How Much Does It Cost To Run A Local Service District (LSD)?

Last Updat­ed on 2026-04-08

Last Updat­ed on 2026-04-08

[Note: I sug­gest read­ing these two pre­vi­ous posts, found here and here, on this sub­ject for addi­tion­al back­ground mate­r­i­al.]

Do res­i­dents of Local Ser­vice Dis­tricts (LSDs) in New Brunswick pay too much or too lit­tle for the ser­vices they receive from gov­ern­ments?

That is a ques­tion that has been raised before in this Province and we will see it raised again across New Brunswick, espe­cial­ly now that the Province has moved for­ward with some of the rec­om­men­da­tions of the Finn Report, name­ly the cre­ation of the Region­al Ser­vice Com­mis­sions (RSCs). The lat­ter are charged with deliv­er­ing ‘local’ and ‘provin­cial’ ser­vices on a region­al basis. For LSDs, that means that ser­vices that have been pro­vid­ed to res­i­dents of LSDs by the Province (e.g. road main­te­nance, snow­plow­ing, polic­ing) are grad­u­al­ly being trans­ferred to the RSCs, which have been giv­en the task of pro­vid­ing those ser­vices on a cost-recov­ery basis.

For sev­er­al decades, the Province has levied a tax rate (referred to as the ‘Spe­cial Provin­cial Levy’) of $0.65 per $100 of assessed val­ue on LSD res­i­den­tial prop­er­ties to pay for those ser­vices. Over the next few years, that $0.65 will grad­u­al­ly be shift­ed from the ‘provin­cial’ to the ‘local’ por­tion of prop­er­ty tax­es and the RSCs will be giv­en the task of recov­er­ing enough in tax rev­enue to pay for those ser­vices. Will the exist­ing LSD tax rates pro­vide RSCs with enough rev­enue to cov­er ser­vice costs? As the cost of a num­ber of those ser­vices has increased sig­nif­i­cant­ly, LSDs that have expe­ri­enced a slow rise (or decline) in the assessed val­ue of prop­er­ties may see sub­stan­tial hikes in prop­er­ty tax­es to make up any defi­cien­cy in rev­enue.

Local Ser­vice Dis­trict bud­gets pre­pared by the Gov­ern­ment of New Brunswick can be found here (Scroll down to Annu­al Report of Munic­i­pal Sta­tis­tics — LSD finan­cial infor­ma­tion is found near the end of each year’s report). At the time of writ­ing, the most recent pub­lished report was for 2012. Those bud­gets do not have line items for cer­tain provin­cial­ly-pro­vid­ed ser­vices. For 2013 and lat­er bud­gets, the Province will be mov­ing por­tions of those ser­vices to those bud­gets. For exam­ple, costs of road main­te­nance and snow­plow­ing are esti­mat­ed by offi­cials of Local Gov­ern­ment to be rough­ly $0.40 of the $0.65 tax rate (the remain­der is allo­cat­ed large­ly to polic­ing with a rel­a­tive­ly small amount for admin­is­tra­tion costs). A por­tion of that $0.65 will be moved from the ‘provin­cial’ prop­er­ty tax to the ‘local’ prop­er­ty tax each year over the next sev­er­al years. Thus, the ‘provin­cial’ por­tion of the tax will shrink and the ‘local’ por­tion will grow. The crit­i­cal issue here is ‘cost recov­ery’; the RSC, or the local munic­i­pal­i­ty, will have to ensure that it has the funds to pay for these ser­vices. Will the $0.65 levy be enough? Will the 60% of that levy allo­cat­ed to roads be enough?

Why does that mat­ter? Well, I am afraid that quite a few LSD res­i­dents are unaware that the Province intends to turn over local road main­te­nance respon­si­bil­i­ties to LSD res­i­dents, just as they have to exist­ing munic­i­pal­i­ties. The intent of the ‘road agree­ment’ is to pro­vide a plan by which respon­si­bil­i­ty for ‘local roads’ will be trans­ferred from the Province to a strange crea­ture called a ‘munic­i­pal enti­ty’. The lat­ter is just a term that encom­pass­es the Region­al Ser­vice Com­mis­sions and any munic­i­pal­i­ties (cur­rent or new) that are formed from LSDs. The ‘road agree­ment’ is designed to offer ‘munic­i­pal enti­ties’ an eight year tran­si­tion peri­od dur­ing which the Province con­tin­ues to main­tain local roads in LSDs. After that peri­od (eight years would bring us to the 2019 or 2020 fis­cal year), either the RSCs or the local munic­i­pal­i­ty would be respon­si­ble for both road main­te­nance and rais­ing the tax rev­enue to pay for roads. If your LSD has a large num­ber of kilo­me­ters of roads to main­tain and an insuf­fi­cient tax base to pay for them, then a sig­nif­i­cant prop­er­ty tax hike might be required to pro­vide those funds.

Thus, the answer to the above ques­tion depends upon at sev­er­al vari­ables: 1)  the num­ber of kilo­me­tres of local roads in an LSD (pre­sum­ably the Province will con­tin­ue to main­tain cer­tain Provin­cial­ly-des­ig­nat­ed roads, or reim­burse the RSC for main­tain­ing them); 2) the rel­a­tive con­di­tion of those roads; 3) the assessed val­ue of prop­er­ties in the LSD; and 4) the actu­al cost of pro­vid­ing the road main­te­nance and snow­plow­ing ser­vices.

What are the costs of main­tain­ing and snow­plow­ing roads in New Brunswick? The Province esti­mat­ed in 2012 that the snow­plow­ing and salt­ing of roads cost about $3550 per km of road. Data obtained (under a Request for Infor­ma­tion) for DTI Dis­trict 5 (the area of which over­laps quite a bit with Region­al Ser­vice Com­mis­sion 11) shows that the Dis­trict main­tains approx. 5400 km of roads. The sum­mer main­te­nance bud­get for 2014 was approx. $3 mil­lion. Those num­bers sug­gest a per km sum­mer main­te­nance cost of $556. The win­ter plus sum­mer main­te­nance costs would there­fore be approx. $4100 per km per year. Costs for a giv­en road, of course, will vary accord­ing to con­di­tion of the roadbed, the num­ber of times the road is plowed per win­ter, and so on. The 2008 Comp­trol­ler’s Report esti­mat­ed ‘local’ road costs in LSDs to be $3,854 per km. ‘Region­al’ local roads had high­er costs, so the bill to LSDs (or munic­i­pal­i­ties or RSCs, as the case may be) will depend on which roads are deemed to be a provin­cial respon­si­bil­i­ty and which are deemed to be a local respon­si­bil­i­ty. In Dis­trict 5, approx­i­mate­ly 75% of total kilo­me­ters were ‘local’ (i.e. not arte­r­i­al or col­lec­tor roads).

It is worth not­ing that the province has assumed in its LSD bud­get process that $0.40 of the provin­cial tax rate cov­ers the cost of road main­te­nance. But LSDs vary in tax base, kilo­me­ters of roads and type of road. It stands to rea­son that, when RSCs or munic­i­pal­i­ties take over respon­si­bil­i­ty for fund­ing road main­te­nance, some LSDs will find that they have suf­fi­cient tax base to cov­er road costs where­as oth­er LSDs will be in a deficit posi­tion. Res­i­dents in the lat­ter LSDs may find prop­er­ty tax­es ris­ing in order to pay road costs. If res­i­dents can get an approx­i­ma­tion of road kilo­me­ters in their LSD, and then mul­ti­ply that by the above per km cost esti­mates, they can get a rough idea of what their road main­te­nance bud­get would be. And remem­ber, the above road cost esti­mates are for main­te­nance only; those esti­mates do not include cap­i­tal costs for major road-renewals or bridge replace­ment. Those costs also need to be recov­ered from prop­er­ty tax­es.

Of course, the provin­cial por­tion of the prop­er­ty tax levy was not designed to just cov­er roads. Polic­ing and gen­er­al admin­is­tra­tion costs are also provin­cial ser­vices. The 2008 Comp­trol­ler’s Report details these costs, and, in par­tic­u­lar, how they have increased in recent years. Esti­mates of res­i­dent pop­u­la­tion and prop­er­ty tax base in your LSD can be found in the Annu­al Reports referred to above. Those num­bers should give you a rough idea of whether your tax base is suf­fi­cient or not (remem­ber that ‘local’ ser­vices (waste removal, plan­ning, etc) also have to be paid for).

The $0.65 levy has not been adjust­ed upwards for decades, and it is hard to see how rur­al prop­er­ties in many parts of the Province could have increased in val­ue suf­fi­cient­ly to cov­er those increased costs. Prop­er­ty tax hikes might be in your future.