
Will Toronto council approve a 9.5% tax hike? Councillors to make call this week
CBC
Mayor Olivia Chow's first budget since winning the city's top job will come to council for one final debate Wednesday, and that could see council adopt the highest tax hike for Torontonians in over 25 years.
Should the mayor's budget pass as expected, a proposed 9.5 per cent tax hike will become a reality. Chow says she's trying to strike a balance with her first spending package, paying for core services while also addressing the city's $1.8 billion structural budget deficit.
The new mayor, who swept to power last summer in a byelection, has defended the tax hike as "modest," though she acknowledges it is a difficult choice.
The city has to address growing financial pressures worsened by the pandemic while still investing in transit and the city's state of good repair. Toronto can't cut its way out of the situation, she said recently.
"If we cut deeper, we could be cutting a bone and hitting the marrow," she said. "It would damage our city, and we can't do that."
The final budget debate comes after weeks of public consultations and budget committee meetings. Wednesday's one day session will set Toronto's spending priorities for the year. By law, it must wrap with the city balancing its books.
While Toronto's official budget process kicked-off in January with a staff proposed document that included a 10.5 per cent property tax hike, the discussion of the city's troubled finances has been going on for months — if not years.
Chow has been trying to build a political consensus around the need for a tax increase since last year's byelection, said Myer Siemiatycki, a politics professor at Toronto Metropolitan University. Now, he says getting her budget passed and agenda moving will be a priority for the new mayor.
"This is the single most important vote that will come to city council this year," Siemiatycki said. "It affects everything else that is to follow."
The tax rate will be the highest since amalgamation in 1998, but it is a point lower than the suggested staff rate from last month. The mayor could be sending a message to councillors that if they want to add anything on the council floor there will be a cost, Siemiatycki said.
"I think the mayor is implying that if you want a tax increase that can come in at under double digits, this is what it looks like," he said.
"And I think what she's putting on notice councillors who may want a variety of additional pet projects, (saying) 'OK, are you prepared to go higher than 9.5?'"
Over the last week, councillors have been working to find approximately $4 million in funding to save windrow snow clearing, which is on the chopping block in Chow's budget.
The proposed 2024 budget includes $620 million in cuts or offsets and included on that list is ending windrow plowing services for 262,000 homes. Windrows are piles of snow that block driveways and are created by passing plows.

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