Kitchener-Waterloo

Kitchener approves its 2023 budget, which includes 4.8 per cent tax rate increase

Kitchener council approves its budget for 2023, which includes a 4.8 per cent tax rate increase. That means the average household will pay an extra $56 a year. The city says this year's tax increase is below inflation.

Average homeowners to pay extra $56 a year in property taxes and an extra $42 for water utilities

Kitchener council approves its budget for 2023. This means for the average homeowner an extra $56 for property taxes and $42 for water utilities. (Brian St. Denis/CBC)

Kitchener city council has approves its budget for 2023, which includes a 4.8 per cent tax rate increase and a 4.5 per cent water utility increase.

This means the average homeowner will pay an extra $56 a year in property taxes and an extra $42 for water utilities. The city says it focused its budget on community and affordability, adding that this year's tax increases are below inflation.

"Working closely with city staff and fellow councillors, we were able to consider a wide variety of community concerns," Coun. Scott Davey, who is the chair of the city's finance and corporate services committee, said in a release.

"We've listened to these voices and have come up with a fiscally responsible plan in times of high inflation and soaring construction costs."

The budget also allocates $1 million of annual investments to parks, trails and playgrounds. 

Council set aside another $1.5 million for traffic calming, parks and playgrounds, free recreational programming, paving of trails, as well as arts and culture.

The budget also included grants for initiatives like Love My Hood and RISE — Racialized and Indigenous Supports for Equity — and funding for the review of the city's lodging house bylaw. 

The city said the investments were made in response to community feedback during the election and the 2023 budget input process. 

"Council worked hard to balance various community priorities while completing their first budget of the 2023-2026 term," Kitchener Mayor Berry Vrbanovic said in a release.

"It reflects the community priorities identified through staff's extensive consultation with residents and councillors' conversations with their constituents."