Tuesday 14 November 2023

Some households would save $750 a year on electricity under Liberal proposal — but who?

 

Some households would save $750 a year on electricity under Liberal proposal — but who?

Higgs government urged to stop taxing electricity, despite uncertainty over who benefits most

A $70 million proposal pushed by New Brunswick Liberals to eliminate the provincial portion of the HST on residential electricity bills would see some households get 10 times the financial benefit others get, according to evidence on file with the Energy and Utilities Board.

Earlier this month, Liberals forced a debate in the legislature on its idea to make electricity free of provincial tax beginning on Jan. 1. At the time, they provided no estimate of how large or small the benefit to individual households might be under the policy. 

But according to consumption profiles of residential electricity customers in New Brunswick, benefits would range from below $60 per year for thousands of households to above $500 for thousands of others.   

In the case of the highest consumption households, the tax benefit would be worth more than $750.

A woman Liberal Leader Susan Holt says every household would get something if the province eliminated its part of the HST on electricity bills. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

In an interview, Opposition Liberal Leader Susan Holt said her party understands its idea would not precisely target financial help to those who need it the most. However, the plan has the advantage of providing at least some money to every household, she argued, and unlike other complex government programs could be easily implemented

"We did think that the time for a blunt instrument was now, and that can provide relief to people quickly in a way that doesn't add a lot of bureaucracy into the mix," said Holt about the proposal..

There are just under 400,000 residential electricity customers in New Brunswick served by N.B. Power and three smaller municipal utilities in Saint John, Edmundston and Perth-Andover.  

In 2022, combined residential electricity bills issued by the group exceeded $700 million, with more than $100 million in HST charged on that amount.

The provincial share of that tax was over $70 million.

According to data filed by N.B. Power with the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board, its average residential customer in 2022 paid $1,859.63 for electricity before taxes.

A man in a suit with a handheld microphone pointed in his direction Bathurst West-Beresford Liberal MLA René Legacy led debate in the legislature on the motion to eliminate provincial tax on residential electricity bills earlier this month. Government MLAs eventually voted against the idea. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Given that, and a rate increase implemented in 2023, the average N.B. Power residential customer would save about  $192 per year beginning in 2024 if provincial sales tax were dropped from bills.

However, there is a wide dispersion of customers above and below that average, depending on whether they live in apartments or large or small houses, whether they heat with electricity or other fuels or drive an electric vehicle they charge at home.

There is also uncertainly over who receives the highest bills and would reap the largest benefits — low or high-income households.

. The Saint John development of Anchorage Estates has large homes with sweeping views of the St. John River. It's unclear whether houses in neighbourhoods like this or drafty older homes in less affluent areas would benefit the most from eliminating provincial tax on electricity. (Google Earth)

According to N.B. Power, more than 33,000 of the households it serves, mostly people in apartments, use under 2,500 kilowatt hours of electricity per year.   

Those customers would save $30 or less if they paid no provincial sales tax on that consumption.T hey would also save another $2.46 a month in tax on service fees applied to every residential bill, for total savings of just under $60 a year.

By contrast N.B. Power has nearly 5,700 residential customers who used more than 40,000 kilowatt hours of electricity in 2022, including 350 who consumed more than 60,000 kilowatt hours. 

The provincial sales tax on every 10,000 kilowatt hours of electricity sold to an N.B. Power residential customer is currently $121.15. Under the Liberal plan, this would put savings for households in the high consumption groups at $500 per year or more. 

During debate in the legislature about eliminating the provincial tax on electricity bills, Bathurst West-Beresford Liberal MLA René Legacy said the biggest savings for large consumers is a positive element of the plan because those households tend to be headed by moderate and low-income residents stuck in drafty houses they cannot afford to fix.

"They can't insulate properly," Legacy said. "They can't pay for a new heat source that is more efficient They can;t buy those windows and door that seal properly and keep the cold out.

"Those are often the larger bills and those are the people that will see the most benefit from the removal of PST [provincial sales tax] on their bills."

. New Brunswick residents living in apartment buildings consume limited amounts of electricity. Many would receive $5 per month or less from a plan to eliminate sales tax on power bills. (Connell Smith/CBC)

But Holt acknowledged Liberals do not have any hard data to know for sure how many large residential electricity users are low-income households struggling in inadequate housing and how many are the opposite — affluent households powering an upscale lifestyle.

"We don't have that granular level of detail," Holt said.

"This is a broad-based tool to provide some savings to a large number of New Brunswickers because there's a lot of people telling us they can't make ends meet right now."

In his remarks in the legislature, Legacy acknowledged it might be better if a $70 million aid package for residents directed money to where it was most needed but wasn't sure what that might be. 

"Why would we eliminate the tax for the more comfortable amongst us," asked Legacy rhetorically, outlining a criticism of the Liberal plan.

"Should we not only do it based on financial circumstances of the individuals or families? Sure. If government could find a way to do this simply without overburdening the process it would be great."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Robert Jones

Reporter

Robert Jones has been a reporter and producer with CBC New Brunswick since 1990. His investigative reports on petroleum pricing in New Brunswick won several regional and national awards and led to the adoption of price regulation in 2006.

 
 
187 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos
I am in my seventies and I smoke overtaxed cigarettes and live like a king right on the poverty line with the funds provided to me byway of CPP and OAS which I had to fight tooth and nail to get because the Feds canceled my SIN many years ago. Because of that fact I cannot get the quarterly GST Rebates and the Carbon Tax Refund I am due and even been denied Free Heath Care until recently.

Small wonder I find this political spit and chew about taxation rather comical EH?

 
Le Wier 
Reply to David Amos
How do you file your income taxes without a SIN? 
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Amos
Hopefully the time will come (sooner than later) that justice will prevail and you will receive the provincial and federal benefits that all qualified Canadians are fully entitled to. 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Le Wier  
I don't 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Le Wier  
Once a year I fill out a form with Service Canada just before my birthday in July and my money keeps coming 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
Thanks Heres hoping but I ain't betting on it ever happening  
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to David Amos
It certainly should. Politicians who think and/or feel otherwise are undeserving of their positions of authority. 
 
 
 
 
 
David Amos
The sales tax on my NB Power bill is higher than my property taxes 
 
 
 
 
Don Corey  
The motive behind this is about as political as it gets. Regardless, if Susan Holt can get Trudeau to agree to drop the federal portion of the HST, then I'm all for it.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
Welcome back to the circus 
 
 
 
 
Ben Brown  
If the NB Liberal Party didn’t agree with the HST agreement, why didn’t it end it in 2018?

Or ask the current PM to dismantle it from the federal side of the agreement?

 
David Amos
Reply to Ben Brown 
Good question  
 
 
Don Corey
Reply to Ben Brown  
Good luck in getting an explanation to your first question.

We all know the answer to the second, although the current PM has been known to flipflop when the polls dictate the need for such.

 
 
 
 
Chuck Gendron 
$62.50 a month does not go very far, now days and they will make it up on a tax or fee somewhere. Liberals give you a dollar with the left hand and take 2 dollars away the right hand.
 
 
SW Home 
Reply to Chuck Gendron 
compared to Higgs who just takes and spends wrecklessly while making sure his pals over at Irving are looked after  
 
 
Don Corey  
Reply to SW Home
"spends recklessly"? You can't be serious.  
 
 
SW Home 
Reply to Don Corey  
I'm sorry, did I make a typo or something? 
 
 
Don Corey  
Reply to SW Home 
Naw, just a spelling mistake, but no big deal lol.
 
 
SW Home 
Reply to Don Corey 
oops my bad. Yea it was supposed to say spends recklessly. Sorry bout that. This site could really use an edit feature to fix typos  
 
 
David Amos
Reply to SW Home 
IMHO "wrecklessly" is apropos
 
 
Chuck Gendron  
Reply to SW Home
So your accusing Higgs of being a Liberal? or are you just saying whatever as long as it is against Higgs.  
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Chuck Gendron 
FYI $40.00 a month plus tax is my phone bill and I can talk far and wide for that much to the chagrin of many politicians and lawyers etc. 
 

Don Corey  
Reply to SW Home 
A lot of typos here are deliberate, to make a point and not get zapped.

I need to work on that one.

 
Michael Cain 
Reply to Chuck Gendron
Higgs started out a Liberal; then Cor, but really wanted to be king of the PC. 


 
 
Micheal Wilson
Another failure by the Higgs government.  
 
 
Don Corey  
Reply to Micheal Wilson 
Why? Right or wrong, power bills have been taxed for longer than I can remember.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey    
GNB should remember when they began that nonsense Why not ask your MLA? 
 
 
Don Corey  
Reply to David Amos 
Good advice, thanks. 
 
 
 
 
Terry Bull 
Every election cycle, the Liberals promise four things and deliver on one.

This will be a promise unfulfilled.

 
Don Corey  
Reply to Terry Bull 
You're being very generous when you give them a one out of four. Then again, their propensity toward spending might get them to the 25%, with our provincial debt taking another big hit.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Don Corey
Ditto
 
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment