Quote:
Originally Posted by Charles5
Of course it's a tax.
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@Charles5,
Do you also consider it a "tax" if the members of a condominium decide to increase their own condo fees in order to have a swimming pool?
Is it a "tax" if a bunch of businesses and households in a neighbourhood get together this winter to fund the local outdoor hockey rink?
Why is it a tax if MOOSE offers train service on a subscription basis?
Ontario's Planning Act, Section 37, does apply an increased tax for municipal transit for properties near the city's stations. It's mandatory. Do you complain about that?
In MOOSE's PPR model, that proportion is not at all mandatory. Then again, delivery of train service to the station is dependent upon the negotiated proportion of income and asset increment going to run the train.
All your comments imply that the train service is an imposition on the owners inside the Linked Localities. But MOOSE and the PPR are designed so that the train service operates under the requirements of the property owners -- at their pleasure so to speak.
PPR stands many of your assumptions on their heads. It's how a railway service gets funded when the greatest value beneficiaries are in charge.
Joseph Potvin
Director General | Directeur général
Moose Consortium (Mobility Ottawa-Outaouais: Systems & Enterprises) |
www.letsgomoose.com
Consortium Moose (Mobilité Outaouais-Ottawa: Systèmes & Enterprises) |
www.onyvamoose.com