Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Government Changes Course, Plans To Adopt Its Own Carbon Tax

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2020 08:02 PM

    WINNIPEG - Manitoba's Progressive Conservative government has changed course and has agreed to bring in its own carbon tax, but is cutting the provincial sales tax as well.

     

    Premier Brian Pallister says his government plans to enact a $25-per-tonne tax, starting July 1, and will lower the provincial sales tax by one point to six per cent at the same time.

     

    Pallister originally planned a $25-per-tonne levy in 2017, but withdrew it when the federal government said it was not high enough.

     

    The federal government then imposed its own tax on Manitoba and three other provinces, and that tax is set to rise to $50 a tonne by 2022.

     

    Pallister is still fighting the federal levy in court, although a date for the Federal Court hearing has not been set.

     

    Pallister says he hopes the federal government will abandon its demands and respect Manitoba's plan.

     

    "Of course I'm disappointed Ottawa didn't see the wisdom of supporting a government which has been willing to expend the political capital of proposing to bring in a carbon tax when no other conservative government would," Pallister said Thursday.

     

    Saskatchewan has also challenged the federal tax and its case is to be heard this month in the Supreme Court. Manitoba is an intervener in that hearing.

     

    Pallister, who has faced criticism from some supporters over his willingness to implement a carbon tax, said cutting the sales tax will help people and the economy.

     

    "The PST dropping increases our competitiveness as a province, helps us achieve our job-creation goals, helps put more money disproportionately into households where there is less discretionary income."

     

    The sales tax drop will bring Manitoba in line with Saskatchewan's six per cent rate. It is the second time Pallister has cut the PST. He reduced it to seven per cent from eight last year, shortly before calling an early election.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran
    TORONTO - A woman in her 60s who recently travelled to Iran has become the fifth person to contract the novel coronavirus in Ontario, as the province's monitoring of the virus widens.

    Ontario Confirms New Case Of Coronavirus, Patient Had Travelled To Iran

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions
    Bill C-7, introduced Monday, would remove a provision in the four-year-old assisted dying law that restricted the procedure to those whose natural death is "reasonably foreseeable" — a restriction that was struck down as unconstitutional by a Quebec court last fall.

    Assisted Dying Bill Gets Mixed Reviews, Raises Fears Of More Restrictions

    Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has taken Canada's campaign for a seat on the United Nations Security Council directly to African diplomats with a speech that tried to emphasize his boyhood connection to the continent.    

    Trudeau Uses Speech To Pitch African Envoys For UN Security Council Seat

    Peter Nygard Steps Down From Company Following Sex Assault Claims

    NEW YORK - Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard is stepping down as chairman of his company following an FBI raid on his Manhattan headquarters over sex assault allegations.    

    Peter Nygard Steps Down From Company Following Sex Assault Claims

    New Brunswick Maintains Position On Abortions And Canada Health Act

    New Brunswick Maintains Position On Abortions And Canada Health Act
    The New Brunswick government is standing firm on its position that it's not violating the Canada Health Act by refusing to fund out-of-hospital abortions in the province.    

    New Brunswick Maintains Position On Abortions And Canada Health Act

    Groundhogs Got It Wrong: Spring Isn't Coming Soon, Weather Network Says

    Groundhogs Got It Wrong: Spring Isn't Coming Soon, Weather Network Says
    Two out of three groundhogs got it wrong — at least according to the Weather Network's spring forecast.    

    Groundhogs Got It Wrong: Spring Isn't Coming Soon, Weather Network Says