Thursday, August 14, 2008

Income Trusters in Toronto area, here is your chance to meet Dion.

The Liberal Party developed an Income Trust Policy in an effort to counter the damage done by Harper's Conservatives.

Here is your chance to ask Stephane Dion your questions about the plan to make Income Trusts a viable option for Canadian Investors again.


Garth Turner hosts Dion at major public forum

Citizens will be asked for views on economy, environment

Federal Liberal leader Stephane Dion is coming August 20th, to meet the people. Hosted by MP Garth Turner, Dion will be centre stage at an important Town hall meeting in which citizens can ask him about the big issues facing southern Ontario, and Canada.

"Now that Stephen Harper has threatened an election in a few months," Turner says, "it's key that people know where our leaders stand. Stephane Dion is the only one making this effort to get out and ask us all what kind of Canada we want, and how best to cope with the problems which need urgent solutions. I'm encouraging everyone – Liberal supporters or critics – to come and make up their own minds."

Turner cites recent job losses in the manufacturing sector as a priority, along with rising energy costs, falling real estate values and mounting family financial stress. He also says Dion will be outlining his Green Shift proposal, which would see personal income taxes slashed, and taxes imposed instead on polluters responsible in part for climate change.

"Dion has won the admiration of people across the country for meeting real voters face-to-face," Turner says. "He's not afraid of the tough questions we should all be asking of our politicians, now that the economy's turned sour and the federal government seems to be drifting. This is a chance for everyone in the region to get out and make their voices heard, so policy in Ottawa can better mirror public wishes."

The Town Hall meeting takes place Wednesday, August 20th at 7:30 pm.

Location: SVCC Hall (St. Volodymyr). 1280 Dundas Street, Oakville (between Trafalgar Rd. and Bronte Rd.).

Admission is free, and seating is on a first come-first served basis.

Seats may be reserved by calling (905) 693-0166, or emailing mp@garth.ca.

For more information:
Esther Shaye (905) 693-0166

MEDIA NOTE: Media availability with Stephane Dion will be provided. Details to follow.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

A cozy agreement

As I suspected from the outset, Canada in cahoots with US over trust tax.

The fraudulent notion of tax leakage would never “go down” in the US, since they still have a vigilant press and endless legislative checks and balances that prevent such conspiracy theories from ever being enacted into legislation, see Writing and Enacting Tax Legislation

Meanwhile we learn of this cozy agreement:



NAFTA Safety Valve Comes to the Rescue
Embassy, June 25th, 2008

By Luke Eric Peterson

Lately, the North American Free Trade Agreement has seemed like the electrified third rail of North American politics.

We've seen sparks flying over proposals for a so-called NAFTA Super-Highway as well as a media firestorm over a leaked diplomatic memo that cast doubt on Barack Obama's true feelings about the NAFTA.

Yet the U.S. and Canadian governments have managed to reach across the border and come to an agreement on one thorny NAFTA dilemma: In a little-noticed exchange of diplomatic letters this past April, the two governments have agreed that Americans investing in Canadian income trusts are not entitled to sue Canada for "expropriating" those investments.

This diplomatic accord comes in the aftermath of the 2006 decision by the Harper government to slap a tax on many types of income trusts. You'll recall that that move drew howls of outrage from Bay Street, as well as from foreigners who had long sunk money into these lightly-taxed investment vehicles.

One pair of Chicago-based investors went so far as to announce last year that they would sue Canada under NAFTA for the "massive destruction" inflicted on their personal stock portfolios. The couple, Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb, have set up a website to encourage other similarly-affected U.S. investors to join them in a class-action type lawsuit against the Government of Canada.

However, that lawsuit suffered a set-back in late April when the governments of Canada and the United States quietly agreed—in a formal exchange of letters—that the taxation of income trusts does not amount to an "expropriation" for which U.S. investors need be compensated under NAFTA. In reaching such an agreement, the two sides effectively vetoed any bid by U.S. investors to sue Canada for expropriating their income trust holdings.

What exactly constitutes an "expropriation" under NAFTA has long been a contentious question. Although the NAFTA provides strong legal protections to businesspersons and companies investing in another North American country, the extent of such protections remains unclear.

If a NAFTA government were to nationalize an industry—say the oil or steel sector—the trade-pact obliges the government to compensate affected foreign-owners. But what happens when a government introduces new regulations or tax measures which impose a heavy new financial burden on foreign-owned businesses, without going so far as to confiscate or nationalize those businesses?

The question may seem academic until you consider that the answer will determine when the public could be on the hook for writing hefty compensation cheques to affected foreigners.

In the income trust spat, the Gottliebs alone are threatening to sue for $6.5 million in losses; thousands of other claimants could join the Chicago couple in suing Canada for hundreds of millions.

Ultimately, it falls to panels of arbitrators to determine whether a given government law or policy is so destructive that it amounts to an expropriation. But with the NAFTA itself offering little guidance as to how to resolve such expropriation cases, arbitrators can find themselves in the same position as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, who famously wrote that he might not know how to define "obscenity", but he knew it when he saw it.

For anxious governments not eager to leave things up to the discretion of arbitrators, the NAFTA does contain a little-noticed safety valve. If a foreign investor has a beef with tax policy—as opposed to other types of government policies—NAFTA governments can confer amongst themselves and determine whether the tax in question crosses the line. Arbitrators are then obliged to respect any such joint-determinations.

And that's exactly what happened recently when U.S. and Canadian officials got together to agree that the new tax on income trusts—while certainly having a financial impact on trust owners—cannot be likened to an "expropriation".

While the decision by Canada and the U.S. strikes a fatal blow to any NAFTA expropriation claim mounted against the income trust tax, U.S. investors remain free to argue that the tax violated other NAFTA protections.

In fact, in documents filed last year, the Gottliebs also accused Canada of unfairly discriminating against U.S. investors—who held unusually large stakes in the energy income trust sector. It remains open for them, and other U.S. citizens, to continue with their lawsuit against Canada and seek compensation for suffering discrimination and unfair treatment.

For the moment, however, the Gottliebs have not signalled whether they plan to press forward with their claim—and if other U.S. citizens will join them in any such fight. If they do, they will join a lengthening queue of U.S. investors suing Canada under NAFTA for various forms of alleged wrongdoing.

While economists continue to debate how effective the North American trade pact has been in generating trade and employment, the NAFTA is clearly creating a lot of work for lawyers.

Luke Eric Peterson is a columnist for Embassy. He is also the editor of the electronic news service, Investment Arbitration Reporter,

editor@embassymag.ca

Related:
Marvin and Elaine Gottlieb explain why they are launching a NAFTA action against the Harper government

Americans Take on Canadian Prime Minister over Income Trust Injustice - Diane Francis

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Psst... Harper Wins CAJ secrecy award - An example we want to add to the list.



18 blacked out pages prove nothing about alleged income trust tax leakage but say much about how Stephen Harper regards Canadians.

Harper philosophy is to Lie Conceal Fabricate his way to power.

CAITI has been saying it since January 2007.

Still we are happy Canada's Journalists are willing to acknowledge the obvious.

Related:
It shouldn’t be the role of journalists to knowingly propagate lies



EDMONTON, May 24 /CNW/ - When it comes to secrecy, nobody does it better than the prime minister's office.

Despite a field of tight-lipped competitors, Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office has run away with the Canadian Association of Journalists' Code of Silence Award for 2007.

"Harper's white-knuckled death grip on public information makes this the easiest decision the cabal of judges has ever rendered," said CAJ President Mary Agnes Welch. "He's gone beyond merely gagging cabinet ministers and professional civil servants, stalling access to information requests and blackballing reporters who ask tough questions. He has built a pervasive government apparatus whose sole purpose is to strangle the flow of public information."

The ignominious award, handed out Saturday night at the CAJ's investigative journalism awards banquet, dishonours the country's most secretive government, department or agency for obfuscatory excellence. Harper's office was the overwhelming choice for this award.

"If journalists can't get basic information from the federal government, Canadians can't hold the government accountable. The Prime Minister's Office has repeatedly demonstrated contempt for the public's right to know," Welch said. "Harper pledged to run a government that was open, transparent and accountable, but his track record to-date has been abysmal."

Harper was invited to accept the award in person but failed to respond.

The other nominees for the CAJ Code of Silence Award were:
  • The B.C. government's climate change secretariat for holding closed- door meetings and refusing to reveal basic information about its members, funding and stakeholder presentations.
  • The city of Rossland, B.C., for falsifying records of a council meeting and forcing a city councillor to resort to freedom of information requests to get documents that should be public.
  • The Ontario government for the secretive tendering process involve in building nuclear power plants worth $26 billion.
  • Ontario's Ministry of Children and Youth Services for their two-year delay in releasing daycare records following a freedom of information request by the Toronto Star. The records revealed serious problems at several hundred of the 4,400 licensed daycares in the province.
  • Transport Canada for proposed draconian secrecy provisions in amendments to the Aeronautics Act. If implemented, these will see a veil of secrecy fall over all information reported by airlines about performance, safety violations, aviation safety problems and their resolution.
  • The town of Montague, P.E.I., for using loopholes in the provincial Municipalities Act to hold pre-council meetings in the guise of committee of the whole sessions.
The Canadian Association of Journalists is a professional organization with more than 1,500 members across Canada. The CAJ's primary role is to provide public-interest advocacy and quality professional development for its members.

For more information, visit www.caj.ca.

For further information:
Mary Agnes Welch, CAJ president,
Cell: (204) 470-8862;
John Dickins, CAJ executive director,
Cell: (613) 868-5442




Wednesday, April 30, 2008

MP should represent people, not the PM

Cornwall Standard Freeholder

April 29, 2007

Something is lost in our so-called democratic system when our representative in Ottawa follows the party line issued by the PMO and doesn't bother to thoroughly check back with the people he represents.

Following the fateful "Halloween Massacre" of income trusts (yes, that again) carried out by our federal minister of finance, Jim Flaherty, one of my associates called our local MP to complain about the loss of $35 billion in asset value overnight. Mr. Lauzon admitted he didn't understand anything about the trusts and yet he subsequently voted for the bill in the House of Commons. At a meeting this past week in company with Senator Marjorie LeBreton, when challenged, he said he didn't own any stocks but had checked back with a local stock broker back at that time. Does one stockbroker represent the electorate of this constituency? In the meantime, before the critical vote, I and others had sent him the many reports by professionals proving that the tax leakage issue was hollow and that there would be serious consequences for the country if the bill was enacted (now proven to be true). This would have been Mr. Lauzon's springboard to truly test local feelings.

Several of us would have been happy to discuss the matter and give him a better understanding of our dilemma to take back to the caucus. We were completely ignored.

You will notice that a Conservative tactic is always to blame the victim, in our case - we shouldn't have invested in such a narrow market - we were not diversified enough. Well, in fact, prior to Oct. 31 the market cap of trusts was about $225 billion across a wide spectrum of industries. The trust itself is a hybrid instrument combining the attributes of common equity and debt (stocks and bonds).

How's that for a diversified portfolio! Another thought to ponder - in 2006, 15 per cent of new listings were trusts and 32 per cent were for mining. Which do you think created more tax leakage and which carried more risk?

Vernon Holt,

Cornwall



Monday, April 28, 2008

Seniors grill senator over finance issues

Cornwall Standard Freeholder

Posted By Greg Peerenboom

April 27, 2008

The country's senior citizens minister endured some grilling by a near capacity crowd Friday.

Senator Marjory LeBreton was sympathetic but stood her ground with several members of the Seaway Seniors Citizens Club, especially on financial issues.

At one point, one man had to be shouted down by a club executive, Frank Cash, after he persisted on blasting the Conservatives' decision to tax income trusts.

Local MP ,, who had invited LeBreton, strode forward and cautioned the meeting was "not a debate."

LeBreton had just finished telling the approximately 80 Seaway members about the progress made for seniors under Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Another senior, Robert Gordon, continued to criticize the government for wiping out a significant part of retirement income from the trusts, which he reminded LeBreton, Harper had promised not to tax.

"It was a hard decision," admitted LeBreton.

But the alternative would have been worse, she said.

LeBreton said more corporations were intending to pay less taxes by converting their businesses into trust funds.

As a result, there would have been less money for programs to help seniors, which LeBreton highlighted earlier in the meeting.

Lauzon said the impact on investment portfolios would be minimal as the average percentage of trust shares was around 10 per cent.

That amount was disputed by another member.

"If he said it should be 10 per cent he shouldn't be a stock broker," said the man.

Gordon also faulted the government for an "uneven playing field" single seniors are grappling with when it allowed couples to split their incomes for tax purposes.

LeBreton said she hopes her ministry will rectify that problem once her National Seniors Council completes a review of the situation.

Another concern was the skyrocketing price of gas on Canadians' pocketbooks and maybe it was time for the federal government to reduce gas taxes.

Lauzon advised cutting down on driving as the demand is helping to drive up costs.

As for the increased gas revenue the government collects, Lauzon said millions are being funnelled back into improving transportation infrastructure.

Earlier, LeBreton shared how her government was putting more money back in seniors' pockets through a variety of methods, including raising the tax credit and the age limit for RRSPs, as well as lowering the GST to five per cent and splitting incomes.

But she said the government is also addressing social problems such as elder abuse.

One Seaway member made a point saying today's seniors "have access to many more programs" than her parents 20 or more years ago.

LeBreton, as the Senate government leader, said she is in position to relay the seniors' concerns to the prime minister.




Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Energy trust tax: dumb and dumber by Diane Francis

National Post
Posted: March 19, 2008, 6:03 PM

There remains trouble in Toryland over finance minister Jim Flaherty’s non-sensical tax on energy trusts and the income trust debacle cost the party a byelection in B.C. this week. Its candidate cited income trusts as the major concern in the election. It is an issue that simply will not go away because it should not. Prime Minister Stephen Harper, at Flaherty's urging, reneged on a firm promise which is good leadership.

The issue is the single biggest reason why the Tories have not, and cannot, get a majority in the polls. Their foolish and flawed flip flop against trusts devastated and alienated their base. Some $35 billion in value disappeared overnight, affecting two million Canadian investors.

Taxing the energy trusts too, when other countries do not, has been a major policy blunder and Albertans are determined to prove how foolish it all has been with an initiative announced last week.

Energy trusts have joined the Liberals who have asked the Auditor General of Canada to investigate Flaherty’s claims that taxing the trusts was necessary to staunch tax leakage.

It was nonsense then and still is.

“$110 a barrel oil prices have camouflaged what is a big mistake in policy,” said Sue Riddell Rose in a phone interview with me last week. She is CEO of Paramount Energy Trust and the Coalition for Energy Trusts spokesperson.

Trusts used everywhere else

Trust structures are used, and recognized, around the world as a more efficient means of managing commodity companies which find planning difficult due to price fluctuations. Flaherty exempted real estate trusts but not energy trusts, a damaging inconsistency.

About 20% of the country’s 33 energy trusts (which pay considerably more taxes than all the foreign-owned oil companies combined) have been swallowed up by foreigners or other entities.

Ottawa’s attack has ruined the junior oil sector too since October 2006 despite soaring oil prices, she said.

“The junior oil sector is no longer vibrant. There is no exit strategy which was to sell oil and gas assets to trusts,” she said. Put another way, if oil prices had remained the same as when Flaherty made his tax announcement on Oct. 31, 2006, the oil patch would be in “dire” straits.

“They did not do their homework. They did not understand the industry and they have deceived the Canadian public,” she said.

Trusts really dumb idea

Flaherty’s leakage excuse was debunked in a report by accounting giant Deloitte weeks ago in a study that showed that the reverse has happened: where there was no leakage there is not massive leakage.

The mistake, or omission, made by him and Mark Carney – author of the scheme and rewarded by becoming Governor of the Bank of Canada -- was to exclude the massive downstream income trusts flowed to unitholders who paid top taxation rates.

It was amateur hour and the harm has been ongoing and will worsen, Riddell explained.

“In 2006, there was no leakage at all and revenues were enhanced by the trust structure,” she said. “We’ve tried to get breakdowns from government as to the percentage of its cash surpluses that are coming from this but cannot get anywhere.”

She said a rough guess is that Flaherty’s folly has cost governments at least $1 billion in tax revenues, but only the Auditor General, with her special access, can do the analysis needed for taxpayers.

“It’s a big number,” she said. “There are two things we would like them to do: Go through their analysis re the actual, downstream revenue and then to analyze what has been foregone as a result of the changes.”
Why isn’t she and others giving up?

“We continue to believe a proper analysis was not done and that the wrong decision was made to enable the efficient recovery of resources for Canadians,” she said. “I personally feel deceived by them because they misrepresented information to Canadians. Something else is driving these decisions and I think Canadians should know. I don’t.”

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Joyce Murray and Deborah Meredith talk Income Trusts

We will never know if 50 or 500 Income Trust Investors voted against Harper Conservative candidate Deborah Meredith in the March 17, 2008 Quadra Byelection.

However Murray and Meredith freely admit that after 1 1/2 years since the surprise October 31, 2006 announcement the Income Trust taxation issue is still on voter's minds.



Related:
Harper lost Quadra due to income trust issue, has Mark Carney to thank
Cadman and income trust scandals on the campaign trail

Meet John McCallum and Victoria Young

Join host Victoria Young candidate for Hamilton Centre for an evening with John McCallum, Liberal Finance Critic, former Secretary of State, Cabinet member and Chief Economist for the Royal Bank of Canada.

DATE:
March 27th, 2008

TIME:
6:00 – 7:30 pm

LOCATION:
LIUNA Station,
360 James Street North,
Hamilton, ON L8L 1H5


TICKETS:
$100
(A tax receipt will be issued up to $60)

RSVP:
Crystal at crystal@victoriayoung.net


Hamilton Centre is a federal and provincial electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that has been represented in the Canadian House of Commons since 2004. It first elected a member to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 2007 provincial election.

It was created in 2003 from parts of Hamilton East, Hamilton West and Ancaster—Dundas—Flamborough—Aldershot ridings.

It consists of the part of the City of Hamilton bounded by a line drawn south from the city limit along Ottawa Street, west along the Niagara Escarpment, southwest along James Mountain Road, south along West 5th Street, west along Lincoln M. Alexander Parkway, north along the hydroelectric transmission line situated west of Upper Horning Road, northeast along Highway No. 403, east along the Desjardins Canal to Hamilton Harbour.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Energy Trusts hope Auditor General will set the record straight on tax leakage

CALGARY, March 10 /CNW/ - Following a move by the Federal Liberals, members of the Coalition of Canadian Energy Trusts (CCET) are also asking Auditor General Sheila Fraser for a formal investigation into the tax leakage claims made by the government as a basis for its October 31, 2006 decision totax income trusts.

"After 17 months and many requests for the details of the Finance Department's calculations, we remain stonewalled by the federal government on this issue," says Sue Riddell Rose, president and CEO of Paramount Energy Trust and co-chair of the CCET. "Neither we nor other experts could find evidence of tax leakage to back up the government's claim, so we are encouraged that the Auditor General may be able to set the record straight with an investigation."

In December 2006, the Coalition presented a 251-page report detailing the role played by energy trusts in the Canadian economy and outlining the expected negative results of the government's broken promise not to tax income trusts (Canadian Energy Trusts: An Integral Component of the Canadian Oil and Gas Industry). In the report, the CCET disputed the claim of tax leakage and publicly invited the government to disclose its calculations. The government has yet to respond.

A formal request through the Freedom of Information Act, seeking data on which the government based its decision to tax trusts, yielded no information other than blacked-out documents.

"Canadians deserve to know what facts the government used for such an important change in policy," says Riddell Rose. "This broken promise by the Conservative government continues to have lasting and disastrous affects on the average Canadian investor, and it has shaken the industry to the core. As advocates for our unitholders, many of them seniors, who were severely mistreated by the government with the sudden change in the rules, we will continue to press the government for the answers we've sought since the beginning." The CCET continues to believe that any concerns the government may have had about energy trusts can be rectified through communication and
understanding leading to a solution that would not be so harmful to innocent unitholders.

The Coalition of Canadian Energy Trusts represents over 30 energy trusts headquartered in Canada and employing thousands of Canadians. It also represents the millions of Canadian unitholders who saw the value of their investments drop by $35 billion following the announcement of the so-called Tax Fairness Plan on October 31, 2006. More information about the Coalition and its partners can be found at www.canadianenergytrusts.ca.

For further information: or to schedule interviews, contact: Daorcey Le Bray, NATIONAL Public Relations, (403) 444-1482, dlebray@national.ca

Jim Flaherty's income splitting will only benefit 14% of seniors...himself included




Jim Flaherty would like to be seen as the friend of ordinary Canadians. Unfortunately he is not. He is a friend of special interests, including his own.

When he announced that retired people would be able to take advantage of income splitting, he left 85% of them out in the cold.

How? By saying that only seniors who were members of defined pension plans could participate in this tax break. Unfortunately, a mere 15% of Canadians belong to this kind of pension plan. As for the others, they are out of luck.

Not Jim though. He is a member of not one but two gold-plated pension plans. The one he'll get from the Ontario government AND the one he'll get from the federal government. No wonder he's concerned about those future tax breaks.

As for the rest of us, what breaks do we get Jim?

Related:
Jimhadhischance.ca