
Canadians are in a tax emergency.
Canada introduced federal income tax in 1917 through the Income War Tax Act. It was brought in during the First World War and presented as a temporary wartime measure. It was never intended to become a permanent, ever-expanding system that would grow generation after generation.
Temporary measure remained permanent
Today, personal income tax generates more than $234 billion annually and represents nearly half of all federal government revenue. What began as a temporary solution has evolved into one of the largest and most powerful financial mechanisms and employer in Canadian society.
And the same mindset has spread throughout every level of government, including municipal government.
Govt spends endlessly
Property taxes rise. Fees rise. Utility costs rise. Development charges rise. The cost of living rises. Every year, governments find new reasons to spend more money, create new programs, launch new initiatives, hire more staff, commission more studies, and expand their responsibilities further into our lives.
Can citizens afford this endless govt spending?
Taxpayers are not an unlimited resource.
At some point, we have to ask a simple question: Can people actually afford this?
Sustainability is not just about climate change. Sustainability is not just about infrastructure. Sustainability is not just about technology.
Sustainability is also about whether families can afford to raise children. Whether seniors can remain in their homes. Whether young people can buy a home. Whether workers can get ahead. Whether small businesses can survive. Whether citizens can maintain their economic independence and keep enough of what they earn to build the future they want.
Without economic sustainability, every other form of sustainability eventually fails.
Municipal election: ‘Promises vs reality’
As we approach this municipal election, voters are going to hear countless promises. New projects. New programs. New initiatives. New spending.
But every promise has a cost.
The question is not what politicians want to do.
The question is whether taxpayers can afford it.
For too long, governments have measured success by how much they spend rather than how effectively they spend it. Growth has become the default answer. More programs. More bureaucracy. More regulation. More taxation.
Very few people stop to ask where it ends.
This is why transparency matters. This is why accountability matters. This is why fiscal discipline matters.
Consider your vote with care
Because government was created to serve the public, not to continuously expand its footprint while asking taxpayers to carry an ever-increasing burden.
We should not be electing leaders based on who can promise the most.
We should be electing leaders who understand limits.
Leaders who understand that taxpayers are not an endless source of revenue.
Leaders who are willing to ask not only “What should government do?” but also “What should government stop doing?”
Leaders who recognize that every dollar spent was earned by someone who worked for it.
This election is not simply about roads, parks, development, housing, or any single issue.
It is about sustainability.
Not just environmental sustainability.
Economic sustainability.
The sustainability of families.
The sustainability of businesses.
The sustainability of communities.
And ultimately, the sustainability of a society where people remain free, independent, and able to keep the rewards of their own hard work.
If we fail to have that conversation now, we may eventually discover that the greatest threat to our future was not what government failed to do.
It was what government never stopped doing.
Most politicians are more than happy to push the gas pedal, but who’s got the brass to push the brakes?
John Meloche
President, Lynn Heights Neighbourhood Assoc.







