Our County

Who would like to look at some of the County issues and provide some content here? County & Education take up more than half of our total taxes. And County taxes keep spiraling out of control with no one paying attention.

Some possible issues:

Tax class ratios:

These are set by County Council each spring and result in owners of commercial, multi-residential (over 5 units) & industrial property paying higher taxes than residential on both County and Town taxes. Currently, the owner of a 6-plex is taxed at 2.2 times the rate for a 5-plex with the same assessment. (However, the owners of  “new” multi-residential units pay the same rate as residential for 35 years.) Taxes are, of course, passed on to tenants, who (unknowingly) are subsidizing the owners of single-family homes.  A fair estimate is that tax class ratios drive up rents by about 10%.

Other Counties have reduced the ratios towards “the range of fairness”. Our County hasn’t.  Several years ago, landlord, Steve Manders, organized a lobby to change this. He was met with blank stares.  Each spring, County staff put the usual Staff Recommendation before Council to leave the class ratios unchanged. And each year, County Council adopts it with little discussion or debate.  Sound familiar?

Would some of our tenant members like to take up this issue?

Tax Class Ratios of our Neighbours:

Municipality       Commercial    Multi Residential   Industrial   Notes                  

Lennox&Addington 1.417467         2.219400           2.17000

Hastings                     1.100000           1.153500           1.129200    excludes Belleville/QuinteW

Frontenac                   1.000000         1.00000             1.00000     excludes Kingston

Belleville (st)             1.919122           2.510162         2.40000

QuinteWest (st)         1.538500           2.130000           2.44600

Prince Edward (st)   1.112500         1.440200           1.389500

Kingston (st)             1.98000           2.227788           2.630000    multi-res being lowered

Ganaonque (st)       1.89400           1.894000             1.894000    ratios are being lowered

st = single tier municipality

Centre St Bottleneck:

Centre Street is a County Road.  It remains a bottleneck and despite numerous studies nothing gets done.  In the short term, traffic would be improved greatly by restricting left turns at busy times of day. This would, among other things, force school buses to use Bridge St rather than Graham. (At present, the crossing guard at Graham has to stop traffic to allow school buses to turn.)  Software and minor hardware improvements to the traffic signals at Dundas and Bridge would help too.

In the medium term, building a 2-way centre turn lane from Bridge to Isabella is an option, although an expensive one.  (This was done between Centre and Bridge with excellent results.)  Widening Centre St to 4 lanes is not feasible since numerous residences sit right on the street line.

In the long term, the County proposes a “third crossing” over the Napanee River west of Town. (See p. 191 of Town Official Plan for approx location.)  This will be very expensive, with bridges over CN and the river.  The location is questionable and it is unclear how it will connect to 401.  An alternative might be a new road east of Town connecting the Palace Road interchange to Hamburg Road east of Agoren Self Storage, thus avoiding the expensive river crossing. But, both options are decades in the future.

Sunshine List: 

The County guys made the sunshine list too.   Who are the highest paid bureaucrats in Town?  The answer may surprise you.  Your taxes at work…

Official Plan:

The Province now requires Counties to have official plans too.  This may make sense in larger centers but it makes no sense at all here.  The County has dragged its feet and the good people in Queen’s Park are now threatening consequences if they don’t get moving.  So, the County budgeted $50,000 this year and hired Meridian, a planning consultant from Vaughan to generate over 100 pages which is now our draft OP .  It was considered by County Council on July 8 but has yet to be approved by the Ministry.

Even the Town planner, John Uliana, who made a presentation to Town council on June 23, agrees that this is a glorious waste of  time, effort and money, and done only to appease the gods in TO.   It will have negative consequences for new development. But, Queen’s Park knows best, so we have to do it.  Some planning consultant, somewhere, is thanking his mother for making him study geography.

Reserved:  

There are lots of other county issues, most of which go under the radar. Should we have a “council watch” at County Council meeting too?  Do you have a suggestion for a County issue that we could put here? If so, send it to napaneeratepayers@gmail.com.

MPAC:

This year the County will pay MPAC, a provincial agency, about $700,000 to assess the properties in Lennox and Addington County. For an average household that’s $32.28. Do we get value for our money? Okay, everyone knows we don’t.  MPAC is a total disaster. When was the last time they inspected a property in Greater Napanee?  Just look at the Ombudsman’s report MPAC in credibility crisis and Getting it Right.  But the County still has to pay for their service and there are no alternate service providers.  Should they complain to the Province?  Would it do any good? Or are the good people at Queens Park too busy ripping up floor boards to feed the fire to listen to our problems here?  Let us know what you think.

Ambulance:

In 2015, the County will spend $245,000 on capital improvements to it’s emergency services including a new ambulance.  Sounds a lot like the Greater Napanee Fire Department.  Are we getting value for our money? Are there less expensive ways to provide these services?  What percentage of calls for service are really necessary? Could some services be provided by the private sector?  Or should the whole thing be contracted out to the private sector?  Has any county councilor asked this question? Anybody remember City Ambulance which used to provide the service?  Just asking…

The New Center of Town:

At left are the County Welfare Office and the CAS building. Also in the immediate area are the fire hall, the police station and the County Ambulance Service.  All of these services were provided downtown a few years before amalgamation. Most of our tax dollars flow to these organizations.

Get Involved.

NRP Directors

Explore Napanee

There is no cost to join and/or receive our newletters by e-mail. Everyone is welcome to contribute content.  Just click on Make Comments Here at the top of any page to post a comment on any issue on this website. We’ve only been up since May 17, 2015 and we’re anxious to build content on issues of interest to everyone in the Town of Greater Napanee.  Shortly, we’ll be adding blogs on each page which will allow you to contribute on-line. We’ll also be adding a module which will let you join on-line and receive our free newsletter.  In the meantime, just send an e-mail to napaneeratepayers@gmail.com to get our newsletter.

Hubert Hogle 532-3672
hogles2@yahoo.ca

Dennis Mills 354-6375
d.smills@sympatico.ca

Arthur Ronald 354-4291
brodick1960@gmail.com

We have added six additional directors, John Wilson, Judy Wood, John Stinson, Briane Birney, Suzy Sheltler and Anne Hogle.  All residents and taxpayers in Greater Napanee are welcome to become members and all interested parties are welcome to receive our regular newsletters and contribute content to the website. If you are interested in serving as a director, let us know.

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