Category Archives: Provincial

Canada’s Trade in Death

Concordat:

I hereby attest and aver that as a Canadian of honour, integrity and ethics it is depraved, and therefore categorically unacceptable, for Canada to be exporting death (slow, painful death) and industrial disease – in any form and for reasons as perverted as jobs, profits and electoral advantage. I demand that the federal government make this trading in death illegal – immediately.

I call upon all Canadians of integrity and ethics to join in condemning this depraved export of death and industrial disease and demand the federal government make this trading in death illegal – immediately.

I call upon all Provincial, Territorial and Municipal politicians and governments of integrity and ethics to pass motions condemning this depraved export of death and industrial disease and demand the federal government make this trading in death illegal – immediately.

I call upon all Members of Parliament of integrity and ethics to come together, regardless of political affiliation, and make it a priority to immediately introduce and adopt legislation making the export of death and industrial disease illegal – immediately.

In stating that he won’t allow cancer causing asbestos to be reintroduced in Canadian homes or schools but he’s firmly behind allowing Quebec’s asbestos industry to export the death and disease that its product causes to willing buyers abroad, hoping that it will enable the Tories to win a seat in the area; in ignoring the fact Conservative MP Chuck Strahl did not seek re-election because he has been diagnosed with incurable lung cancer – mesothelioma – believed to be triggered by breathing asbestos when he was younger; Mr Harper has demonstrated a level of ethical and spiritual corruption and turpitude such that he is unfit to be involved in any manner with the governing of Canada and such that his presence in Ottawa defiles Parliament, the Government of Canada and the Citizens of Canada.

Mr Harper and any members of his caucus, indeed any Members of Parliament, Provincial, Territorial or Municipal politicians supporting this trade in death on the grounds of profit, jobs and/or political advantage are unfit to be associated in any manner with the Government of Canada, any Province, Territory or Municipality and must resign.

Should Mr Harper refuse to resign, a high probability outcome given the level of depravity his statements, actions and non-actions on the prostitution of Canada by trading in death, it is the moral duty of the Conservative caucus to remove Mr Harper from the caucus and any association with the Conservative Party.

Should the Conservative caucus choose to join Mr Harper and descend to his level of ethical and spiritual corruption and turpitude, any members of the Conservative caucus with integrity and ethics must resign the caucus and serve Canadian citizens by sitting as independents and working with other Members of Parliament possessing integrity and ethics to stop Canada and Canadian business from exporting death.

All Members of Parliament with integrity and ethics must not only wrest control of Parliament from those so depraved as to see nothing wrong with trading in death and put an end to this trading in death, but must also do all within their power to end any connection between Parliament and any members of parliament with a level of ethical and spiritual corruption and turpitude as to refuse to ban the export of a cancer causing death material.

Failure to act on ending this trade in cancer death and disease by Parliament and Provincial, Territorial or Municipal governments demonstrates they are unfit to govern and any government or level of government that demonstrates its’ unfitness to govern should be treated as non-existent.

Unfit governments should be shunned until they demonstrate they are at least minimally fit to be a government.

Whatever government Canadians deserve or are, for the most part willing to accept, no Canadian of any integrity or ethics can accept a government or governments so depraved as to be willing to export asbestos materials that cause cancer and death.

The only course for Canadians of integrity and ethics is to call for the resignation of all those who support or refuse to end the Death Trade and to focus on civil disobedience until at least minimal ethical behaviour is restored to governments in Canada.

We can starve the monstrous beast by refusing to feed it what it must have to exist – citizens financial support.

Forcing the federal or other levels of government to cease to sully all Canadians with their corruption and turpitude will not be easy, but it can be done.

The question every Canadian must ask themselves is what value they place upon their own integrity, ethics, spirit and souls?

Financial Reality Check

The report on the state of the hospital on Haida Gwaii contained two important reality checks.

The NDP continue to need a major reality check on financial reality. There the NDP were, once again, demanding the BC government spend millions ($60 million) on health care (new Haida Gwaii hospital) while the NDP continue to advocate the repeal of the HST.

The 2011/12 budget is already facing a revenue shortage of $475 million, the amount that was due July 1, 2011 for implementing the HST. Given that BC’s referendum on repealing the HST violates the agreement with the federal government, the feds are not going to be paying that $475 million. Unless of course reality and sanity prevail and the Voters vote to keep the HST.

So, the NDP are working to cut $475 million out of BC’s 2011/12 budget and calling for added spending of $60 million for a new hospital on Haida Gwaii.

As a public service to the citizens of BC I am willing to make the sacrifice and accept $1 million from the NDP in order to provide a salient lesson on the effect of a significant revenue reduction . I am willing to accept any additional millions from the NDP that may be necessary in order for the NDP to learn about the effects a significant reduction in revenue has on a budget and what that reduction means for spending.

Further I will accept $130,000 from the NDP to model the effect of adding a large expenditure to a budget dealing with a large revenue reduction. (13% was arrived at by dividing $60 million demanded expenditure by the $475 million revenue reduction demanded by the NDP).

I also extend this offer to Mr Vander Zalm (adjusted to remove the additional $130,000 representing the NDP’s demanded expenditure as Mr Vander Zalm has only advocated reducing revenue by the $475 million this year, hundreds of millions per year in subsequent years and by the $1.2 billion that will need to be repaid to Ottawa).

Neither the NDP or Mr Vander Zalm should have any objection to accepting this offer as this is exactly what they are advocating the citizens of BC do with their money. There is no reason to object to acting on a personal financial level in the same manner they are advocating the province of BC act, is there?

The second reality check (and of far more concern) was the statement that, while the government was committed to getting the people on Haida Gwaii a new hospital, they did not have the $60 million needed and did not know where they could find it.

Hardly surprising in light of the Finance Minister’s statement that the government did not have any extra millions to increase spending on the missing woman’s inquiry. Or in light of the report on the same newscast that the most vulnerable of our citizens, those facing mental and physical challenges are facing cutbacks because the government simply does not have the money to meet all its obligations and demands for services. This situation is not the only cannibalizing of services here to provide services there. The government has been, over time, more and more often robbing Peter to pay Paul.

 

And that is the reality before revenue is reduced by $475 million or by the hundreds of millions (year after year) that will result from a repeal of the HST.

Why do I say this is of far more concern?

Consider this scenario: the province finds the $60 million but the people of Surrey say “Wait a minute, we need more hospital beds, the money should be spent building more hospital beds in Surrey (or Vancouver). There are only 2,500 people in Haida Gwaii and hundreds of thousands in Surrey.”

We are in that scenario. If the government manages to scrape up the $60 million by (robbing it from) further reductions in support to the challenged and other programs and if the money is spent on a new hospital on Haida Gwaii there will be no money for new hospital beds in the rest of BC.

We are just beginning resource and service wars pitting Haida Gwaii against Surrey, premies against the old; those in need of heart surgery or transplants against those in need of elective surgery……

We cannot have everything, have it now and not need to pay for it.

Reality is about to give British Columbians and our government, indeed Canada as a whole, a rude awakening with a reality hip-check.

As it says in the Tao of James: ‘Realty doesn’t much care what you believe or what you want to be true, it just IS.”

BC’s anti-volunteering legislation

I consider a love of reading to be the greatest gift my parents gave me. So, when I found out about the ‘Reading Buddies’ program at our local library, the opportunity to spend an hour a week sharing my love of reading and paying forward the gift of reading, I picked up an application.

While my mother gave me (and my siblings) the gift of reading, her alcoholism gave us the behaviour and thought patterns of children of alcoholism. I became a member of Alanon to deal with the profound negative effect growing up in an alcoholic household had on my life. The awareness of the profound negative effect growing up with alcoholism had, and would have continued to have if I had not found Alanon, is why I considered it important to volunteer when Alanon Sponsors were needed for our local Alateen group.

Being a dedicated swimmer led to meeting the male members of our local Special Olympics swim team as we shared a change room – they leaving practice and I arriving for the supper time length swim. When the team had a desperate need for volunteers……well, spending an extra 90 minutes in the water was not a real hard sacrifice for me to make.

While poverty may not permit me to financially support programs and organizations it has not prevented me from supporting programs and organizations in my community by volunteering. Even being homeless in Abbotsford, living in my car on the streets of Abbotsford did not prevent or interfere with my volunteering with the Special Olympic swim team.

No, it took BC government legislation to put an end to my volunteering.

Understand, I fully support the requirement for police checks for those working with youth or vulnerable individuals. Over the years I have had many police checks done .

When the province decided to bring in legislation to require police checks for all, rather than leaving the choice up to the individual organizations I felt it was only common sense. And since the organizations I volunteered with already required police checks, I foresaw no effect on me from legislating a police check as a requirement.

I do not know what had the government taking the sloppy route in drafting the legislation. It really doesn’t matter. What matters is that the government produced legislation that was seriously flawed.

When the legislation was introduced supporters of privacy and civil liberties pointed out to the government that the legislation contained an assault on both privacy and civil liberties of citizens. Mathematicians pointed out that statistical analysis showed a significant percentage of volunteers would be faced with the need to decide between violations/intrusions into their privacy, civil liberties and charter rights to get a police check or walking away from volunteering.

Which is the situation I found myself in and mulling over, meditating on and wrestling with this past week, after getting a call from the Abbotsford Police Department that they required my fingerprints in order to complete my Criminal Record Check. Never before, in over a decade of criminal record checks, has there been any problem.

Giving or being required to give the APD my fingerprints when I have done nothing wrong is a violation of my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights that I cannot countenance.

Last year I turned down an opportunity to attend (without any out of pocket cost to me) an interesting conference in the USA because of the privacy violations that go with flying into [or simply over] the USA. Even visiting my favourite used book store cannot tempt me into crossing the border into the USA. And Mr Harper’s cavalier selling out of Canadians privacy to the USA is among the top reasons on my ‘why I feel an uncontrollable need to kick Stephen Harper’s a** list’.

At a time when government cutbacks and funding cuts are making the services provided by volunteer organizations more and more vital, and at a time that many volunteer organizations cannot find the volunteers they need, the sloppy structure of the British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act is forcing volunteers to walk away from volunteering.

The sloppy drafting of BC’s British Columbia Criminal Records Review Act has added my name to its list of victims and has cost two local organizations a long time volunteer and denied another a new volunteer.

I have never had any problem with the need to provide a criminal record check and walking away from volunteering was a difficult and painful decision, that remains unsettling.

But I cannot, will not, allow the state (in this case BC) to violate my privacy, civil liberties and charter rights by forcing me to provide fingerprints, for the state’s convenience, in order to satisfy a piece of poorly drafted legislation.

Media and the HST Report

You know, at one time the News media actually (I know I am showing my age) had a certain amount of factual information and balance in their reporting.

As the coverage of the release of the report the BC government asked an the independent panel to prepare to provide BC voters with the information needed to make a wise decision when casting their vote – yea or nay – on the HST referendum demonstrates neither the broadcast nor print media can be trusted to provide factual and balanced coverage of important issues.

Watching the coverage or reading the papers left one thinking the report had salvaged the BC Liberals and the HST.

Since this was not what I had expected from an independent panel I went to the internet to read the report and found that nothing could have been further from the reality of the report than the media coverage.

Indeed, the coverage provided by the media was so misleading the coverage, with its total disregard for reality, accuracy or the consequences of the coverage, borders on malfeasance.

The report was a thoughtful examination of the HST setting out the facts and realities of the HST and placing the HST in context vis-à-vis the budget realities of the BC government – a must read for those who will be voting in the HST referendum.

Indeed the report does such a fine job of setting out the budget realities faced by the province and government of BC, the report needs to form part of budget deliberations and discussions to ensure politicians and public have a solid understanding of the budget [revenues and spending] realities of the provinces finances.

You can read the report HST or PST/GST? – IT’S YOUR DECISION in its entirety or the excerpts (italicized) below which includes over 90% of the report itself, reformatted to this format.

We’ll admit — It’s been a struggle. Some of the facts about the HST and PST/GST are crystal clear. Other facts will take time to emerge. Tax policy is complex and it’s not always easy to arrive at black and white conclusions.

The process of preparing this report has shown us much of the debate over the HST and PST/GST remains filled with factually incorrect information. We believe that better information, including the good and the bad about each tax system, is critical for there to be a successful referendum – no matter the result.

Revenue from the sales tax equals the total income taxes paid by individuals. If B.C. eliminated the sales tax — whether it’s the HST or PST/GST — there would be a $5-billion to $6-billion hole in the $41-billion budget. To compensate the government would need to increase the deficit, raise other revenue or cut spending on services. Or do a combination of all three.

Spending on health care [currently 42% of the budget] in B.C. is growing more than twice as fast as the government’s revenue growth.

If governments are to adequately fund public services and avoid cutbacks, tax hikes or deficits that add to provincial debt [interest on debt is 6% of budget expenditures; increasing debt and/or increasing interest rates means more of the budget must be used to pay interest, decreasing the monies available to provide services], they must have reliable and robust sources of revenue.

Under the PST, much of the service economy went untaxed. Under the HST, most services are taxed. That means a broader tax base and a more stable source of revenue for government. One thing is clear— sales taxes are essential to the B.C. government’s revenue base.

“As a consumption tax the HST is efficient. There are no loopholes, exemptions for special interest groups or deductions.” Paul Mockler, A & A Trading Ltd.

British Columbian families pay an average of $350 more every year on routine expenditures under the HST. The more you spend, the more HST you, pay. The more you earn, the more you’re likely to spend. If your family is one of the 15 per cent of B.C. families that report income of less than $10,000 a year, you’re actually better off under the HST. All B.C. taxpayers’ HST costs are partially offset through income tax relief. 17% of your spending has an extra seven per cent sales tax; 29% of your spending is subject to the same total sales taxes as before, it has not gone up or down; 54% of your spending is not taxable under the HST or the PST/GST – nothing has changed.

To make a product or service, businesses pay for items like power, heat, rent and computers. Under the PST, businesses paid the seven per cent sales tax on those purchases. While you never saw it on your bill most of that PST was added onto the final price you paid at the cash register. Call it the invisible PST paid by you, the consumer.

Under the HST system that’s changed. Most businesses receive a full rebate on sales tax paid on items they buy to make a product or service. That means they no longer add the invisible PST to the final price they charge you. Businesses can pass on their HST rebates to you in the form of lower prices or use their savings to invest in new equipment and productivity.

“For B.C.’s businesses to remain competitive, a value-added sales tax, like the HST, is a necessity.” Institute of Chartered Accountants

Virtually all economic analysis finds the HST increases economic growth, productivity, wages and the quality of jobs. A move back to the PST/GST will likely have a negative impact on business and investor confidence because of uncertainty over tax policy. The panel’s commissioned analysis concludes the economy will get a bigger boost under the HST than it would under PST/GST. Under the HST, the size of the economy will be $2.5 billion larger in 2020 than it would have been with the PST/GST. That’s about a 1.1 per cent higher growth. Small and large businesses save at least $150 million in administrative costs because they now comply with one tax, not two.

“A reality that has seldom been mentioned in the HST debate is that the provincial government actually has relatively few policy levers available to attract investment, foster the growth of high-paying private sector jobs, and enhance B.C.’s competitiveness. The design of the consumption tax regime is one area where the province has the capacity to shape the economic environment in a positive way.” Business Council of British Columbia

The HST puts exporters on the same footing with the more than 140 other countries that have gone to value added sales taxes, such as the HST, to make their exports competitive in the global marketplace.

For the important small business sector the HST is a benefit as the HST removes the PST from the cost of production. That makes it cheaper to produce goods and services, helping overall sales and exports. The HST also makes bookkeeping simpler and cheaper for small business. Compliance with only one sales tax (HST) vs. two (PST and GST) is particularly important for small firms, which often don’t have the same administrative resources as larger companies.

Our consensus is the HST will be a net benefit to the economy. But don’t expect dramatic results overnight – it’s a tax that offers incremental benefits over time by: Making most businesses more competitive; Reducing administrative costs to businesses; Reducing the cost of producing goods and services; Creating more jobs.

Going back.

Going back to the PST will take 18-24months. The time is needed for rewriting federal-provincial tax laws and regulations, hiring back 300 tax collectors, rebuilding a provincial PST office and helping businesses readjust their accounting systems.

The first year of going back to the PST/ GST will result in the province losing the

$820 million in the first year, increasing to $893 million in the second year and would widen each year. Factoring in the saving the provincial budget would see a net revenue loss of $531 million in the first year and $645 million in the second. That trend would continue each year, meaning other revenues would need to be found or public services cut to avoid increasing future deficits.

Going back will be expensive. The province will probably have to repay Ottawa the $1.6 billion it received to transition to the HST. If the government borrowed $1.6 billion to repay Ottawa, it would cost $85 million a year in interest based on today’s interest rates. {Assuming that repealing the HST and the need to borrow $1.6 billion does not result in a change to BC’s credit rating and raise the interest rate BC can borrow at}

Note: one point I feel the report was not strong enough on is the negative effect repealing the HST will have on the province’s cost to borrow money. Lenders are repaid out of government revenues raised through taxes. I feel that a refusal to pay higher taxes while at the same time demanding more and more services – and thus rapid increases in debt, is going to have a significant effect on the cost to borrow money and the negative consequences flowing from increasing costs of debt servicing. Indeed, under those circumstances the province could begin to have trouble borrowing the money it needs as lenders become cautious about BC’s debt escalation.

And while it may not seem large compared to other costs the government will spend $35 million each year to run the PST office.