Trudeau says Sask. residents will keep getting carbon rebate
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Saskatchewan residents will still receive their full carbon rebate payments, even though the provincial government is not remitting the carbon tax on home heating to Ottawa.
«Despite the disagreement I have with the provincial government in Saskatchewan on them not wanting to pay the federal government what is owed, the Canada carbon rebate cheques going to families in Saskatchewan will not be impacted by the government of Saskatchewan's decision,» Trudeau said at a Tuesday morning news conference in Saskatoon.
In February, the provincial government announced it would no longer remit carbon tax on home heating.
In November, the province passed a law making it the registered distributor of natural gas in the province. On Feb. 20, the Canada Revenue Agency agreed to a request from the Saskatchewan government to make it the distributor, rather than SaskEnergy.
Trudeau said while people will continue to receive their payments, how the money owed will be collected would be left to the CRA.
«Canada Revenue Agency has ways of ensuring that money that is owed to them is eventually collected, and we have faith in the rigorous, quasi-judicial proceedings that the Canada Revenue Agency uses,» he said.
Under the federal Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, «every person that intentionally fails to pay a charge as and when required … is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction,» and could face fines or even up to six months in jail.
In 2022, SaskEnergy remitted $172 million carbon tax collected. That total was expected to be higher this year.
At a news conference in Ottawa Tuesday, Federal Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault reiterated Trudeau's comments.
«I think what the