9 N.S. municipalities receive bleak financial rating - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:15 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

9 N.S. municipalities receive bleak financial rating

Municipalities are assessed in 13 different categories, including the size of their debts, the amount of savings set aside and their reliance on other government transfers.Each category is given an evaluation of low, moderate or high risk. The municipality then gets an overall rating.

Province analyzed financial health of municipalities in 13 different categories

A stock photo shows a man from the shoulders down holding a pen and leaning over a stack of white papers with colourful pie graphs
The province found high levels of instability among nine Nova Scotia municipalities. (TheCorgi/Shutterstock)

Nine municipalities in Nova Scotia have a "high risk of financial instability," accordingto the province.

The latest financial condition index was done prior to the pandemic and isbased on financial information from fiscal 2018-19.

Municipalities were assessed in 13 different categories, including the size of their debts, the amount of savings set aside and their reliance on other government transfers. The municipalitiesweregiven an evaluation of low, moderate or high risk for each category.

Each of Nova Scotia's 50municipalitieswerethen givenan overall rating.

The nine municipalities that fell into the high-risk category are:

  • Bridgewater.
  • Clark's Harbour.
  • Cumberland County.
  • Lockeport.
  • New Glasgow.
  • Oxford.
  • Trenton.
  • Westville.
  • Shelburne.

Oxford and Trenton had the most categories flagged as high risk.

Bridgewater is one of nine municipalities that have a 'high risk of financial instability.' (Robert Short/CBC)

Wayne Teasdale, CAO of Trenton, said in an email he was hopefulthe financial information for2020 wouldshow "a major shift"in both cash flow and profitability.

Oxford CAO Rachel Jonessaid hertown plans to work on reducing its debt and increasing its reserves by focusing on core municipal services.

"We have a very streamlined budget," said Jones."We don't have a lot of money to put into reserves, so we will need to find areas to reduce, at least in the short term."

The financial assessment of Clark's Harbour included comments from town officials, who blamed the high-risk indicators on an unexpectedbill from the province.

Clark's Harbour had budgeted $30,000for social housing units located in the town,but the province carried out extensive renovations during the 2018-19 fiscal year and unexpectedly sent abill of $87,749, said town officials. The money had to come from the town's reserves to cover the deficit.

The only county on the list Cumberland placed some blame for its budget deficit on a merger with the Town of Springhill in 2015. In aresponsesent to the province, county officials said they believeCumberland would have been assessed as having moderate financial risks if it hadn't been for the merger.

The Town of Springhill dissolved and merged with Cumberland County in 2015. (CBC)

A spokesperson for the Department of Municipal Affairs told CBCNews in an email that staff support high-risk municipalities by "providing advice and guidance and helping them prepare actions."

Krista Higdon also wrote that the province has created a $380-million, low-cost loan program to "help municipalities with pressures created by COVID-19."

The department has no plans to make any adjustments to the financial assessment of 2020 because of the pandemic.

More than half 60 per cent of Nova Scotia's municipalities wereassessed aslow risk for financial instability, including Halifax.

The Region of Queens and Inverness County were the only two that scoredlow-risk assessments in all 13 categories.