P.O. Box 1749 Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 3A5 Canada Item No. 3 Budget Committee March 7, Mayor Savage and Members of Halifax Regional Council

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P.O. Box 1749 Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 3A5 Canada Item No. 3 Budget Committee March 7, 2018 TO: Mayor Savage and Members of Halifax Regional Council SUBMITTED BY: Jacques Dubé, Chief Administrative Officer DATE: February 20, 2018 SUBJECT: 2018/19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts ORIGIN As per Administrative Order 1, and the Budget and Business Plan consultation schedule presented on November 14 th, 2017 to Regional Council, staff is required to present the 2018/19 draft Business Unit Budget and Business Plans to the Committee of the Whole for review and discussion prior to consideration by Regional Council. LEGISLATIVE AUTHORITY Halifax Charter, section 35 (1) The Chief Administrative Officer shall (b) ensure that an annual budget is prepared and submitted to the Council. RECOMMENDATION It is recommended that the Committee of the Whole direct staff to: Proceed to prepare the 2018-19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts, as proposed in the accompanying presentation and consistent with the preliminary fiscal direction, BACKGROUND In February of 2016 Regional Council directed staff to undertake in 2017-2018 and the following years, a much broader view that looks at the underlying fiscal and economic assumptions and critical key decisions such as the level of the overall capital budget, debt, tax levels, reserves and the capacity to undertake service enhancements. Being the second year of a multi-year budget, staff have prepared the 2018-19 budget as per Council direction, with some adjustments from the Approved in Principle budget, presented before Council in 2017-18.

18/19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts Committee of the Whole Report - 2 - March 7, 2017 In December 2017, Council directed that the: Budget Committee recommend that Halifax Regional Council recommended that staff revise the 2018-2019 Budget according to Council's approved priorities, and preliminary fiscal direction, including: maintaining the appropriate level of existing services with the addition of the new services previously approved by Council; a stable capital budget that maintains state of good repair while also funding growth related issues and service improvements; a responsible and declining debt position; appropriate reserve balances that allow for risk mitigation, future obligations and opportunities; alignment of the current average tax bill for residential homes and commercial properties at a 1.9% increase. DISCUSSION Preparing and finalizing a budget is an extensive exercise which includes many iterative steps. Including four critical influences: 1. Operating Budget, 2. Net Capital Budget, 3. Tax Supported Debt, and, 4. Reserves (Net Obligations) Since December, all business units have presented their 18/19 budgets for Council s consideration. Given current Council direction, staff have developed a tentative budget that incorporates the following assumptions. - Average Single Family Home assessment is up 1.4% - The Assessment cap is 0.9% - Commercial Assessment growth is 0.2% - The average tax bill for single family homes will increase by 1.9%, or $36. Based on Council s direction, these rates will see the average residential tax bill increase by 1.9% and the average commercial tax bill for properties under $1.25m, increase by 1.9%. Various other tax rates must be set by Regional Council for the 2018/19 fiscal year. These rates are to be set once the amounts are finalized. These tax rates include: Fire Protection Charge Supplementary Education Provincially Mandated Services: o Halifax Regional School Board o Correctional Services o Property Valuation Services Corporation o Metropolitan Regional Housing Authority The Stormwater Right-of Way Charge is reviewed annually and adjusted, as required, by application of Bylaw C-900, the Charges for Stormwater from Municipal Streets By law. Other policy issues that impact the budget include HRM s responsibility to the Halifax Convention Centre (HCC), with approval required from the Province and Regional Council, administrative order (AO) review of District Capital and Discretionary funds, review of grants principles, Area Rate Review and updates to the Commercial Tax structure. Also included in fiscal services are some amounts that will be transferred into business units following full approval of the budget. These include amounts for IMP ($350,000).

18/19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts Committee of the Whole Report - 3 - March 7, 2017 Commercial Tax Structure Update Over the past 12-16 months, staff have been working with the business community on possible adjustments to the commercial tax structure. During this time, staff initiated a consultant report by CanMac Economics, entitled An Economic Analysis of the Halifax Regional Municipality Commercial Tax. The report conclusions were shared with the business community during a workshop held in mid-january. Staff have continued to analyze possible adjustments given current legislative powers, and are currently in dialogue with business about objectives and policy options. Ultimately, Regional Council will debate possible options during the 2018-19 budget cycle, or may defer a decision until more analysis is conducted on what adjustments it judges to be appropriate. The timeline below indicates where the process currently stands: Council motion for report April 2015 Some powers granted, staff conduct more analysis and enlist help of CanMac to conduct study Spring 2016- Fall 2017 Update for direction, Feb 2018 November 2015 Staff report presented and request for additional powers January 2018 Study completed, presentation of consultant and staff analysis to business Later in 2018 Council decision point Potential Funding of Budget Options: During the Committee of the Whole Budget process, Council reviewed each Business Unit s high level budget and proposed plans before detailed preparation. During this time Council developed a list of budget options. Council s budget options list will be debated on March 28 th, outlining potential increases to Business Unit expenditures. Those items which are one-time in nature could possibly be funded through using the general contingency reserve. However, ongoing increases to services are best funded through an ongoing, sustainable source such as a permanent decline in other expenditures or a permanent revenue increase, such as through taxes. As Council has already reviewed the budgets of each business unit, further tax increases may be the most realistic option to achieve the balance of tax and service that Council desires. However, Council can also defer parking lot items to the 2019-20 budget debate and consider them at that time. FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS Capital from Operating, Debt and tax rates have been adjusted accordingly to align projected revenues and expenditures. Debt per household continues to decline at 3 per cent per year. Capital from Operating

18/19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts Committee of the Whole Report - 4 - March 7, 2017 appears in both Transit and Fiscal Services and is unchanged from the Approved in Principle budget. The recommendations in this report will lead to the development of a proposed budget for 2018-19, the second year of Council s Multi-Year Budget. RISK CONSIDERATION The risk associated with this report is financial to the extent Regional Council approves expenditures over the proposed budget. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT Public participation was invited throughout the Business Unit presentations during the Committee of the Whole process. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS None ALTERNATIVES The Committee of the Whole can choose to amend the Budget as proposed in the accompanying presentation through specific motion, and direct staff to proceed to prepare the Budget for inclusion in the proposed HRM Budget and Business Plan documents. ATTACHMENTS Attachment A - Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts 2018 2019 Budget Presentation A copy of this report can be obtained online at http://www.halifax.ca/council/agendasc/cagenda.php then choose the appropriate meeting date, or by contacting the Office of the Municipal Clerk at 902.490.4210, or Fax 902.490.4208. Report Prepared by: Bruce Fisher, Manager, Financial Policy and Planning, 902.490.4493 Kenzie McNeil, Senior Financial Consultant, Financial Policy and Planning, 902.579.4129 Report and Financial Approval by: Jerry Blackwood, A/Director of Finance & Asset Management /CFO, 902.490.6308

Fiscal & Consolidated Accounts 18/19 Multi-Year Budget & Business Plan Committee of the Whole on Budget March 7, 2018

Recommendations What is Fiscal Services? Overview Framework and Linkage to Priorities Revenues and Taxation Expenditures Capital from Operating Debt Reserves Halifax Convention Centre Other Issues Pressures and Risks Council s Direction Questions and Answers 2

Recommendations Proceed to prepare the 2018-19 Fiscal and Consolidated Accounts, as proposed in the accompanying presentation and consistent with the preliminary fiscal direction. 3

What is Fiscal Services? Organization wide costs and revenues that are not fully allocated to Business Units including: Property and Other Taxes Non-departmental Revenues Private Roads, other Area Rates Debt Charges Capital from Operating Reserves Provincial Mandatory Costs Supplementary Education Contingencies for Compensation Intern Program, Other Compensation costs Grants and Tax Relief Valuation Allowance Insurance 4

HRM Budget Framework Revenue/ Expenses Reserves Taxes Debt Capital Projects 5

Operating Budget 1. Taxes Should taxes rise, fall or stay the same? 2. Services (Existing) How can value be optimized? 3. Services (New) Will new services be approved? Capital Budget 4. Capital Budget How much should be invested in State of Good Repair, Growth and Service? 5. Capital from Operating How much current year tax revenue should be applied to capital projects? Debt The 7 Key Council Decisions 6. Debt Maintain debt policy or amend? Reserves 7. Reserves What reserve balances should HRM maintain? 6

Economic Assumptions Conference Board of Canada, Fall 2017 Trends Earlier this Year Revised Trends Base Year Year 1 Year 2 Base Year Year 1 Year 2 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 Real GDP 1.4% 1.7% 1.7% 1.4% 2.2% 2.2% Personal Income per Capita Percent Change Inflation (CPI) Population (000s) Dwelling Units Dwelling Units % 45,198 46,121 47,286 44,883 45,985 47,278-2.0% 2.5% - 2.5% 2.8% 1.2% 1.9% 2.2% 1.2% 2.0% 2.2% 434 440 445 434 440 446 194,984 196,954 198,782 194,159 195,529 198,837-1.0% 0.9% - 0.7% 1.7% Note: Personal Income per Capita is defined as the sum of all revenues (wages, dividends, self employment, etc.) received in a year, divided by total population. Data are in dollars and not corrected for inflation (current dollars). 7

Fiscal Operating Budget Overview Description 16/17 Budget 17/18 Budget 17/18 Projected 18/19 Approved in Principle 18/19 Proposed Budget Total Expenditures $160,169,200 $162,203,700 $163,765,100 $181,691,300 $149,977,000 Total Revenue (551,521,400) (568,861,000) (574,881,800) (588,847,600) (585,921,100) Total ($391,352,200) ($406,657,300) ($411,116,700) ($407,156,300) ($435,944,100) 8

Summary of Proposed Budget Adjustments Proposed Adjustments Projected 18/19 $ Impact Amount 18/19 Approved in Principle ($407,156,300) Contingencies Transferred to Business Units (26,207,800) Budget Adjustments: Lower Property Tax Revenues $6,350,000 Higher Deed Transfer Tax (3,000,000) Reduction in Debt Service Costs (4,248,500) Reduction in Valuation Allowance (1,200,000) Other Changes (net) (481,500) Sub-Total of Budget Adjustments (2,580,000) Total Proposed Changes ($28,787,800) Proposed 18/19 Budget ($435,944,100) 9

Total Municipal Revenues Revenues 16/17 Budget 17/18 Budget 17/18 Projection 18/19 Approved in Principle 18/19 Proposed Tax Revenue (445,037,700) (462,064,600) (466,567,400) (481,499,200) (476,511,600) Area Rate Revenue (23,917,200) (23,031,200) (23,651,600) (22,951,200) (23,434,300) Tax Agreements (10,358,500) (10,617,300) (10,797,500) (10,627,000) (12,165,000) Payments in Lieu of taxes (37,509,000) (38,804,000) (38,747,000) (39,384,000) (39,010,000) Transfers from other Gov'ts (3,700,000) (3,700,000) (3,628,000) (3,772,000) (3,530,000) Interest Revenue (6,806,900) (7,099,200) (7,404,200) (7,309,000) (7,307,500) Fee Revenues (4,575,000) (4,682,700) (4,922,700) (4,719,700) (4,875,000) Other Revenue (19,617,100) (18,862,000) (19,163,400) (18,585,500) (19,087,700) Fiscal Services Total (551,521,400) (568,861,000) (574,881,800) (588,847,600) (585,921,100) Business Unit Revenues (172,484,800) (173,986,200) (172,777,001) (175,082,900) (174,078,800) Municipal Total (724,006,200) (742,847,200) (747,658,801) (763,930,500) (759,999,900) 10

Residential and Commercial Assessment (Annual Rate of Change) 10.0% 7.5% 5.0% 2.5% 0.0% 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 Residential Commercial Linear (Commercial) 11

Commercial Assessment, Real GDP (Annual Rate of Change) 12% 10% 8% 6% Commercial Assessment 4% 2% GDP 0% 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Growth in Assessment (%) Real GDP Growth (%) 12

Changes in Commercial Assessments 2017-18 13

Recommended Average Tax Bill Residential Average Taxable Value Rate (Urban) Bill (Rate X Value) 2017 $231,300 $0.813 $1,880 2018 234,500 $0.817 $1,916 1.9% Increase or $36 per home Commercial Average Taxable Value Rate (Urban) Bill (Rate X Value) 2017 $1,445,000 $2.869 $41,457 2018 $1,401,000 $2.924 $40,965 1.2% Decrease or $492 per property 14

Small vs Large Commercial Taxpayers The average commercial property declined 3% in value. But there was a significant split between the smaller and the larger properties. The average value for those under $1.25m didn t change. The average for the top 20% fell by 3.8%. We have a choice: Raise the rate by 4.9%, keeping overall average taxes at 1.9%. Recommendation: Base the tax rate on the average for smaller properties and adjust the rate by less. 6,000 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 $316k $5.7m 15

Recommended Average Tax Bill Small vs Large Commercial Taxpayers Small Properties (Bottom 80 Percent) Average Taxable Value Rate (Urban) Bill (Rate X Value) 2017 $316,220 $2.869 $9,072 2018 $316,150 $2.924 $9,244 1.9% Increase or $172 per property Commercial (Top 20 Percent) Average Taxable Value Rate (Urban) Bill (Rate X Value) 2017 $5,960,000 $2.869 $170,992 2018 $5,740,000 $2.924 $167,838 1.8% Decrease or $3,154 per property 16

Recommended Tax Rate Changes Tax Rate ($) 2017-18 2018-19 Change Residential Urban 0.667 0.673.006 Suburban/Rural 0.634 0.640.006 Local + Regional 0.146 0.144 -.002 Commercial Urban/Suburban 2.869 2.924.055 Rural 2.542 2.591.049 17

Stormwater Right-of-Way Charge By-Law completed September, 2017 Increase of $1 per account, from $39 to $40 Supplementary Education MOU expires March 31, 2019. Fire Protection $7.1M Other Tax Rates Provincial Area Rates Final amounts not official, will be set as an Area Rate: Halifax Regional School Board $140.3M Correctional Services $6.75M Property Valuation (PVSC) $7.0M Metropolitan Regional Housing Authority $3.5M 18

Total Municipal Expenditures Expenditures 16/17 Budget 17/18 Budget 17/18 Projection 18/19 Approved in Principle 18/19 Proposed Compensation and Benefits 14,193,700 17,126,900 17,126,900 26,397,700 7,532,800 Office 17,800 20,100 20,100 20,100 20,100 External Services 1,230,300 873,000 523,000 1,552,000 2,152,000 Supplies 5,800 6,100 6,100 6,100 6,100 Building Costs 122,950 221,700 221,700 221,700 321,700 Equipment & Communications 15,600 18,000 18,000 18,000 18,000 Other Goods & Services 2,079,050 5,387,100 5,623,300 9,946,800 3,403,100 Interdepartmental 140,000 141,000 491,000 145,000 145,000 Debt Service 45,495,100 43,284,500 43,012,400 45,468,700 41,220,200 Grants 569,000 1,039,000 1,138,200 769,000 992,000 Tax Relief 5,655,000 6,555,000 6,555,000 6,570,000 6,635,000 Reserves 21,617,200 20,439,600 20,340,400 18,672,600 15,599,200 Capital from Operating 32,280,000 27,654,500 27,654,500 31,551,000 31,310,000 Other Fiscal 36,747,700 39,437,200 41,034,500 40,352,600 40,621,800 Fiscal Services Total 160,169,200 162,203,700 163,765,100 181,691,300 149,977,000 Business Unit Expenditures 563,837,000 580,643,500 583,893,701 582,239,200 610,022,900 Municipal Total 724,006,200 742,847,200 747,658,801 763,930,500 759,999,900 19

Capital from Operating Strategy: Shift funding from Debt to Capital from Operating. Targets: Outstanding debt per dwelling unit declines 3 per cent per year. Capital from Operating per dwelling unit increases 3 per cent + CPI per year State of Good Repair is approximately 67 per cent of the total Capital Budget. The goal is to use Capital from Operating for all State of Good Repair projects, due to their shorter-term nature. 20

Long Term Trends: Capital from Operating $45,000,000 $40,000,000 $35,000,000 $30,000,000 $25,000,000 $20,000,000 $15,000,000 $10,000,000 $5,000,000 $- 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019(F) 2020(F) Capital from Operating Linear (Capital from Operating) 21

Municipal Debt HRM budgets for both principle and interest costs Debt is a longer-term financial tool. Lower debt stocks may imply Assets are deteriorating Cost of maintaining assets are increasing. Opportunity costs. Higher stocks of debt may place financial pressure on future tax rates. Attractive if used for productive/efficient capital spending. HRM has capacity to borrow, however Future debt payments will put pressure on current tax take. 22

Long Term Trends: Municipal Debt $260,000,000 $255,000,000 $250,000,000 $245,000,000 $240,000,000 $235,000,000 $230,000,000 $225,000,000 $220,000,000 $215,000,000 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019(F) 2020(F) Stock of Debt Linear (Stock of Debt) 23

Reserves The Gross balance of Reserves is $202.15m (as of December 31, 2017). The Net Available balance is projected to be $85.16 million (as of March 31, 2018). HRM has 20 reserves, with Council approved business cases. There are three categories of reserves: To offset Risk - $16.08m (projected for March 31st, 2018) To save for Future Obligations - $31.5m (projected for March 31st, 2018) To provide for Opportunity - $37.53m (projected for March 31st, 2018) 24

Update: Halifax Convention Centre Taxes from Nova Centre go into a HCC Reserve. The reserve pays HRM s share of annual costs (50%): Nova Centre assessed at $200m but is under appeal. Value is expected to grow as full complex is completed. Convention centre portion is under tax agreement. Final HCC budget must be approved by both the Province and Regional Council. 2018-19 budget is estimated at $7.5m for HRM. Will be fully funded from reserve for 2018-19. In 2019-20 the reserve is likely insufficient to fund the HCC budget. Transition issues under review 25

Other Updates District Capital and Discretionary Proposed AO is being revised as discussed at Council. Budget rounded to $4,500 per Councillor Grants Review Principles are before Regional Council for consideration. Area Rate Review Staff returning on Area Rates and Grants and Capital Projects. Stormwater Rate Information report tabled should Council wish to debate. Rate increase of $1 in 2018-19. Supplementary Education MOU expires at end of 2018-19. 26

Pressures and Risks 2018-19 Budget is balanced. Anticipated Year 2 pressures in 2017-18 and were able to prepare. Otherwise, tax increase may have been larger. Heading for Next Two Year Cycle (19-20 and 20-21): Additional collective agreement increases Fuel Prices subject to change Grant requests (number and amount) Capital Budget Halifax Convention Centre Sustaining Deed Transfer Tax revenues Overall economy strong but Commercial tax base will likely remain flat 27

Commercial Tax Structure Update 28

Original Motion Request a staff report and recommendations for potential changes to the commercial tax structure and for implementation approaches that shall: Address concerns regarding small and independent businesses Outline options to address these issues Contain pros and cons of various courses of action. 29

Timeline Regional Council motion for report April 2015 Some powers granted, staff conduct more analysis and enlist help of CanMac to conduct study Spring 2016- Fall 2017 Update for direction, Feb 2018 November 2015 Staff report presented and request for additional powers January 2018 Study completed, presentation of consultant and staff analysis to business Later in 2018 Regional Council decision point 30

What is allowed under current property tax law Municipality has legal authority to tax by: Property values Geographic area Size of property (e.g. square footage, land size) Frontage Combination of above, including: multiple rates surtaxes Deductions Ability to phase assessment up to ten years 31

What is not allowed under current property tax law No legal authority to tax by Size of the business (vs property) Type of business (e.g. retail, high tech) Type of property (e.g. warehouse, office tower) Sales, profits or revenues Ownership (local vs elsewhere) Cannot tell a landlord how much tax to collect from their tenants. Cannot exempt businesses from property tax (Heritage District an exception). 32

Conclusions of Economic Study Commercial property tax is a relatively low share of firm costs. Econometric simulation showed no material impact on investor behaviour by dropping the commercial tax rate substantially. May differ within sub-groups. Service costing (marginal cost pricing) would be optimal. Requires determining the cost of servicing each commercial property. Selective incentives for economic development may be desirable. 33

Four critical success factors 1) Agreement as to an equitable or fair way to pay tax. 2) Well defined objectives: How will we know a changed tax system is successful? 3) Options identified for achieving that success. Acceptance that for some properties to pay less tax, other properties must pay more tax. 4) Ability to administer Understandable to business 34

Options for Tax Changes (Success and Consequences) Small Properties (Geographic) >> Special Main Street Tax Rate Special BIDC Tax Rate Special Tax by Zone Small properties (Multi-Tier Taxes) >> Lower Taxes for First $ of Assessment Lower Taxes for Higher Taxed Business Square Footage Tax Max Tax Development >> Frontage Tax Land Tax (by Size) 35

Hypothetical Examples $230k Value = $8k Tax $26m Value = $863k Tax $1.4m Value = $46k Tax $12m Value = $398k Tax $230k Avg Value = $2,700 Tax $2.3m Value = $76k Tax $2.5m Value = $83k Tax $750k Value = $25k Tax 36

Success and Consequences: Special Main Street Tax Rate What is it and Why Consider It? Lower taxes for business on main streets Small local business are often on the main street Taxes appear higher on arterial and main roads Links to vibrancy, planning Considerations: What is a main street Presumably includes side streets Which properties are in vs out Those out pay higher taxes Requires clear objectives and consistent boundary definition 37

Small Properties >> Main Street (Reduce Main Street Taxes by 50%) $8k Tax ($5.3 per Sq. Ft) Extra $500 $863k Tax ($6.6 per Sq. Ft) Extra $60K $46k Tax ($4.6 per Sq. Ft) Extra $4K $398k Tax ($3.1 per Sq. Ft) Extra $28K $76k Tax ($7.6 per Sq. Ft) Saves $38K $83k Tax ($10.4 per Sq. Ft) Saves $42K $25k Tax ($2.5 per Sq. Ft) Saves $12.5K 38

Success and Consequences: Create Tax Zones What is it and Why Consider It? Create Tax Zones and separate tax rates for Industrial and Business Park(s), Central Business Districts Urban Rural Attempt to match zones to taxes Maximize benefit to small firms Instead of choosing who is in, choose who is out Considerations: Set separate tax rate(s) for each zone Might work better if we could also tax by type of property 39

Small Properties >> Zones (Urban Taxes reduce 10%, Bus Park Offsets) $8k Tax ($5.3 per Sq. Ft) Saves $1K $863k Tax ($6.6 per Sq. Ft) No Change Central Business District Urban $46k Tax ($4.6 per Sq. Ft) No Change $398k Tax ($3.1 per Sq. Ft) Extra $19K Industrial and Business $76k Tax ($7.6 per Sq. Ft) Saves $7K $83k Tax ($10.4 per Sq. Ft) Saves $8K $25k Tax ($2.5 per Sq. Ft) Saves $3K 40

Success and Consequences: Multi-Tier (High Value Assessment) What is it and Why Consider It? Lower Taxes on Mid-range Assessment E.g., Tax Rate is 0 between $2m and $2.2m of value Not all properties receive Higher tax rate over $2.2m Benefit more valuable to modest-value properties Considerations: Leased properties may not get much benefit Should target those with higher tax bills Low value properties shouldn t change Higher value properties increase but not as much as for first $200k 41

Small Properties >> Multi-Tier $ No tax on between $2m and $2.2m of assessment $8k Tax 1,500 Sq. Ft =$5.3 per Sq. Ft No Change $863k Tax 130,000 Sq. Ft =$6.6 per Sq. Ft Extra $13K $46k Tax 10,000 Sq. Ft =$4.6 per Sq. Ft No Change $398k Tax 130,000 Sq. Ft =$3.1 per Sq. Ft Extra $2K $76k Tax 10,000 Sq. Ft =$7.6 per Sq. Ft Saves $6K $83k Tax 8,000 Sq. Ft =$10.4 per Sq. Ft Saves $7K $25k Tax 10,000 Sq. Ft =$2.5 per Sq. Ft No Change 42

Initial Thoughts from Workshop Consensus from participants was difficult. Not ready to commit to any specific tax approach. Requested additional workshops on broader tax reform and analysis about what an optimal commercial tax structure looks like. There was broad agreement on need to deal with predictability issue on taxes. 43

Staff Conclusions Re Assessment Averaging: Staff believe they may be able to use recent legislative changes (Bill 177) to provide for some form of three year assessment averaging. Requires additional analysis and review. Staff to return this Summer. Re: Changes for Small Business: Can achieve some of Council s objectives indirectly through a Main Street Tax, Zone Taxes or a Multi-Tier Tax. There will be some negative consequences. 44

Possible Council Direction Recommendation: Set Urban Commercial Tax Rate at 2.924% as per the current Budget. Continue with business consultation during 2018. Bring forward any recommendations for next budget cycle. Option: Delay finalizing the commercial tax rate in favour of a Committee of the Whole on options for this year: Main Street Tax Rate Multi-Tier Tax Rate Zone Tax Rate Other 45

Questions and Discussion 46