SOUND OFF: NDP carbon tax hike adding to British Columbians’ financial burdens
WITH DAVID EBY STILL PLANNING to increase B.C.’s carbon tax on April 1, our BC United Caucus continues to call on the NDP to halt the hike. British Columbians are facing an affordability crisis with the cost of living higher than ever, folks simply can’t afford another government tax grab that only adds to the financial burden on our families.
Across our province, people are struggling financially. More than half of all British Columbians are less than $200 away from being able to afford their bills each and every month. We see stories daily that paint a vivid picture of the consequences: seniors forced to live in their vehicles; families having to abandon the dream of homeownership; and a record-high number of visits to food banks, stark indicators of the widespread struggles to afford basic necessities.
The NDP government’s continued tax hikes during a cost-of-living crisis diverge significantly from the original intent behind the carbon tax, which was revenue neutral, returning every dollar collected back to British Columbians. However, when the NDP formed government, they took what was once a tax shift and turned it into a tax grab. The implications of this shift were profound, transforming the tax into a direct feed into the government’s coffers, and setting the stage for its continuous escalation. Since that pivotal change, the tax has more than doubled, with NDP plans to triple it by 2030.
These increases come after B.C. is already home to the highest fuel prices and gas taxes in North America. The NDP launched an expensive British Columbia Utilities Commission (BCUC) inquiry into gas prices in the hopes it would appear that they were taking action on affordability. Then they spent more tax dollars to create a government-run website that mimics existing sites like GasBuddy. Both of these initiatives cost you tax dollars while failing to deliver any action on making gas prices more affordable.