Status of Outstanding Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties

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GM19.4 REPORT FOR ACTION Status of Outstanding Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Date: March 17, 2017 To: Government Management Committee From: Treasurer Wards: All SUMMARY This report provides information on the status of payment in lieu of taxes (PILTs) requested from federal, provincial and municipal properties, as well as adjustments made to various PILT accounts as at December 31, 2016. PILTs are voluntary payments made to the City of Toronto by the federal and provincial governments to compensate the City for municipal services it delivers to their properties. In most cases, the federal and provincial governments pay the full amount of PILTs that the City requests. There are, however, outstanding PILTs requested from federal and provincial bodies that the Treasurer has concluded, in consultation with the City Solicitor, to be uncollectible. In accordance with the authority provided within The City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control, the Treasurer, in consultation with the City Solicitor, has adjusted for accounting purposes, outstanding amounts of receivables in respect of payments in lieu of taxes determined unlikely to be paid. RECOMMENDATIONS The Treasurer recommends that: 1. Government Management Committee receive this report for information Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 1 of 10

FINANCIAL IMPACT The PILT amounts noted within this report in Tables 1 and 2 and detailed in Attachment 1 have been fully provided for in the City's Non-Program 2017 Operating Budget under the Payments-in-Lieu Provision account. As such, there are no future negative financial implications arising from this report. The Deputy City Manager & Chief Financial Officer has reviewed this report and agrees with the financial impact information. DECISION HISTORY At its meeting of September 22-25, 2003 City Council approved the adjustment of outstanding PILT receivables for taxation years 1998 to 2003 inclusive as a result of a reduction in the current value assessment of the property owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Centre located at 250 Front Street West (re: Policy and Finance Committee Report No. 9, Clause 8: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, 250 Front Street West, Crown Corporation, Reduction in Payment-in Lieu of Taxes). Council's decision and the staff report is available at: http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/2003/agendas/council/cc030922/pof9rpt/c1008.pdf At its meeting held on July 25-27, 2006 City Council approved adjustments to uncollectible PILTs for taxation years prior to amalgamation (1994-1997 inclusive), totalling approximately $12.7 million, consisting of approximately $0.2 million on federal properties, $12.0 million on provincial properties, and $0.5 million on municipal and other properties (re: Policy and Finance Committee Report 6, Clause 21: Write-Off of Uncollectible Payment in Lieu (PIL) of Tax Amounts on Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties). The Council decision and staff report are available at: http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/2006/agendas/council/cc060725/pof6rpt/c1021.pdf At its meeting held on October 8-11, 2013, City Council approved adjustments to outstanding PILTs for taxation years 1999 to 2012 for the Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport as part of a PILT settlement adopted by City Council at its October 2013 meeting as Item CC39.1: Payments in Lieu of Taxes for Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport. Council's decision and the staff report are available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item=2013.cc39.1 At the same meeting, City Council approved adjustments to outstanding PILTs for taxation years 2007 to 2013 for Parc Downsview Park as part of a PILT settlement agreement adopted by City Council as Item GM24.13: Parc Downsview Park - Proposed Agreement on Assessment Values for Payments in Lieu of Taxes. Council's decision and the staff report are available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item-2013.gm24.13 Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 2 of 10

At its meeting of July 7-9, 2015 City Council approved adjustments to outstanding PILTs for taxation years 1999 to 2015 for the TPA as part of a PILT settlement agreement with Ports Toronto (Toronto Port Authority) for properties owned by the Port Authority as item GM5.7: Payments in Lieu of Taxes for Ports Toronto. Council's decision and the staff report are available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item=2015.gm5.7 At its meeting held on November 3-4, 2015 City Council approved adjustments to uncollectible PILTs for taxation years 1998-2014 inclusive totalling approximately $34.1 million. Adjustments were also approved in the amount of $3.4 million for uncollectible property tax amounts billed to tenants of federally owned properties. At the same meeting, City Council approved amendments to the City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control to delegate authority to the Treasurer to adjust for accounting purposes, outstanding payment in lieu of taxes receivables that the Treasurer, in consultation with the City Solicitor, determines will not be paid, and to report annually to Council on amounts adjusted. The Council decision and staff report are available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item=2015.gm7.1 ISSUE BACKGROUND Federal Payments in Lieu of Taxes Section 3 of Ontario's Assessment Act states that land owned by Canada is subject to assessment but is exempt from property tax. This exemption from tax is consistent with the constitutional prohibition that one level of government cannot tax another level of government. The federal Payments in Lieu of Taxes Act ("PILT Act") was enacted to compensate municipalities for delivering services to federally owned properties that would be subject to property tax if they were privately owned. Federal crown corporations make PILTs pursuant to the Crown Corporation Payments Regulation ("the Regulation"). Under the PILT Act and the Regulation, the City requests PILTs from federal bodies. PILTs are unlike property taxes in two important ways: PILTs are made voluntarily, and federal bodies have discretion in determining property values and property tax rate for calculating PILTs. Two Supreme Court of Canada judgments 1 have considered the nature of this discretion and have concluded that its purpose is to preserve the 1 Halifax (Regional Municipality) v. Canada (Public Works and Government Services), [2012] 2 SCR 108. The City of Toronto intervened in support of Halifax in this case where the Court considered the nature of the discretion that the federal body has to determine value. The City was also an intervener in support of the position taken by Montreal before the Supreme Court of Canada in Montréal (City) v. Montreal Port Authority [2010] S.C.J. No. 14 which considered the nature of the discretion that federal bodies have under the PILT Act in determining the tax rates used to calculate PILTs. Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 3 of 10

constitutional immunity of federal bodies from tax while at the same time providing a mechanism to fairly compensate municipalities for their services. The City's PILT requests are calculated using the values and classifications returned for the PILTable properties on the assessment roll by the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) multiplied by the tax rates approved by City Council. In most cases, the PILTs are paid as requested. However, in some cases, the City's PILT request was for a property incorrectly assessed by MPAC as federal PILTable. For others, the federal body applied a tax mitigation measure like capping or rebates resulting in a lower PILT amount than requested. Another reason that a federal PILT may be lower than requested is that the federal body had a different opinion of the value of the federal property than had been returned for it on the assessment roll by MPAC. Taxable Tenants on Properties owned by the Federal Government Tenants of federal bodies are taxable pursuant to section 18 of the Assessment Act. Although Revenue Services made attempts to collect taxes from the tenants by way of collection notices and other collection action, including in some cases issuance to a bailiff, as the tenants were no longer carrying on business, it was not feasible to pursue collection. Normally unpaid taxes result in a tax sale. However, federal bodies are exempt from property tax. Therefore, pursuant to paragraph 319(4) (a) of the City of Toronto Act, 2006 when unpaid taxes are deemed uncollectible, they may be written off without a tax sale if the property is federally owned. Under section 3.1 of the PILT Act and section 8.1 of the Regulation, a federal body has the discretion to make a payment to a municipality for a federal tenant that did not pay their property taxes. In deciding whether to make the supplemental payment, the Minister will have to conclude that the municipality has made all reasonable efforts to collect the unpaid taxes, and, that there is no likelihood the municipality will ever be able to collect it Provincial Payments in Lieu of Taxes Properties owned by the province are also exempt from property taxes under Section 3 of the Assessment Act. The provincial PILT legislation is the Municipal Tax Assistance Act ("MTA Act"). Under Section 4 of the MTA Act, the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing may make a voluntary payment for property owned by the province or by a provincial agency equal to the tax for municipal purposes that would be payable if the property were taxable. However, if a Crown property or a portion of a property is occupied by taxable tenants, the Minister or a Crown Agency that owns the property may pay to the municipality an amount equal to the tax for municipal and school purposes that would be payable if the property or the portion of the property were taxable. The province may also make a payment to the City under Ontario Regulation 6/99 if it or a provincial agency is a tenant of a property not provincially owned. Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 4 of 10

The majority of provincial properties that are occupied by provincial agencies do not pay the education portion of taxes to the City. Provincial PILTs are calculated using only the municipal general rates that calculate the city portion of taxes only. For tenanted properties (whether residential, commercial or industrial), PILTs are based on both the municipal and education portion of taxes, with the education amounts being remitted to the province. Municipal Payments in Lieu of Taxes Under section 27 of the Assessment Act, certain municipal bodies are required to make payments equal to taxes for municipal and school purposes to municipalities "if the land and buildings were taxable and classified in the commercial property class". In Toronto, section 27 applies to properties owned by the Toronto Parking Authority, Toronto Hydro, and lands owned by the Toronto Transit Commission (with the exception of certain properties made exempt commencing in 2006). Amendment to City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control At its meeting on November 3-4, 2015 City Council adopted Item GM7.1, "Outstanding Payment in Lieu of Tax and Property Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties". One of the recommendations in this report was to amend the City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control to delegate to the Treasurer the authority to adjust for accounting purposes outstanding PILT receivables that the Treasurer, in consultation with the City Solicitor, determines will not be paid and to report annually to Council on amounts adjusted. This authority allows Revenue Services to remove unpaid PILT receivables where, on a case by case basis, the Treasurer concludes that the PILT will likely not be paid, and to remove dormant or invalid PILT accounts from the tax billing system. COMMENTS PILTs are made by the federal and provincial governments voluntarily. For practical purposes, PILTs are requested from federal, provincial and municipal bodies in the way that private property owners are billed. Revenue Services generates the City's PILT requests through the City's tax billing system. This is practical because the information used to request PILTs is based on the assessment roll returned by MPAC which is then uploaded into the tax billing system. In general, the City calculates PILT requests in the same way that taxes are calculated: multiplying the current value assessment (CVA) of the property as returned by MPAC for the tax year by the applicable tax rate for the property type. Under the City's accounting practices, and in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and audit requirements, a PILT receivable is created in the City's tax billing system for properties that the City requests PILTs from. When PILTs are paid to the City that are less than the requested amount, the short payment results in an outstanding receivable balance in the tax billing system. Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 5 of 10

Revenue Services staff make every attempt to collect outstanding PILT amounts from the relevant level of government. In early stages, the follow up is correspondence by letter, email or phone calls to the relevant PILT "manager" at the government body. Revenue Services will also have meetings which will typically include representatives from MPAC and often lawyers from Legal Services. There are also appeal/review processes which the City has used to deal with outstanding PILT receivables. The federal Dispute Advisory Panel is the adjudicative body created by the federal PILT Act that permits municipalities to ask for a review of the value or tax rate that a federal body has used to calculate its PILTs. Following a hearing, the Panel makes a recommendation to the federal body on the issue of value or rate. Significantly, the federal body is not bound by the Panel's recommendation and is not required to adjust the PILT that they paid to the municipality. The City applied to the Panel in respect of PILTs from three federal bodies: the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the Toronto Port Authority, and Parc Downsview Park. The Panel process reached varying stages for each matter, but ultimately all resulted in favourable PILT settlements for the City. The appeal processes in the Assessment Act that apply to taxable properties are applicable to provincial and municipal bodies. The City is currently a party to appeals brought by Infrastructure Ontario (formerly Ontario Realty Corporation and Management Board Secretariat) for the West Don Lands. If resolved, those appeals will result in decisions from the Assessment Review Board which will be used to adjust outstanding PILTs for these properties. Current Status of Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts Table 1 below identifies PILTs requested, amounts outstanding, and PILT amounts adjusted, by each level of government as at December 31, 2016. Table 1 - Payments in Lieu of Taxes - Requested Amounts and Amounts Outstanding - By Level of Government (2016) Adjusted Outstanding Balance Description Refund December Total Levy (Payment) 31,2016 Municipal Education Outstanding Billed 1998 transactions Total as % of levy Receivables Portion Portion to 2016 expected (includes add on charges and fees Federal 7,107,322 (1,093,084) 5,996,724 17,515 6,014,239 504,009,337 1.19% Provincial 3,190,737 787,718 3,777,694 200,762 3,978,456 674,208,171 0.59% Municipal 2,275,268 402,180 2,640,639 36810 2,677,449 817,197,164 0.33% Other 1 (1,420) 1,420 0 0 0 4,231,841 0.00% Total PILTs 12,571,907 98,234 12,415,057 255,087 12,670,144 1,999,646,513 0.63% Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 6 of 10

The total outstanding PILT balance as at December 31, 2016 is approximately $12.67 million. This total amount outstanding is expected to be reduced by approximately $10.5 million as a result of changes in legislation and appeals adjustments. Table 2 below identifies these amounts as well as the applicable government agency. Table 2 Payments in Lieu of Tax Amounts Expected to be Adjusted and Subject to Appeal Description Port Authority adjustments awaiting amendments to section 45.1 of Ontario Regulation 282/98 to include Billy Bishop Airport Toronto Parking Authority - Property subject to conversion to taxable Taxation Years 2013 to 2016 December 31,2016 Receivables Refund (Payment) transactions expected Adjusted Outstanding Balance Municipal Portion (includes add on charges and fees) Education Portion Total Total Levy Billed 1998 to 2016 Outstanding as % of levy 5,362,116 0 5,362,116 0 5,362,116 12,840,615 41.76% 2016 1,999,773 0 1,999,773 0 1,999,773 1,999,773 100.00% West Don Lands properties subject to appeal 2006 to 2016 1,846,455 1,311,879 2,962,614 195,720 3,158,334 4,308,686 73.30% Expected and Possible Adjustments Total 9,208,344 1,311,879 10,324,503 195,720 10,520,223 19,149,074 54.94% Remaining Receivables 3,363,563-1,213,645 2,090,554 59,367 2,149,921 1,980,497,439 0.11% Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 7 of 10

Toronto Port Authority On October 8, 9, 10 and 11, 2013, City Council approved a settlement proposal with the Toronto Port Authority for Payment-in-lieu of taxes for Billy Bishop Toronto City for tax years 1999 onward, that saw PILT amounts for the Port Authority's airport property determined on a per-passenger basis, similar to the method used to determine payment-in-lieu amounts for Toronto Pearson Airport, and other airports in Ontario that are operated by federal airport authorities. This report is available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item=2013.cc39.1 When section 45.1 of the Ontario Regulation 282/98 is amended to include the Billy Bishop Airport, $5,362,115 of the $5.4 million outstanding will be adjusted. Toronto Parking Authority The Parking Authority outstanding receivable balance identified in Table 2 represents $1,199,773 of the $2,277,181 which is subject to conversion. Once the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) issues supplementary and omit assessments the City will make the appropriate adjustments. West Don Lands A further $3.1 million, with respect to the West Don Lands properties are currently subject to assessment appeals. Once the appeals are settled, Revenue Services staff will be in a position to make the necessary adjustments. Remaining Outstanding Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts The remaining $2,149,921 outstanding balance includes $652,123 relating to Federally owned properties; $926,241 for Provincial properties and $571,557 for Municipal properties. The outstanding PILT amounts are a result of the following: Collections efforts are active and continuous, however, unsuccessful to date Properties subject to appeal Differences in the application of phase in adjustments Assessments used to calculate payments differ from that provided by MPAC Supplementary and omitted levies due in 2017 Attachment 1 to this report provides a detailed summary of the current status of PILT properties, with explanations and details surrounding reasoning and justifications for non-payment or payment below amounts billed. Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 8 of 10

Revenue Services staff will continue to review the remaining PILT accounts until such time as all reasonable efforts to collect have been exhausted Adjustments to Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts - December 31, 2016 In December 2016, the Treasurer, under the authority of the City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control, approved adjustments to PILT amounts deemed likely to not be paid in the amount of $13,247,070.51, as outlined below. Public Works Canada The Treasurer, in consultation with the City Solicitor, has deemed $1,841,417.25 to be uncollectible. The overall underpayment by Public Works Canada was the result of: The application of capping and claw-back adjustments by PWC and/or In the opinion of PWC the assessed value and/or the assessment classification is different than what was returned by MPAC Canadian Broadcasting Corporation The City Solicitor's opinion dated February 13, 2014 advises that Council authority exists for the Director of Revenue Services to settle corporation property values for the CBC's National Broadcast Centre at 250 Front Street W, for the 2012 CVA (tax years 2013 to 2016). A settlement was reached and executed in August 2016 in the amount of $9,157,672.53. The adjustments for 2016 unpaid PILTs are a result of differences between the PILTs requested and the PILTs made as a result of the August 2016 settlement. The Financial Control bylaw gives the Treasurer the authority to adjust PILTs for these four tax years; these PILTs are uncollectible because they exceed the PILTs based on the property value agreed to by the City and CBC in the settlement. Port Authority On July 7, 2015 City Council adopted report: "Payments in lieu of Taxes for Ports Toronto". Through the adoption of this report, certain Port Toronto properties were adjusted by $2,247,980.73. This report is available at: http://app.toronto.ca/tmmis/viewagendaitemhistory.do?item=2015.gm5.7 Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 9 of 10

The amendment of the City of Toronto Municipal Code Chapter 71, Financial Control, and improved internal processes providing for early notification of unpaid PILT amounts from federal, provincial and municipal bodies is improving the City's overall collection success rates for PILTs. These improved processes will also assist the City's ability to hold accountable the various federal, provincial and municipal agencies for the payments in lieu of tax amounts made to the City. CONTACT Casey Brendon, Director, Revenue Services Phone: (416) 392-8065, Fax: (416) 696-3778, E-mail: Casey.Brendon@toronto.ca SIGNATURE Mike St. Amant Treasurer ATTACHMENTS Attachment 1: Summary of Outstanding Payments in Lieu of Tax Amounts by Level of Government Payment in Lieu of Tax Amounts for Federal, Provincial and Municipal Properties Page 10 of 10