Edmonton property taxes expected to rise by 3.1 % for 2017 - Action News
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Edmonton

Edmonton property taxes expected to rise by 3.1 % for 2017

Property taxes for a typical Edmonton home will rise by $72 next year, if a proposed budget amendment is approved by city council.

Taxes on the typical home are forecast to increase by about $72 a year

Property taxes for atypical Edmonton home will rise by $72 next year, if a proposed budget amendment is approved by city council.

That's a 3.1-per-cent increase, slightly less thanwhat council approved in the spring, when it forecast a 3.4-per-cent tax increase for 2017.

Part of that increase will go to cover costs associated withthe province's carbon tax, which are estimated to bejust over $4 million.

The city's chief financial officer, Todd Burge, said $10 million has already been built into the budget over the next two years to deal with the costs of the NDP government's climate-change plan.

"I think the impact is pretty much what we expected it to be, and we've tried to manage it," he said. "We've got lower fuel costs, which are kind of offsetting some of it anyways."

Burge said the city has managed to save more than $38 million through a series of measures, such as eliminating vacant jobs and freezing management wages for 2017.

He said that won't have any impact on frontline services for Edmontonians.

"We were looking for things that didn't impact service probably longer-term vacancies that haven't been filled and removing them from the budget," he said.

Burge said the city also has more revenue coming in than anticipated. Increased construction in Edmonton, along with a bigger than expected dividend from Epcor, brought in more tax dollars.

The proposed 3.1-per-cent property tax increase will also pay forthe neighbourhood renewal program, the Valley Line LRT and cityprograms and services.

The proposed budget amendments will go to city council on Dec. 9.