The explosions came a day after an apparent Israeli attack targeting pagers used by Hezbollah killed at least 12 and wounded nearly 3,000.
'It starts off innocent': Manitoba man loses $185,000 to crypto-romance scam
A Manitoba man is warning others after he fell victim to an elaborate online scam over the summer.
Teen faces new charge in Sask. high school arson attack
A 14-year-old student who allegedly set her classmate on fire is facing a new charge.
Quebec woman charged with first-degree murder in death of five-year-old boy
A 29-year-old Quebec woman is facing a first-degree murder charge in the death of a five-year-old boy southwest of Montreal.