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HST fighter elated over referendum results

But 18 months to switch back to PST/GST is still too long, says Maple Ridge resident
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Corisa Bell led the anti-HST campaign in Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge.

The people have spoken, now get moving on removing the HST – sooner than the March 31, 2013 deadline announced by Finance Minister Kevin Falcon on Friday.

"They put it in as quickly as they did, they can take it out as fast as they did," said Corisa Bell, who led the local FightHST campaign in Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows.

"If they don't do this, they're done, it doesn't matter when the election is."

"Hopefully, the government is honourable. If they don't listen, this group will get together … and make sure they're held accountable."

The Harmonized Sales Tax went to down to solid defeat Friday as 55 per cent of the 1.6 million British Columbians who voted in the mail-in referendum voted yes, saying they wanted to extinguish the HST and return to the provincial sales tax and federal, goods and service tax.

Both Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge-Mission had results similar to the B.C. wide vote.

Bell said waiting until 2013 is a stalling tactic done to appease big business and said Fight HST will be pushing to have the change done before that.

"The honorable thing to do is to act on this as quickly and enough of this, the people have spoken."

At Austin Fish and Chips in Valley Fair Mall, Evelyn Ching also would like to see the process speeded up and wonders what will happen if an election happens in the meantime.

The B.C. government implemented the HST within two or three months, she said. Now it's said it will take two or three years. "It's not quite fair for us."

She said when the HST first came in July 2010, that her sales dropped almost 25 per cent.

With a 12-per-cent HST charged on restaurant meals (compared to only five per cent GST previously) people were paying up to quarter of their bill in taxes and tips.

Since then, she's coaxed customers back with specials and promotions but "it's still choking our neck."

She's trying to maintain her prices while costs of flour, fish and cooking oil all increase and hopes that reverting to the old system will give restaurants a break.

Uncertainty will grow in the economy as people delay purchases, Bell added.

She wants to buy a used car but wants to wait until the HST is cancelled so she'll only have to pay the seven per cent PST.

She wants the old PST/GST regime to be returned exactly the way it was before the HST was implemented July 1, 2010.

Falcon though said in a Friday news release he'd do just that.

"I can assure British Columbians PST will not be applied to such items as

restaurant meals, haircuts, bikes and gym memberships - just as it was

before the HST was introduced in B.C.

"We will work as quickly as we responsibly can to return to the PST. We

have always been clear that, as the independent panel found, dismantling

the B.C. HST and returning to the PST will take time to do properly,"Falcon said.

He estimated that scrapping the HST will cost the province about $3 billion in the next few years. The B.C. government will have to borrow to pay back the $1.6 billion transition fund from the federal government, with a payment schedule to be negotiated with Ottawa.

Bell said she wasn't surprised by the results. "I'm happy with the result. It's a good margin to win by."

At first, she thought the Yes side, for extinguishing the HST, would win by a landslide, but then when the government launched its campaign, the result became less certain.

She added it's also time for Liberal MLA Marc Dalton (Maple Ridge-Mission) to acknowledge the result.

Dalton said he'll do that.

"We are totally committed to restoring the PST with the previous exemptions."

It's going to take some time to untangle the tax regulations to minimize the negative impact on the economy.

"We are committed to responding to what the voters of B.C. made clear today."

 

 

Referendum question: Are you in favour of extinguishing the HST (Harmonized Sales Tax) and reinstating the PST (Provincial Sales Tax) in conjunction with the GST (Goods and Services Tax)?

• Maple Ridge-Mission: Total valid votes: 19,219; Yes: 56% No: 44%

• Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows: Total valid votes: 20,485; Yes: 57% No: 43%