Mayor Sutcliffe opposes $13M tax break for new airport hotel
"I was elected to represent the interests of the taxpayers and residents of Ottawa and I stand with them in opposing this tax break."
Liam Fox, Ottawa Citizen
Published Apr 03, 2023 • Last updated 13 hours ago • 2 minute read
Mayor Mark Sutcliffe is challenging an application for a $13-million tax break for a new hotel connected to the Ottawa International Airport ahead of a vote by city council members at the finance and corporate services committee.
“I support the airport authority and its plan to turn Ottawa into a travel hub. But the city is facing significant financial pressures and there is the prospect of economic uncertainty in the months ahead,” Sutcliffe wrote on Twitter. “Using taxpayers’ dollars to pay for this hotel is not reasonable at this time and doesn’t respect the wishes of residents.
“These decisions are difficult and I respect the work of the airport and others in preparing the application. I was elected to represent the interests of the taxpayers and residents of Ottawa and I stand with them in opposing this tax break.”
The 180-room hotel proposed by Germain Hotels, supported by a community improvement plan (CIP) introduced in the final period of the previous council term to encourage economic development in underused federal lands surrounding the airport, has faced contemplation from council and scrutiny from residents.
In a city staff report to committee, it was estimated $17.4 million in increases to the municipal property tax would be generated over 25 years, with the city receiving about $4.4 million and forgiving up to $13.1 million in the proposed grant.
The planned eight-storey hotel, including a restaurant, meeting spaces, lobby workstation and fitness room, would produce 50 full-time jobs, as stated in the report.
Sutcliffe is not the only committee member opposing the proposed tax break.
Capital ward Coun. Shawn Menard was one of several members voting against the CIP program last term.
“The city needs to stop spending resident funds in this way,” Menard wrote in a message to this newspaper March 27, citing a recently developed Porsche dealership on Montreal Road that received $2.9 million in tax breaks.
“Had we not provided $2.9 million to the Porsche dealership in tax breaks, and they located elsewhere in the city, we would have received that $2.9 million,” he said in a Twitter reply to Sutcliffe’s statement today.
The finance and corporate services committee, chaired by Sutcliffe, will vote on the motion to grant the tax break in Tuesday’s meeting at city hall.
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