Technology

Saskatoon city council passes 2026 budget with 6.7% property tax hike

2025-11-29 01:14
558 views
Saskatoon city council passes 2026 budget with 6.7% property tax hike

Saskatoon city council passes next year's budget with residents footing a 6.7 per cent property tax hike.

After four days of considerations, Saskatoon’s city council has officially passed its budget for next year with a higher-than-usual property tax increase.

Saskatoon residents can expect to see a 6.7-per cent increase in property taxes next year, and a 5.81 per cent hike in 2027. For the average homeowner, this amounts to around $13 a month and $12 a month, respectively.

City council spent the previous two days going through 108 options to chip away at the operating budget and put money back in the pockets of residents. Despite the progress this process made at the end of the third day — which lowered the tax rate to 6.1 per cent — some additional, larger items were added to the bill Friday, bringing that number up by a little more than half a percentage point.

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.

Get daily National news

Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.

One such item is the addition of eight dedicated police officers and one sergeant to transit to deter incidents, costing residents $1.6 million over the next two years.

Story continues below advertisement

Mayor Cynthia Block says the move to add police to transit was not one that council expected to pass at the start of this year.

“But as we started to see transit police being added to services right across the country, we were paying really close attention to what that meant for both operators and for riders and that means a significant increase to our overall budget and one that I’m happy to support,” Block said, adding that safety is the top priority for the city, which is planning to move forward with a modernized public transportation system.

Trending Now
  • Court issues arrest warrant for Thai co-owner of Miss Universe pageant
  • New Brunswick parent concerned new religious accommodation policy will alienate students

Other major additions include the approval of more fire dispatchers for emergency calls and coordination, affordable housing incentives, herbicide use for weed management in parks, the extension of the Riverbank public washrooms and one new full-time equivalent zookeeper position.

The final budget passed with support from all but two councillors, in a 9-2 vote. Ward 3 councillor Robert Pearce and Ward 9 councillor Bev Dubois were the two to oppose it, saying they could not back the property tax hike.

“I supported some, I didn’t support others,” said Dubois.

“But I really want and think that our city, our municipality needs to stick to our core services and that’s really what the majority of the residents in this city want.”

More on Canada More videos
  • Here’s a timeline of Guilbeault’s decision to resign from Carney cabinet
  • Canada avoids recession as GDP climbs in the 3rd quarter
  • Consumers may not be feeling as ‘rosy’ as the economy appears to be
  • Speculation on B.C.’s tanker ban ‘premature,’ federal energy minister says
  • Francophone South School District requires form to request religious accommodations
  • Canada commits more funding to crack down on extortion crime in BC
  • YVR warns of Black Friday congestion
  • BIV: Court-ordered home sales in Metro Vancouver have doubled