Royal Canadian Legion in Lasalle faces closure over unpaid taxes - Action News
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Montreal

Royal Canadian Legion in Lasalle faces closure over unpaid taxes

Legion Branch 212 has until Nov. 4 to pay $24,200 in back taxes to the City of Montreal or risk losing the building it has occupied since 1963.

Legion Branch 212 has until Nov. 4 to pay the City of Montreal $24,200 in back taxes

Ray Cormie, the president of Legion Branch 212 in Lasalle, Que., said the legion is an 'integral part' of the community. (CBC)

The Royal Canadian Legion in Lasalleis struggling to pay tens of thousands of dollarsin back taxes and it now has until Nov. 4 to settle its bill with the City of Montrealor risk seeing the building it's occupied since 1963sold off to the highest bidder.

That's the same day the legion plans to hold its2018 Remembrance Day ceremony, said Ray Cormie, the president of Legion Branch 212.

"We are about to lose our home here due to unpaid back taxes," Cormie said during a news conference at the legion Friday.

The legion lost its tax-exempt charitable status in 2013, and it saw its annual property taxes jump tenfold, from $3,000 to $30,000, Cormie explained.

It had to wait five years before it could reapply for tax-exempt status, he said, and it did so on June 28 of this year.

In the meantime, though, the legionhas been struggling to pay its sky-hightax bill.

The legion says it received a letter from the city a few weeks ago which said it had until Nov. 4 to pay $24,200 in unpaid taxes for the 2017 tax year.

If it doesn't pay, the city said it would put ads in local newspapers and online to sell the building the legion calls home, Cormie said.

"Thisbuilding is an integral part of Lasalle," he said.

The legion has used this building in Lasalle since 1963, Cormie said. (CBC)

Home to other community groups

In addition to supporting Canadian military veterans and RCMP members and their families, the legion also hosts a variety of community events, such as weddings, church group meetings and activities for seniors.

Dorothy Gleason is the co-ordinator of the LasalleD+D 50+ Centre, a group that supportslocal seniors and uses the legion building for its activities two days a week.

"It's been an amazing partnership. We're so fortunate to call this our home," Gleason said.

Dorothy Gleason, the co-ordinator of the Lasalle D+D 50+ Centre for seniors, said closing the legion building would be devastating for her organization. (CBC)

She said she's concerned aboutthe legion's future, as well as what closing the building would mean for her own organization, because it's not easy to find a space that canaccommodate its needs.

"We need a big space with a lot of multiple rooms, [for] a lot of activities;[a] kitchen, parking, main floor access all the things that make it right for serving seniors," Gleason told CBC News.

"The implications of them closing on our centre would be quite devastating."

Fundraising online

Cormie said the borough of Lasalle has helped the legion fill out its forms to regain its tax-exempt status.

A spokesperson for the City of Montreal told CBCNews the citycan't get involved because it's theprovince that grants tax-exempt status.

Cormiecalled on the Quebec government to do more to protect legions, many of which are struggling to pay the rising costof utilities and municipal taxes, he said.

Cormie said a legion branch in Lachine faceda similar crisis but regained its tax-exempt status with help from that borough.

"If they can do it in other jurisdictions and other provinces, and other jurisdictions in Quebec here, why can't they do it here? This completely baffles us," he said.

The legion hosts several community events, such as weddings, church group meetings and activities for seniors. (CBC)

In the meantime, the legion is raising funds online to try to pay its back taxes.

In addition to the $24,200 it owes for 2017, the legion said it owes $30,000 to the city for its unpaid2018 tax billand another $16,000 in incidentals, such as legal fees,late-payment fees and interest.

Even if the legion isforced to close, Cormie said, itsRemembrance Day activities would go ahead as planned on Nov. 4.

With files from CBC'sSean Henry