Mr. Chairman, I am using the term recreational. Mr. Schauerte used the term recreational. The Minister used the term recreational. I am trying to avoid the term recreational. I am asking if the government would be taxing somebody's trapping cabin. My understanding is that there are cabins on the Slave River near Fort Smith, near Fort Resolution, and cabins on the Taltson River, that are subject to taxing. Individuals are not seeing how that is possible. They went in the bush. They have been trapping there forever. They have replaced their cabins every once in a while, and they trap out of there, and they hunt out of there. Everybody shares cabins. Whether they share it with a community or not shouldn't have any relevance at all if we are using just the rules to assess and then tax. Very specific. I don't want the same answer again, because I got the same answer three times. I clearly understand. If you are sharing cabins with the whole community, it is not taxable. I am asking about an individual who is using a cabin for traditional harvesting, if that cabin is subject to taxation. This is the last time I will ask it.
Tom Beaulieu on Consideration in Committee of the Whole of Bills and Other Matters (Reversion)
In the Legislative Assembly on February 22nd, 2018. See this statement in context.
Consideration in Committee of the Whole of Bills and Other Matters (Reversion)
Consideration in Committee of the Whole of Bills and Other Matters (Reversion)
February 22nd, 2018
See context to find out what was said next.