thommyjo
Senior Member
Agreed, the businesses they work at pay taxes. But again, so do the businesses that Edmontonians work at….AND they pay property taxes.If they're in Edmonton, wouldn't employment be a huge reason? Followed by shopping. These businesses do pay taxes. I know in Vancouver they talk about this quite a bit when discussing the residential vs. commercial and industrial tax burden. At least both City of Edmonton and Vancouver do a reasonable job not caving into regional demands to increase road capacity, but City of Edmonton also blundered by pulling out of regional transit.
A great example is when people talk about how the landscaping and parks are so much nicer in St. Albert. Why? Because they don’t have the same burden as Edmonton. Whereas if St Albert was just a neighborhood like Windermere (which it’s similar to in a million ways), then they would see a greater percentage of taxes having to go towards supportive housing, policing, fire departments responding to drug overdoses, transit, etc.
The reason a place like red deer isn’t as rich as St. Albert, is because it’s an actual city, independently carrying the costs of a real city. St. Albert isn’t a true city. It’s a suburb whose residents benefit from the high paying jobs, education opportunities, healthcare access, entertainment selection, and networks of a large city. That’s the only way St Albert maintains such a high average household income, it’s just a wealthy separatist suburb. An actual town of their size can’t have the jobs/amenities/lifestyle to sustain their quality of life.
They need to more fairly contribute to the central city that fosters their lifestyle.