â–ş Listen Live
â–ş Listen Live

Kootenay-Columbia MP disappointed by failed non-confidence vote

Kootenay-Columbia MP Rob Morrison is disappointed by the federal government pushing ahead with a planned increase to the carbon tax levy on April 1.

Morrison said an increase would put more strain on people’s budgets.

“When they jack up the carbon tax by 23 per cent, that will start with the farmers, goes to shipping, then to grocery stores, then of course, it goes onto people buying the product,” said Morrison. “It’s going to keep compounding in cost, which is making things more unaffordable.”

The tax increase is expected to raise the cost of gasoline by about three cents per litre.

This comes after a Conservative-led motion of non-confidence was voted down vote 204 to 116 on Thursday.

“The economy is so difficult for people that we wanted to vote to cancel the carbon tax,” said Morrison. “We wanted to have an election, and we wanted to have it over the carbon tax. If you want it, vote for it, if don’t, vote against it.”

However, the federal Liberals said carbon rebates will increase with the tax raises, noting that about 80 per cent of Canadian families get more in rebates than they pay into the tax.

B.C. has its own carbon tax system in place, separate from the federal tax.

This means B.C. industry, residents and businesses pay into and get rebates through the provincial tax structure rather than the Canadian system.

The provincial carbon tax is expected to rise on April 1 as well, which will likely also raise gas prices by about three cents per litre.

Morrison said repealing the federal carbon tax may have a domino effect on provinces that have their own system in place.

“I think the province is using the rationale that ‘as long as the federal government is doing a carbon tax, we’re just following suit.’ That tells me if the federal government stops the carbon tax, the B.C. government will stop the carbon tax,” said Morrison.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Thea Hanson named Kootenay Boundary’s Realtor of the Year

The award highlights excellence, integrity, and leadership among real estate professionals in the region.

Local credit union celebrates 75 years of community impact

Nelson & District Credit Union is celebrating 75 years of service and community impact in conjunction with International Credit Union Day on Thursday, October 16.

Trail Museum acquires scale used to weigh gold, silver bars

Teck recently donated the scale, which is believed to date to the 1930s. However, it has been sitting in a corner of the machine shop for decades.

RDKB chief administrator Mark Andison announces retirement

Andison has been with the RDKB for over 20 years, and was previously deputy CAO and head of planning.

Canada Post to resume limited service as CUPW shifts to rotating strikes Oct. 11

Canada Post says it will begin restarting mail operations this weekend as the Canadian Union of Postal Workers shifts from a national walkout to rotating strikes.
- Advertisement -