Wake-Up Call: Nanaimo’s Debt Trap
Council
is considering changes that would allow up to $185M in long-term borrowing
without voter approval. On paper this may be 'legal,' but for taxpayers it
represents the equivalent of a 15% property tax hike — locked in for 20–30
years.
What Changed
•
Old Rule: Long-term borrowing always required elector approval.
• New Rule: Up to 10% of revenues can now be borrowed without a vote.
• For Nanaimo: $15.5M/year in new debt payments = ~$185M in borrowing.
Household Impact
Every
$1M in City spending ≈ 1% property tax increase. $15.5M in new annual payments
= 15–16% tax increase. And these payments last for decades.
The Flaw
The
Province’s 'sustainable revenues' test measures City Hall’s cashflow, not what
households can afford. Revenues already fund existing services — new debt means
higher taxes or service cuts.
Bigger Picture
From
Ottawa to Victoria to City Hall, debt is the reflex answer while inflation,
housing, and interest burdens rise. Taxpayers are the backstop at every level.
Even the Best Paid Struggle
The
BCGEU, representing some of BC’s best-paid workers, is striking for an 8.5%
raise to 'keep up.' If they can’t sustain the cost of living, how can average
taxpayers absorb a 15% permanent tax hike for City debt?
Call to Action
•
Retain voter approval for long-term borrowing.
• Demand clear affordability studies.
• Balance ambition with fiscal restraint.
Debt ceilings are not affordability tests. Taxpayers deserve transparency,
accountability, and consent.
FOR A MORE INDEPTH REPORT READ THIS VOICE OF NANAIMO NEWS MAGAZINE ARTICLE

It's not their money so they never worry about it. They make big money that we pay them.
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