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    B.C. residents to pay more for health care, insurance, power and gas in 2012

    VANCOUVER - British Columbia residents will pay more in the coming year for health care, electricity, car insurance and gasoline.

    Critics say the increases don't always make sense, particularly when they hit lower-income residents at the same rates as richer citizens, while the provincial government maintains British Columbians pay some of the lowest taxes in Canada.

    The first provincial increase comes into effect on Jan. 1, when health-care premiums rise by six per cent, or $84 a year for families of two or more.

    It's the third year in a row that fees have increased, bringing the total premium for families to $128 per month. The family health-care premium was $108 per month for most of the 2000s until increases began in 2010.

    A month later, the Crown-owned Insurance Corp. of B.C., which has a monopoly on auto insurance in the province, will increase its rates.

    In February, basic premiums will jump by $68 a year — 11.2 per cent — for the average customer, but when combined with cuts to optional rates, ICBC says the average customer will be out an extra $27.

    BC Hydro is set to increase its rates by 3.9 per cent as of April 1, which the Crown corporation says will cause the average residential power bill to increase by about $36 a year. That's about half what BC Hydro had proposed earlier this year until the provincial government ordered the corporation to come up with a smaller increase.

    In July, the province's carbon tax will increase to $30 per tonne. The tax on gasoline will hit 6.67 cents per litre, up from the current tax of 5.56 cents.

    Drivers in the Vancouver area will pay even more after local mayors voted to impose a two-cent gas tax beginning this spring to pay for a rapid transit line that will link Vancouver with Coquitlam and Port Moody.

    Jordan Bateman of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation said the series of increases may be more than some families can handle, particularly when combined with increases to federal employment insurance and Canadian Pension Plan premiums. Those together will take about $142 from workers' paycheques.

    He noted municipal property taxes will also likely rise for many residents this summer.

    "It's almost death by a thousand cuts right now," Bateman, who lives in B.C., said in an interview.

    "In isolation, these fees might seem reasonable, but the problem is that it's one on top of the other."

    Bateman said the federal, provincial and municipal governments should be working together to ensure the taxes and fees imposed on residents are fair.

    He said he's not opposed to the idea of taxes, but he said they need to be fair and the money collected should be spent responsibly.

    "I don't think anyone feels really confident that governments at any level are managing our dollars efficiently and effectively, certainly not like we would manage our own wallets."

    B.C.'s finance minister, Kevin Falcon, issued a statement specifically addressing health-care premiums.

    Falcon defended the pending increase, insisting the Liberal government needs the money to cover rising health costs and noting premiums remained static for seven years before the first hike in 2010.

    He also noted that low-income British Columbians will be eligible for assistance that will bring their rates below what they were before the increases began. Nearly one million residents receive some level of assistance or don't pay premiums at all.

    "B.C. families generally have one of the lowest overall tax burdens in Canada, including income taxes, consumption taxes, property taxes, health care premiums and payroll taxes," said Falcon.

    Opposition NDP finance critic Bruce Ralston said the health-care premiums are problematic because all residents who don't receive assistance pay the same regardless of their income.

    That means a family earning more than $30,000, which is the cutoff for assistance, pays the same health-care fees as a family earning $100,000.

    "The approach that the Liberals have taken is basically to increase user fees on the broad middle class," said Ralston.

    "There's no recognition of paying more as your income goes up, so you pay more as a proportion of your income in the middle class as you would in the top end."

    Helmut Pastrick, chief economist with Central 1 Credit Union, said taxes and fees in B.C. appear to be increasing faster than incomes, but he said it's a complicated balancing act between keeping taxes low and ensuring government services are properly funded.

    "Individually, those increases are certainly above the rate of inflation — average incomes probably won't be rising by six per cent," Pastrick said in an interview.

    "They reduce disposable income, so that could present some drag on other spending. However, services are provided for that money and those services have a value. In the total budget of a household, MSP (health premiums) going up, carbon tax going up — how much is that going to account for?"

    Note to readers: This is a corrected story. A previous version indicated the first of three increases to health-care premiums was in 2009.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    60 comments

    • Oh Boy  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      So the BC gov. raised the min. wage from $8.00 to $8.50. So that means the lowest paid in the prov. now makes $17,680. Wow. Now take away the total of the new increases just to gov. and don't forget higher income tax. Then add food increases, rent increases and so on.
      How in Hell are people supposed to live?
      Instead of keeping the people poor why not go after large corporations, like banks. Why do they need to make 1/2 a billion dollars profit per quarter. Oh and they raise the user fees and penalize the poor people that have less than $1000.00 in their account.
      Wake up people.
    • The gentle warrior  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      we gotta pay for the Olympics somehow......the pricks
    • michael  •  1 month 28 days ago
      I'm pretty sure that ontario consumers will be put over the table and also dry humped.
      Big business and big government have no intention of letting up on us sheep/slaves.
      Just dig deeper into the pocket suckers.
    • ...  •  Kelowna, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      Pay the lowest taxes in Canada? Really, BC has the same tax rate as Ontario, but OHIP is free and MSP is $768 a year.
      There are serious mishandling of tax dollars in BC.
    • clydel  •  Burlington, Ontario  •  1 month 27 days ago
      The BC Govt is allowing this to happen..Insurance rates from a monopoly Govt insurance. Hydro rates going up, again the BC Govt doesn't do anything..But you just wait and see. The BC Govt will want and pass that they will all get a pay raise in January 2012..What about all the poor people or the old people or the sic people that can't afford these increased..Time for a change in BC..Now watch all the other Provinces try to fallow suit..
    • happyone  •  Abbotsford, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      Governments wether federal or provincial or municipale are elected to rule our country. THEY ARE NOT ELECTED TO RULE OUR LIVES! wake up people
    • GPG  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      Welcome to the land of the BC Liberals. Tax cuts for bussinesses and the rich and introduce other taxes for the rest of the poor shmucks.
    • tabootrailer  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  1 month 27 days ago
      The more you give them the more they want. The job of a polotician is to look after the people he represents. That means the working stiff, not the big corporations. What we need is an intirely different party made up of new people that have a vision that includes all Canadians. Definately no lawyers, doctors or accountants.
    • nobody special  •  1 month 27 days ago
      ok working class bend over and grab you ankles your going to get it again!!
    • anonymous  •  1 month 27 days ago
      yet government spending by politicians & departments are not being scrutinized or cut. no one can give a clear answer where all our money is going towards.
    • David Ramsay  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      I always said the BC Liberals are useless! Gordo should DIE!
    • alex1212q  •  Prince George, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      TIME TO REVOLT! SIMPLE ,,STOP THESE CRIMINALS
    • Grumpy Old SOB  •  Greater Sudbury, Ontario  •  1 month 27 days ago
      Wait until McGuinty and his buddies go to work to try and fix the province they have bankrupted
    • pickles  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  1 month 27 days ago
      the government should raise the rates just like landlords are allowed to - at the rate of inflation only. these rates of increase for medical et al are more than wage increases and considering it is a monopoly not fair at all. but i do feel better knowing if i am a junkie i at least get free crack pipes and medical.
    • TomW  •  Calgary, Alberta  •  1 month 27 days ago
      pigs at the troff
    • steve  •  Port Coquitlam, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      AUDIT EVERY CROWN CORP. , FIRE FIRST TEN ON PAYROLL, THEIR ARE
      FAILING AT RUNNING THESE CORPCRATIONS.
      WHO EVER IS LEFT , MAKE THEM RUN A STREAMLINED, NO TENURE , BUSINESS
      AS THEY CONTRACTED TO DO.
      FIRE ALL MLA"S AS WE CREATED, CROWN CORPORATIONS TO MAKE THEYRE DECISIONS, ALL THEY DO IS APPEAR TO CARE ABOUT US. THEIR BOSS!
    • Trixie Stone  •  1 month 27 days ago
      I will never be able to afford to live in BC again.
    • playerotito  •  Olympia, United States  •  1 month 27 days ago
      I hope all canadians read this article. I moved to canada 6 years ago and since came back to the usa and will stay here. I spent most of my retirement with nothing to show for it. Canadians can call me what ever, but at the end all I can say is, why do canadians come across the border to buy gas, milk and others goods which cost 2x the amount in canada. You can refute this but canadians need to wake-up, nobody needs to over pay for goods.
    • fearlessflea  •  Sault Ste Marie, Ontario  •  1 month 26 days ago
      The liberals there are as bad as the liberals here in ontario,uncaring,greedy,incompetent and corrupt and we just take it.
    • baylabber  •  Victoria, British Columbia  •  1 month 27 days ago
      Auto insurance premiums going up? Yeah, that's because the plan to squash accidents, injuries and deaths by introducing rediculess speeding, drunk driving, elimination of cell phones and new driver training programs are working so well. Or perhaps it due to the cost of paying all those cops to do their jobs that is to blame. With each new program we were told how much "savings" we'd see. Where are they? Insurance should be free by now based on all the "savings".

      We have killed many bar and restaurant businesses -- not with HST but with the fear that even a single drop of liquor could push you over a limit that nobody understands. With the cops on the street being the judges. Good thing they are being paid by the insurance company and not the police departments.

      The Insurance Corp of BC is a total rip off. They have absolute power and we know what absolute power leads to. Right?
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