Vander Zalm to circumvent HST petition delay
Last Updated: Friday, August 13, 2010 | 12:37 PM PT
CBC News
Former B.C. premier Bill Vander Zalm plans to deliver the anti-HST petition to the legislature himself. (CBC)Former premier Bill Vander Zalm says if B.C.'s chief electoral officer won't send the anti-HST petition to the legislature, he will.
Vander Zalm insists the Initiative Act gives him the power to forward the results of the petition against the harmonized sales tax.
However, legislative committee chair MLA Terry Lake disagrees, saying Vander Zalm should know the process must be respected.
Lake said he won't touch the petition until it is officially forwarded by Elections BC — something that's unlikely to happen until after the courts deal with a business group's challenge of the petition's validity.
The HST, which blends the seven per cent provincial sales tax with the five per cent federal goods and services tax, came into effect July 1.
The petition opposing the HST's introduction in B.C. was verified Wednesday, which means it met the threshold of 10 per cent of voters' signatures from each of the province's 85 ridings.
But chief electoral officer Craig James said in a letter to Vander Zalm that a business coalition's challenge of the petition campaign must be dealt with in B.C. Supreme Court before the petition result can be addressed.
Court delay
If the court rules the petition is constitutionally valid, the legislative committee would have to decide whether to send a bill to the legislature withdrawing the HST or to put the issue to a province-wide referendum.
The court hearing is scheduled for the week of Aug. 16. Whatever the court decides, appeals of that decision could take years and leave the petition in limbo, anti-HST campaign organizers suggested Wednesday.
Opponents argue British Columbians will pay more under the tax because it applies to many items that were previously exempt from the provincial sales tax.
Vander Zalm has said Fight HST members are already planning to put the heat on Liberal MLAs by recalling them if they don't repeal the tax.
MLA Blair Lekstrom left the governing Liberal Party in June, supporting public opposition to the tax.
With files from The Canadian PressShare Tools
Latest British Columbia News Headlines
- Vancouverites say volunteering part of being good citizen
- Vancouverites seem to place more importance on volunteering as a part of being a good citizen than other Canadians, a recent Environics Institute survey suggests. more »
- Home foreclosures skyrocket in Kelowna
- Home foreclosures are on the rise in B.C.'s Central Okanagan in recent months, but local real estate agents disagree about who might be losing their homes. more »
- No charges in B.C. lake crash that killed Edmonton girl
- Charges will not be laid in connection with a fatal collision that killed a 10-year-old Edmonton girl on Okanagan Lake last summer. more »
- Man killed in fight at B.C. Hedley concert
- Police say one man is dead after a fight at a rock concert in Dawson Creek, B.C., on Tuesday. more »
Top News Headlines
- Drummond report on Ontario calls for cutbacks
- The Ontario government must curtail its spending with the kind of cuts not seen since the Mike Harris years, according to a report by former TD Bank chief economist Don Drummond. more »
- Children of immigrants challenged at school, home
- By 2016, foreign-born youth and Canadian-born youth from immigrant families will make up a quarter of the country's population, according to predictions by the Canadian Council on Social Development. As their numbers grow, more attention is being paid to their successes and failures. more »
- B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens
- Two teenagers cried as they testified at the trial of a B.C. woman who was charged after a teen died while her son was hosting a party at her house in 2008. more »
- Whitney Houston funeral to be livestreamed
- Whitney Houston's funeral will be livestreamed, to satisfy the desire of fans to grieve alongside family members at the Saturday memorial. more »
- Legalize pot, say former B.C. attorneys general
- Botox injected by unlicensed practitioners
- Homicide follows Vancouver family argument
- Tires slashed on more than 100 cars in Surrey
- Adults told B.C. teen had taken ecstasy
- B.C. Mountie drank to 'calm nerves' after fatal crash
- 1925 Vancouver mansion listed below lot value
- Home foreclosures skyrocket in Kelowna
- B.C. argues to keep sperm donor identity shielded

