Some cities losing half of provincial funding, says Sask. Urban Municipalities Association - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 12:52 AM | Calgary | -9.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

Some cities losing half of provincial funding, says Sask. Urban Municipalities Association

SUMA shares message with members saying provincial government is making municipalities out to be "the bad guys".

Association says budget leaves some communities 'devastated'

Yorkton is losing more than half of its provincial funding, according to the Saskatchewan Urban Municipalities Association. (Google Streetview)

Saskatchewan communities are facing a "dire" situation following the release of the province's budget, according to the Saskatchewan Urban Municipal Association (SUMA).

In a message to its members that was posted on Twitter, SUMA's board and administration says "our members are outraged and so are we".

The province's deficit budget put an end to $36 million in grants from SaskPower and SaskEnergy, which were paid to municipalities in lieu of property taxes for infrastructure.

SUMA's message said more than 100 of its members were "ambushed" by the cuts. While the province kept its revenue sharing with municipalities intact, the loss of the grant will "negate any sense of relief we felt over the revenue sharing formula surviving intact."

The association released a table that they say shows the calculated cuts to affected members.

The chart indicates that with the loss of the grants in lieu, some municipalities will be receiving half of what they received from the province the year prior.

Loss for communities by percentage:

  • Yorkton 58.45 per cent.
  • Moose Jaw 49.44 per cent.
  • Humboldt 49.30 per cent.
  • North Battleford 48.39 per cent.
  • Estevan 47.49 per cent.
  • Melville 47.08 per cent.
  • Weyburn 43.98 per cent.
  • Prince Albert 43.48 per cent.
  • Melfort 41.8 per cent.

SUMA's message goes on to say the provincial budget "has devastated and ambushed our members, making you out to be the bad guys if you raise property taxes (because what other option do you have?)"