鈥楧uffy Defence鈥 is the next stage
Re: 鈥淪peaker鈥檚 report raises questions,鈥 letter, Jan. 23.
I can see the 鈥淒uffy Defence鈥 being written up already by the lawyers.
1. I didn鈥檛 do it.
2. If I did, I had permission.
3. No one told me I couldn鈥檛 do it.
4. Everyone does it.
5. I am going to sue you for my lost job, my lost income and defamation of character.
Jim Dobell
Central Saanich
Ironic placement of two stories
Re: 鈥淐amp Shawnigan to get new life with bold new vision for charities,鈥 column; 鈥淥fficers鈥 pay hikes spark questions,鈥 Feb. 1.
It鈥檚 hard to not notice the ironic juxtaposition of two articles on the front page of Friday鈥檚 sa国际传媒 鈥 one about two legislature officers鈥 salaries (topping out at $565,000 before expenses); the other about challenges to keep an Easter Seals camp open. Enough said.
Sharon White
View Royal
Nanaimo houses standing empty
The sa国际传媒 Liberals are making much of the speculation tax. I think it鈥檚 about time we did something to discourage owners from buying houses and leaving them vacant.
I live north of Dover Road in Nanaimo, and we have seen several houses in the neighbourhood standing empty for years. Why did the owner buy them? Why is no one living in them?
If you can buy a house in the $800,000 price range and leave it empty, you can well afford to pay a tax for the privilege. The vacancy rate in Nanaimo has been very low and shelter has been at a premium.
The purpose of the tax is to discourage property owners from buying houses and condos and leaving them empty. It could easily be that these properties have been purchased with money that has questionable sources.
We鈥檙e hearing that billions of dollars have been laundered through the casinos and invested in real estate, luxury cars and other such items. The money laundering happened on the Liberals鈥 watch. I think the Liberals would be wise to tone down their objections to the speculation tax.
Arlene Feke
Nanaimo
New bus is not well laid-out
sa国际传媒 Transit has put a new double-decker bus into operation in Victoria.
There is only one spot for a wheelchair, scooter or stroller (and, if the latter, no fold-up seat for the adult to sit in). On the other side of the bus, there are only three fixed seats for people, and only the person in the right-most seat has a 鈥渟top request鈥 button. The person in the middle must reach across their neighbor, and the left-most passenger has no button within reach. (And no, there are no pull cords.)
Finally, the second language on the signs is Spanish.
What was sa国际传媒 Transit thinking when it purchased this bus? It should be given back to whomever sa国际传媒 Transit bought it from, and the money paid refunded.
Rainer Heilke
Esquimalt
Pay hikes are stomach-churning
Re: 鈥淥fficers鈥 pay hikes spark questions,鈥 Feb. 1.
When legislature Speaker Darryl Plecas announced that the people would want to 鈥渢hrow up鈥 when they saw the results of his investigation into the spending of the clerk and the sergeant-at-arms, I thought: How histrionic?
Now, especially after reading that clerk Craig James鈥檚 salary has ballooned from $145,863 in 2012 to $347,090 in 2018 鈥 $104,000 more than the clerk of our federal Parliament in Ottawa 鈥 I am having to keep my mouth shut.
Steve C. Faraher-Amidon
Comox
Will homeowners answer honestly?
So, now we are all guilty of being speculators, until we prove ourselves innocent.
How do you prove that the empty house owners will be honest? They could simply fill out the form saying that the house is occupied by them or that they have it rented out six months a year. How do you prove that every person is answering honestly?
Is the government planning on sending out people to confirm each answer? The amount of estimated tax that the government thinks it will collect must be offset by the hours spent by employees sifting through the papers. If the house is jointly owned by spouses, then each one will have to fill out the form. Very confusing for elderly owners, and this will happen every year.
The answer to the empty-house problem is simple: Ask the neighbours to phone in reporting an empty house on their street, check the hydro or the water bills. Easy.
This is typical NDP 鈥 spend, spend, spend with no rationale behind it.
Anne Bell
Victoria
City council demonstrates its hubris
Re: 鈥淚n a nation short on hugs, Victoria isn鈥檛 helping,鈥 column, Jan. 31.
The only thing I would add to Jack Knox鈥檚 excellent column is that the hubris of some members of Victoria city council reminds me of the Pharisees, the New Testament religious sect whose the holier-than-thou attitude Jesus vociferously condemned.
Jim Hill
Victoria