Alberta, Ontario and Quebec have committed to share legal cannabis revenues with local governments, and in their fourth year of asking, B.C. municipalities expect their province to do the same.
The Union of B.C. Municipalities is preparing for its 2020 conference, a virtual event to be broadcast from Victoria Sept. 22-24. Cannabis revenue sharing with local governments is among the executiveB次元官网网址檚 top priorities for the with B.C. cabinet ministers.
The resolution notes that Ottawa increased the share of federal excise tax on legal cannabis to the provinces to 75 per cent in recognition of costs to administer and enforce legalized recreational cannabis in 2017. That agreement covers the first $100 million of excise tax revenue, and it expires in December 2020.
The federal excise tax alone was projected to bring $6 million to B.C.B次元官网网址檚 treasury as of Finance Minister Carole JamesB次元官网网址 February 2020 budget. The actual revenue received for 2019-20 was $10.7 million, and that was before B.C. received its March payment.
B次元官网网址淭he B.C. government has disbursed none of the federal excise tax it received to B.C. local governments,B次元官网网址 the UBCM executive states. B次元官网网址淣otably, the Ontario government allocated $40 millionof its projected $100 million cannabis excise tax revenue to local governments as part of a two-year agreement, with any revenue exceeding $100 million B次元官网网址 to be shared 50-50 with Ontario local governments.B次元官网网址
The federal government also collects GST on cannabis sales, while the province charges provincial sales tax and has a 15 per cent markup on its wholesale monopoly run by the Liquor Distribution Branch.
James has repeatedly told the UBCM delegates that B.C. hasnB次元官网网址檛 produced any net revenue to share, and continues to spend more on administration and enforcement than it brings in.
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Other concerns to be aired at the UBCM convention include the additional costs to local governments from B.C.B次元官网网址檚 new emergency management legislation, including new mitigation and recovery duties after floods, fires and other natural disasters.
Another executive-endorsed resolution calls for changes to the local election law, to extend regulations on third-party advertising. It calls for the province to require all elector organizations to register, and report contributions to candidates outside election years.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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