Land is your friend. 🙂
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Originally posted by ajl View PostWhat are you going to do with land when no one can afford to buy your produce? At least you can hunt on it. Saw a bear last night headed into the bush NE of Edmonton.
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Originally posted by parsley View PostLand is your friend. 🙂
Jeff Bogaerts from the latest “Landowner†magazine: “A trendy new phrase is the ‘Natural Heritage System’ or in layman’s terms, you own the land, pay the mortgage and taxes, but government tells you what you can and cannot do with your land. Neat trick, eh? I do not have to own something to control it. I just need to scare the pants off you with threats of monetary fines or imprisonment or both… the Conversation Authority Act provides for fines up to $10,000 per charge and 3 months in prison. Is this the kind of power and control you are willing to freely give to your government and elected officials?â€
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In Saskatchewan, burnt, many municipalities were told land owners had to start paying a portion of the education tax. School tax. Farmers individually grumbled. And paid. The tax rose. Farmers paid. Councillors noticed it and noted it and watched it grow. In our municipality, the tax portion rose to 80% that went to the prov Govt to pay for teachers raises and building schools, well, ed costs. Farmers had no representation at Teacher/Govt negotiations. Just there to pay the bills.
We formed a committee. And called the prov Ed reps to a town hall meeting. I took official notes. Rural Councillers from diff municipalities were noticeably present. We politely brownbeat the Govt. at all diff. Municipality meetings.
Moral of the story: levy decreased in every municipality.
Hand-wringing was not effective with Govt slicks. Organized confrontation is. ParsLast edited by parsley; May 24, 2018, 09:54.
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It is encouraging to hear accounts like that. It means that when things got bad enough, it was possible to find enough people to organize into an effective body.
What we - a small group of concerned and motivated individuals - have encountered here is that everyone appreciates the effort we put into effecting change, but very few will actually join into the actual work required.
Too busy, too "unqualified", too invested in the status quo...a thousand and one excuses. "But keep up the good work", they say.
Which could mean several things - not well enough organized, situation is not bad enough yet, those who are affected do not understand the extent of the in jury they will suffer, etc.
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