City of Brandon budget proposes 6.9% tax hike amid inflation, COVID-19 pressures

Council to begin deliberations Friday morning on budget that proposes $10M increase in spending over 2021

Image | Brandon city hall

Caption: Brandon city council will begin to debate the city's 2022 budget on Friday morning. (Riley Laychuk/CBC)

Brandon's city council begins deliberations Friday morning on its 2022 budget — one affected by inflation and the COVID-19 pandemic, and which proposes a 6.9 per cent municipal tax hike for Manitoba's second-largest city.
If approved, the operating budget will also see spending among city departments increase by almost $10 million — or 11.9 per cent — over the 2021 budget.
Over the next two days, city council will go through the proposed $93.6-million operating budget(external link) and its $132-million capital budget(external link), and hear presentations from city administration and department officials faced with rising costs in recent years.
"Senior administration has worked diligently to keep this [tax increase] percentage as low as possible while dealing with rising inflation costs, challenges due to COVID-19, and the need to properly invest in infrastructure projects which will support our city's future," reads a news release from the city.
The city is also relying on $40 million in provincial and federal grants to balance its capital budget.
Brandon's protective services budget, which makes up more than a third of the city's operating budget, is proposed to go up by $1.17 million, with a draft increase of almost $900,000 to the Brandon police budget alone.
The city is also proposing a 78 per cent increase to the growth, economic development and housing budget — most of which is attributable to a $3.9-million hike in the budget for housing initiatives.
The capital budget includes proposals for drainage improvements, a new sewage lift station for the southern part of the city, a new ladder and rescue vehicle for the city's fire department, and a $14-million allocation to a new outdoor sports complex.
The proposed tax increase is markedly higher than those proposed in past budgets.
In 2021, Brandon city council approved a budget that saw the residential property tax rate go down by one per cent, after a proposed increase of 3.15 per cent.
The increase in 2020 was held to 0.47 per cent, while 2019 saw a 1.17 per cent increase passed after deliberations.
The city will live stream budget deliberations on Friday and Saturday on its YouTube channel(external link).
After council passes the budget, it will go to a public hearing before it is ratified.