Catalyst Paper, Richmond, B.C., Canada, says it will appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada following dismissal of its appeal concerning the North Cowichan 2009 tax bylaw by the Court of Appeal for British Columbia. In its April 22 decision, the Appeal Court declined to strike down the tax bylaw while calling the "extreme imbalance" perpetuated by the District of North Cowichan a political problem requiring a policy decision by elected officials. While keeping its legal avenues open, Catalyst notes that it also has been working with others to demonstrate broad-based support for interim relief and a long-term, made-in-B.C. solution outside of the courts.
In the February 2010 Throne Speech, Premier Campbell announced a joint committee on municipal property tax reform, and the committee is expected to table its recommendations this fall. "We were encouraged by the premier's leadership on this matter," said Richard Garneau, Catalyst president and CEO, "and the Appeal Court decision now makes it even more critical that the joint committee does its work, does it well, and does it quickly." In the meantime, the City of Powell River and Catalyst have signed an agreement in principle that would reduce the Class 4 property taxes paid by the mill while assisting the City in reducing significantly its capital expenditures for future municipal service infrastructure.
"The competition for business and markets is fierce and other jurisdictions are actively encouraging businesses here to abandon their existing B.C. communities and set up shop outside of this province, even outside of Canada," said Garneau. "Powell River city council clearly understands that survival is about everyone working together to reduce taxes and costs in order to keep existing jobs and create new ones in this post-recession global economy. The days are gone when municipalities could set tax rates that ignored competitive reality and not pay a steep community price."
Catalyst Paper produces specialty mechanical printing papers, newsprint, and pulp. It has six facilities located in British Columbia and Arizona, USA, with a combined annual production capacity of 2.5 million metric tons.
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