Riverview property taxes hiked for first time since 2010
Vanessa Blanch | CBC News | Posted: December 13, 2016 4:10 PM | Last Updated: December 13, 2016
Extra tax revenue will go to improve infrastructure including trails, streets and water lines
Property taxes are going up in the Town of Riverview for the first time since 2010 according to Mayor Ann Seamans, who said there was no way around the increase.
By raising the taxes by two cents and putting this money in the reserve fund we'll be better prepared for the future. - Riverview Mayor Ann Seamans
The 2017 operating budget was passed by town council on Monday and includes a two-cent increase on every $100 of a property's assessed value.
"What it's going to mean is a $30 increase on property taxes for homes that are assessed at $150,000," Seamans told Information Morning Moncton.
Seamans said revenue from the property tax assessment base has declined for the past two years because of market conditions and town staff have done everything possible to cut costs.
"This year we instructed staff to decrease their departments by four per cent, which was a decrease overall of $300,000," she explained.
"We felt that in order to look forward in the years to come with our aging infrastructure that we had to do an increase this year of two cents on the tax rate."
Seamans said some services, such as street patching and advertising, have been reduced in the 2017 budget but for the most part services will be maintained.
New Codiac Transpo bus for Riverview
Seamans points to improvements to six streets, a new path to connect the Hillsborough Road bike lane to the Riverfront Trail, improvements to the outdoor Lion Ken Gabbey Community Pool and a new sidewalk for Cleveland Avenue as budget highlights.
"We are also getting a new Codiac Transpo bus which is much needed in the fall of 2017 and we were able to receive $50,000 from the federal government with the Canada's public transit infrastructure fund."
Seamans hopes the property tax increase will allow Riverview to take advantage of more federal and provincial funding for future projects.
"In order to do those projects [Riverview] has to have money to put forward too — the way we were going there was nothing being put in reserve and if those opportunities came up the only way we were going to be able to take advantage of that is to borrow money," Seamans said.
"So by raising the taxes by two cents and putting this money in the reserve fund we'll be better prepared for the future."
In addition to property taxes, Riverview residents will also be paying more for water and sewer with an increase of $20 per year, or $5 per quarter.
"We have a lot of cast iron pipes in the Town of Riverview and we have had a lot of water main breaks over the last few years which is very costly so we will be addressing that," Seamans said.
Riverview has also set aside $1.7 million in the 2017 budget for a one time debt payment.