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prepared by the staff of the Parliamentary Research Branch to provide Canadian
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LS-350E
BILL C-10: AN ACT TO AMEND THE
MUNICIPAL GRANTS ACT
Prepared by:
Antony G. Jackson
Economics Division
22 November 1999
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF BILL C-10
HOUSE OF COMMONS |
SENATE |
Bill Stage |
Date |
Bill Stage |
Date |
First Reading: |
27 October 1999 |
First Reading: |
28 March 2000 |
Second Reading: |
30 November 1999 |
Second Reading: |
10 April 2000 |
Committee Report: |
13 December 1999 |
Committee Report: |
4 May 2000 |
Report Stage: |
14 February 2000 |
Report Stage: |
|
Third Reading: |
24 March 2000 |
Third Reading: |
9 May 2000 |
Royal Assent: 31 May 2000
Statutes of Canada 2000, c.8
N.B. Any substantive changes in this Legislative Summary which have
been made since the preceding issue are indicated in bold print.
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
BACKGROUND
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
Clauses 1 and 2
Clause 3
Clause 4
Clause 5
Clauses 6, 7, 8 and 9
Clauses 10, 11, 12 and
13
Clause 14
Clauses 15, 16, 17 and
18
COMMENTARY
BILL C-10: AN ACT TO AMEND THE
MUNICIPAL GRANTS ACT
BACKGROUND
Bill C-10, the Municipal Grants
Act, was introduced by the Minister of Public Works and Government Services and received
first reading in the House of Commons on 27 October 1999. The bill is a result of the work
of a joint technical committee composed of representatives from the Federation of Canadian
Municipalities, the Treasury Board Secretariat, and Public Works and Government Services.
In addition, the Minister held extensive cross-country consultations. The aim of Bill
C-10, according to the Minister, is to modernize the Municipal Grants Act to
improve the fairness, equity and predictability of federal payments made in lieu of taxes.
The constitutional position that
federal departments, agencies and Crown corporations are not to be subject to local
taxation is very clear from section 125 of the Constitution Act, 1867:
Exemption of Public Lands, etc.
125. No Lands or Property
belonging to Canada or any Province shall be liable to Taxation.
In spite of the soundness of the
principle that different levels of government should not be able to interfere through
taxation with the use of property by other levels of government, the heavy reliance of
municipalities on property taxes has put a moral obligation on the federal government to
make a contribution for the local services it uses. In recent years, Canadian
municipalities have obtained over half of their revenues from property tax sources as the
following table shows.
Municipal
Sources of Revenue (%), 1994 - 1998. |
|
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
Property and Related
Taxes |
49% |
47% |
50% |
51% |
57% |
Sales of goods and
services |
19% |
19% |
20% |
21% |
21% |
Investment Income |
5% |
7% |
5% |
5% |
5% |
Transfers |
25% |
26% |
22% |
20% |
15% |
Other |
2% |
2% |
2% |
2% |
2% |
Source: Statistics Canada, CANSIM, Matrix 7093.
The policy history of federal
payments to municipalities shows a movement towards federal properties being treated more
and more like commercial properties, along with the removal of limitations and
restrictions. The 1939 Rowell-Sirois Royal Commission on Dominion-Provincial Relations
recommended that the federal government pay property tax on Crown-owned properties. In
1949, the Municipal Grants Act was passed. Although that Act provided for the
payment of a federal grant, in lieu of taxes, to municipalities, only those local
authorities whose federal property exceeded four percent of total property assessment were
compensated. Only about 70 municipalities had a sufficient concentration of federal
property to qualify. Moreover, the federal government was liable under the Act for
only three-quarters of the tax liability. In 1955, however, the cutoff was lowered to two
percent of total property assessment, and grants increased to equal the full municipal
tax. In 1980, the range of federal property covered by the Municipal Grants Act was
extended to cover most categories of federal property. In 1992, a freeze on payments made
in lieu of taxes was announced as part of general federal financial restraint. As might be
expected, this measure was unpopular with the municipalities, leading to the process
culminating in Bill C-10. During debate on amendments to the Canada Marine Act, which
were introduced in the 35th and 36th parliaments, the taxable status of the national ports
was a contentious issue; eventually, it was agreed that they would be treated in the same
way as other federal properties.
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
Clauses 1 and 2
These clauses would change the
long title of the Act to "An Act respecting payments in lieu of taxes to
municipalities, provinces and other bodies exercising functions of local government that
levy real property taxes" and the short title to "The Payments in Lieu of Taxes
Act." The word "grant" would be replaced by "payment" to reflect
the federal commitment to pay for the local services it receives.
Clause 3
This clause would make changes to
the definitions used in the Act, in particular to add "immovables" to "real
property." This wording change would not affect the amounts to be paid by the federal
government. The definitions used to establish the tax liability are those of the
assessment authority, not of the federal government. Each province has its own assessment
base, as have some of the municipalities. All use land and buildings but some include
machinery and equipment, while others include only machinery and equipment that provide
services to the land and buildings on the land. This clause would also make stylistic
changes such as replacing "immeuble fédéral" in the French version with
"propriété fédérale," meaning federal property, and by substituting
"emphyteutic" in the English version for "held under emphyteusis," a
term referring to a lease of 9 to 99 years with an annual rent and in which the lessee has
an obligation to make improvements.
In clause 3(6), Bill C-10 would
extend the listing of federal properties subject to local taxation under present section
2(3) of the Act to include:
(ii) an outdoor swimming pool,
(iii) a golf course improvement,
(iv) a driveway for a single-family dwelling,
(v) paving or other improvements associated with
employee parking, or
(vi) an outdoor theatre.
The principle followed is that
such federal improvements are for the benefit of the public sector employees in the
building and should be taxed in the same way as those a commercial firm might furnish to
its workers. Federal real property in urban parks is not subject to local taxation
(subsection (3)(c)) because the federal provision benefits the local public directly at no
cost to the local taxpayer.
Clause 3(6) would amend present
section 2(3)(d) of the Act by extending a provision of the current Municipal Grants Act
to the Cree-Naskapi and Sechelt Indian Band and to the Yukon First Nations. This provision
treats the on-reserve residences of federal employees as federal property for the purposes
of making grants.
Clause 3(6) would add section
2(4) to the present Act to cover the payments in lieu of taxes for experimental farms and
research stations. In setting the effective tax rate, the Minister of Public Works would
have to take commercial farming tax rates into account. It should be noted that the
current Municipal Grants Act uses the following definition:
"effective rate" means
the rate of real property tax or of frontage or area tax that, in the opinion of the
Minister, would be applicable to any federal property if that property were taxable
property;
Thus proposed section 2(4) would
seem to be asking no more of the Minister than does the current Act.
Clause 4
This is a "goodwill"
clause included to underline the fair and equitable administration of payments in lieu of
taxes.
Clause 5
This clause deals with the
authority of the Minister of Public Works to make payments under proposed sections 3(1.1)
and 3(1.2) of the Act. The Minister of Public Works could make a supplementary payment to
compensate for unreasonable delays of federal payments in lieu of taxes, provided the
Minister was of the opinion that the delay had been unreasonable. The supplement payable
would be the product of the amount delayed, multiplied by a standard rate of interest over
the period of the delay. New section 3.1 would allow the Minister to make payments to the
local authority for a non-departmental tenant who was in default, if the local authority
had made all reasonable efforts to collect the debt. The legal mechanism used would be to
deem a property not considered a federal property under 2(3)(h), to be such in the year
the debt was incurred. It is not clear whether the Minister would treat the outstanding
debt simply as an account to be settled in full or as any other amount under the Act
either with a duty to gauge the appropriate effective tax rate and so on, or with an
opportunity to compensate for late payment.
Clauses 6, 7, 8 and 9
These clauses would continue the
changes made in clauses 1, 2 and 3, whereby "payment" would replace
"grant" in the English version and "propriété" would replace
"immeuble" in the French version.
Clause 9 would amend sections 7
and 8 of the Act, which deal with the deductions that might be taken from federal payments
made in lieu of taxes when the local authority could not provide a full range of services
to the federal property. If an arrangement was in effect (section 7(a) and 7(b)) then the
reductions are known, but if not (section 7(c) and 7(d) and section 8) the Minister would
be restricted to considering the costs of replacing the services not provided and
estimating the property tax reduction that would be forthcoming to a municipal taxpayer.
Clauses 10, 11, 12 and 13
These clauses would add the word
of "immovables" and substitute the word "payment" for
"grant" in various parts of the Act. A new Advisory Council proposed in clause
14 would deal with local taxation disputes for Crown corporations listed in Schedules III
and IV of the Act. Clause 10 would add section 9(1)(g.1) to the Act to provide that the
powers of the Governor in Council to make regulations under section 9 would extend to such
corporations. It should be pointed out that the power to make such regulations would be
"with any modifications that the circumstances require."
Clause 14
A new Advisory Panel would be
established to give advice to the Minister of Public Works when any local taxing authority
disagreed with the federal assessment of property value, property dimension or effective
tax rate or when a tax payment has been unreasonably delayed and interest should be paid.
Clause 14 would add new section 11.1(2) to require that there would have to be a
disagreement, but would not explicitly limit the Panel to receiving complaints only from
municipalities; thus, the federal departments and agencies could complain about the
payments they were required to pay.
The Advisory Panel would have to
consist of at least two members from each province and territory. Members, who would be
required to have relevant knowledge or experience, would have a term of appointment not
exceeding three years but that term could be renewed indefinitely. The Minister would
select the Chairperson, who would have the power to establish divisions of the Advisory
Panel. Members would be paid and reimbursed expenses and would serve at the
Minister’s pleasure.
Clauses 15, 16, 17 and 18
These clauses would amend both
the Act and the Schedules by the addition of the word "immovables" and the
substitution of "payment" for "grant." Clause 18 would remove open air
swimming pools from Schedule II, thereby making such structures taxable, as has been
proposed by clause 3.
COMMENTARY
In Bill C-10, the government
attempts to address municipal concerns about federal payments made to municipalities in
lieu of taxes. Bill C-10 does not propose to go all the way to making the federal
government just another local taxpayer, who must rely on the provincial appeal mechanisms
in place, should an assessment seem unfair. Indeed, there are constitutional reasons why
this should not be the case, though these reasons are much less convincing for Crown
corporations. Why should the CBC be taxed differently from the local private broadcaster,
or the Business Development Bank differently from a local bank?
Bill C-10 would introduce an
Advisory Panel, to serve at the pleasure of the Minister of Public Works. The Minister,
rather than the Panel itself, would appoint the Chair, who would have wide powers. The
Panel would not be an independent dispute-resolution mechanism. Although sometimes, for
example in the case of Crown corporations, the Minister would be reviewing decisions made
by others, at other times the Panel would be reviewing the Minster’s own decision and
perhaps asking the Minister to reconsider this. In the case of claims that payments were
unreasonably late, the Minister would already have made a direct decision to deny
compensation or to pay less compensation than the local authority thought reasonable.
Making the new Act work would take a strong Panel, willing to override the person who had
appointed it, and Ministers willing to look again at their decisions.
Bill C-10 does not present any
precise mechanisms for parliamentary accountability for the new system. Would the Advisory
Panel be obliged to publish? How would changes in spending appear in the various Estimate
documents? Nor is it clear how the public would be able to judge whether the new system
was better than the old. Would the measure of success be whether municipalities complained
less about the federal government as a source of local revenue? Or would the measure be
how often the Minister agreed with the Panel’s advice? Or might success be judged by
whether the claim rejection rates for the Advisory Panel and the Minister were the same as
those for the provincial dispute resolution mechanisms?
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