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Muskoka group urges elected officials to keep the carbon tax

The following is an open letter to MP Scott Aitchison and Minister of Natural Resources Graydon Smith:

Dear MP Aitchison and Minister Smith,

Both of you have stated that eliminating the carbon tax will increase affordability or reduce the cost burden on Canadians.  So, we decided to dig into these statements, and here is what we found.

1)      Eliminating the carbon tax will also eliminate the carbon rebate.Currently Canadian households receive a tax rebate of anywhere from $760 to $1,800 per year, depending on which province they live in. A couple in rural Ontario receives $1,008/year, which includes a 20% rural supplement, and a family of 4 receives $1344. 

2)      Regarding the cost-of-living impact of a carbon tax

“The Bank of Canada has estimated that the carbon tax increases inflation by 0.15 per cent. Trevor Tombe, an economist at the University of Calgary who has studied the impact of the carbon price on consumer costs, points to Statistics Canada data that suggests its impact on food prices is less than one per cent.”  CBC News · Posted: Oct 07, 2023  https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/carbon-tax-food-prices-wherry-analysis-1.6989547 

So, a $300 grocery bill is now up less than­ $3 due to the carbon tax – the cost of a candy bar. 

And what about that $0.176 a liter on gas, what is that costing the average Canadian?  Well, at 20,000 km per year, a vehicle that burns 15 liters/100 km will pay $528 carbon tax a year or just over half what Ontarians receive in the rebate. The remaining dollars will cover any other expenses related to the carbon tax.

So NO, the elimination of the carbon tax will not increase affordability, but will in fact decrease affordability for a majority of Canadians.

3)      The carbon tax may be a burden on those who burn a LOT of carbon/fossil fuels, by idling, by purchasing larger vehicles, by driving at higher speeds, or enjoying life in their boat or RV.  i.e. a cost burden for those who can afford it. 

It is not a burden on those who, due to financial limitations, can’t afford to burn fossil fuels or on those who choose to burn fewer fossil fuels through their life choices. 

In a way, the carbon tax/rebate system is a way of redistributing wealth, from those who can afford to burn, to those who cannot afford to burn. 

4)      Does a carbon tax help fight climate breakdown?

Carbon pricing is about recognizing the cost of pollution and accounting for those costs in our daily decisions by choosing less carbon-intensive options. Anything that costs more, makes us think about ways to reduce those costs.

So, if fuel costs are higher, people are more likely to consolidate their trips into town, to purchase a smaller or more efficient gas vehicle, or to buy an electric vehicle and completely eliminate the gas tax on transportation. Any of these options reduce the carbon entering the atmosphere and heating the planet.

The government of Canada estimates that carbon pollution pricing will contribute as much as one-third of Canada’s emissions reductions in 2030. So definitely, the carbon tax/rebate system reduces carbon emissions and therefore helps reduce climate breakdown.

In short, if you are successful in eliminating the carbon tax, the truth is you will make life less affordable for the majority of Canadians.

Hopefully Canadians and Ontarians will remember this at the polls in the coming elections.

Sincerely,

Paul Kuebler, Port Sydney

Sue McKenzie, Gravenhurst

Len Ring, Gravenhurst

Linda Mathers, Port Carling

Lesley Hastie, Huntsville

On behalf of Climate Action Muskoka

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5 Comments

  1. Sue McKenzie says:

    Andrew Sommers. Yes, only one person in the household receives the entire household’s climate carbon rebate, however, EVERY person in the household receives a carbon rebate, even children! Those living in a rural area (ie Muskoka) receive a 20% rural amt added in.

    Here are the Ontario amounts:
    – first adult $560, $672 (rural amt);
    – second adult $280, $336 (rural),
    – each child $140, $168 (rural),
    – family of 4 $1,120, $1,344 (rural)

  2. Andrew Sommers says:

    One problem is the rebate is per household. I spend on average 1500-2000 on various carbon taxes throughout the year and the one year that I did get a rebate it was for 300 dollars. My wife spends about a 1000 as well, however only one person per household gets the rebate!!

  3. Lynda Mochrie says:

    Could Peggy Tupper for once substantiate her point of view.

  4. peggy tupper says:

    So, 5 people get together and create a name for themselves. This should not give them credibility nor a voice. Electric vehicles are NOT environmentally friendly. The carbon tax is a curse on Canadians and affects everything we do. We as a country are no longer competitive. Nothing our glorious PM has done has benefitted Canadians, absolutely nothing.

  5. Bob Braan says:

    Remember “Poilievre ran in favour of carbon taxes multiple times in his career.”
    He was also a big fan of the carbon tax.
    When it suited.
    But now he’s the official opposition so lying and complaining about everything is his thing.
    Good idea or bad.

    Complaints are easy.
    And worthless.
    Solutions are hard.
    And very valuable.
    Nothing of any value has ever come out of PP’s mouth.
    Just complaints.
    He even says Canada is broken but most premiers are Conservative.
    Housing, health care and education are mostly provincial responsibilities.

    Both federal and provincial Conservatives and their fanatics are telling tall tales about the carbon tax. Over and over.
    https://southmuskoka.doppleronline.ca/letters-conservatives-are-telling-tall-tales-on-carbon-tax/

    It’s insulting to Canadians
    They make no sense at all.
    Carbon pricing is the most effective and least expensive carbon plan.

    The carbon tax is rebated. And then some for most.
    Don’t believe anyone.
    Especially PP.
    Figure it out yourself.
    We paid $300 carbon tax on nat gas heat ($50 average per month for the 6 months we need the furnace) plus $300 on gasoline and got $800 back in Ontario so we are up $200.

    PP is counting on those who can’t do math to blindly parrot his lies.
    But lying and complaining is all he’s got.
    He’s very good at it.

    “Here’s to a good future for Canada!”
    Without blind parrots.
    https://doppleronline.ca/huntsville/to-a-good-future/