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Beginning in January 2020, the Government of Alberta undertook a review of the assessment model for regulated oil and gas properties such as wells and pipelines.

The purported intent of the provincial review was to modernize the assessment model for oil and gas properties and thus enhance industry competitiveness while ensuring municipal viability.

It is the County’s position that the Province has achieved neither of these outcomes with its ill-conceived, industry-biased model. Rather, this model strikes a crippling blow to rural Albertans already struggling under the weight of a fiscal downturn; a global pandemic; and the Province’s similarly ill-conceived rural policing cost download.

Background

The Government of Alberta is currently considering changes to the assessment model for regulated properties such as oil and gas wells and pipelines. Notably, no municipal leaders were involved in this review; nor was the County even aware of such a review prior to public notice of the Province’s finalized recommended changes to the model on Friday, July 24, 2020.

If implemented, the UCP's assessment model will strike a crippling blow to rural Albertans already struggling under the weight of a fiscal downturn; a global pandemic; and the Province’s recent rural policing cost download.

The impacts of shifting the tax burden from industry to residential would be severe, and would likely worsen after the first year of implementation. The Province has refused to provide access to the data required to conduct a multi-year impact assessment. Initial scenarios based on current available data are shown Here.

The Big Picture

Large oil & gas players want lower property taxes to enhance their competitiveness. The Alberta Government has caved to this industry pressure by proposing a drastic reduction in the County's non-residential assessment base (oil & gas properties and equipment).

The County thinks this is a disastrous plan and wants to stop the Province from putting it into motion.

The Big Picture

Between April and July of 2020, the Government of Alberta's conducted a review of the assessment model for oil and gas properties. The purported intent of this review is to “modernize” the assessment model for oil and gas properties and thus enhance industry competitiveness while ensuring municipal viability.

It is the County’s position that the Province will achieve neither of these outcomes with its ill-conceived, industry-biased model. Rather, this model would strike a crippling blow to rural Albertans already struggling under the weight of a fiscal downturn; a global pandemic; and the Province’s recent rural policing cost download.

Ratepayers are Encouraged to Get Involved

The Province has given rural municipalities an advocacy period of 30 days. During this time, the County plans to aggressively lobby its local MLAs and Ministers, and to add a clear and resounding voice of dissent to those of adjacent rural municipalities.

The County encourages all concerned ratepayers to do the same. The contact details for Alberta’s Minister of Municipal Affairs Tracy Allard and MLA for Lac Ste. Anne-Parkland Shane Getson are indicated below.

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