Saint John requests repeal of Canaport LNG tax deal
City requests additional funds be held by the provincial government in trust until assessment appeals over
Saint John council voted unanimously on Monday night to move ahead with the repeal of the 11-year-oldCanaport LNG tax deal but it could be years before any additional revenue arrives in municipal coffers.
The request is subject to the willingness of the provincial governmenetto agree to an arrangement that will see additional tax money placed in a trust account until any assessment appeals on the Irving Oil Ltd. property have been completed.
Jeff Trail, the city manager, advised councillorsonMonday that should Irving Oil appeal the assessment,the process will be complicated and could take years.
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"This is a distinct possibility given the uniqueness and the complexity of the property in question," said Trail.
If that proves the case, warned Trail, the city could potentially lose millions by having to pay back the provincial government tax money forwarded earlier.
"The liabilities could accumulate into a large amount owing to the province by way of repayment [it] represents a large financial exposure risk for the city," he said.
We have to be very cautious of how we handle this- Shirley McAlary, Saint John councillor
The Canaport LNG property is assessed at $299 million, but under terms of the 2005 deal requested by Saint John's then council, and agreed to by the provincial government, Irving Oil's property taxes are fixed at $500,000annually until 2031.
The taxes on a $299 million property would under normal circumstances generate $8.02 millionannually for the municipality.
Deal offers security
City's councillors believe their motion offers the security they need should a messy assessment process unfold.
"We don't want to collect taxation without knowing for sure that it's going to be for our use. So for the next few years we have to be very cautious of how we handle this."
The two-page motion asks the province to "develop and implement" a mechanism to protect stakeholders.
Under its terms the city would continue to collect the current $500,000in tax revenue from Irving Oil, it would also continue to receive its annual provincial equalization grant under the existing formula.
In the meantime added tax revenue from the terminal property would be placed by the province in an interest bearing trust account.
Once the tax appeal process is completed funds are tobe taken from the trust and distributed to communities across the province who lost money because Saint Johncontinued to get higher equalization payments during the appeal process.
The remaining tax revenue in the trust would be turned over to the city.