B.C.'s HST bad news for restaurants, consumers


CRFA's Garth Whyte (right) and Mark von Schellwitz (left) present hundreds of industry petitions against the HST to B.C. Finance Minister Colin Hansen. They also presented CRFA survey results showing over 90% of restaurant owners are against the HST.

ACTION ALERT!
We've told government how the industry feels about the HST -- have you? Contact your MLA today.

(Aug. 5 /09) On July 23, the British Columbia government announced it will introduce a harmonized sales tax (HST) beginning July 1, 2010.  This new tax would replace the GST (5%) and the current provincial sales tax (7%) with a harmonized tax of 12%. 

What CRFA is doing for you

Since the government’s announcement, CRFA has met Premier Gordon Campbell and Finance Minister Colin Hansen.  Both say they wan to work with us to mitigate the damage that will be caused by a harmonized tax.  We’ll continue to press this issue with the B.C. government.

CRFA has also launched an industry petition and a member survey to quantify the industry’s opposition to the new tax, and communicated industry concerns in numerous media interviews.

Why this is bad news for restaurant operators

While many business groups are applauding this move, an HST in B.C. will have a devastating impact for the province’s 12,000 restaurants, bars and caterers.  Here’s why:

 

CRFA in the news


Related Articles