Thunder Bay – Since 2004, TbayTel Has Given The City Of Thunder Bay $358 Million. What Do We Have To Show For It?

Tbaytel has reported revenues of nearly $215 million in 2022 amid rising usership, allowing the city-owned telecom to transfer over $18.4 million into municipal coffers.

THUNDER BAY — Tbaytel has reported healthy revenues in its 2022 financial results, allowing the city-owned telecom to transfer over $18 million into municipal coffers this year.

The company earned nearly $215 million in revenue in 2022, realizing a net profit of roughly $40 million, according to its financial statements.

The numbers reflected increased usage, with internet traffic up 20 per cent in 2022 for a total of 250 petabytes. That’s the equivalent of streaming 125 million movies on Netflix, the company said.

The mobility provider also sold over 36,000 cell phones.

Tbaytel President and CEO Dan Topatigh described the 2022 financials as a strong performance that has enabled the company to forge ahead with service expansions and enhancements.

“With a dedicated workforce committed to our customers and region, strong financial performance and the trust of our customers throughout northern Ontario, Tbaytel looks forward to another great year in 2023,” he said in a statement.

The company’s dividend to the City of Thunder Bay will exceed $18.2 million on the strength of those results, including a fixed dividend of $18 million and performance dividend of $239,000.

That equates to a property tax reduction of 8.25 per cent for local residents, the company said.

Previously known as Thunder Bay Telephone, the utility operated as a city department until 2004, when it was restructured as an arms-length city-owned corporation.

In 2021, city council approved a gradual increase to the fixed dividend, ramping it up from $18 million a year to $18.75 million by 2025. Council is set to review the policy again this year.

When Tbaytel outperforms its financial plan, the city also receives 25 per cent of net income above projections.

This year’s performance dividend was relatively modest, comparing to previous amounts of $570,000 in 2020 and $2.6 million in 2021.

Tbaytel says it has returned nearly $358 million in dividends to the city since its inception in 2004.

The money is transferred to the city’s capital funds where it largely supports infrastructure work.

The company also touted its estimated total economic impact of $145.7 million throughout Thunder Bay and Northern Ontario last year.

Meanwhile, the company’s charitable Tbaytel for Good program was reported to contribute over $416,000 to 118 organizations and events across the region.

The numbers are highlighted in Tbaytel’s 2022 report to the community — entitled Expanding with Stronger Connections — which was released on Tuesday, the day after the company held its AGM and city council approved its financial statements.

In addition to financial results, the report reviews service expansions across the region and new products and services.

That included bringing fibre internet service to over 5,000 new addresses across the region, including in Marathon and outlying areas of Thunder Bay. Some of that work is supported with federal and provincial dollars.

According to Tbaytel, 99.4 per cent of the city of Thunder Bay now has access to its fibre services.

The company also pointed to the introduction of 5G in Thunder Bay and the completion of LTE across its wireless serving territory in 2022.

The company employs more than 400 people. –  tbnewswatch.com

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This a basically an add for the phone company.

….That equates to a property tax reduction of 8.25 per cent for local residents, the company said….

Sooo what that says is that the high salaried residents of City Hall are spending well over a 10% property tax rate for many, many, years.  And what do we have to show for it?   Does the city look like a place that is getting all that tax money and spending it wisely?

Council keeps bragging about how they are keeping our property taxes low when in reality, its TbayTel that is keeping our taxes low.  Not city council.  They are spending money at a high tax rate….with no repercussions because the tax rate is fake. Its an illusion.  Nobody cares because nobody knows.

…Tbaytel says it has returned nearly $358 million in dividends to the city since its inception in 2004….

A third of a billion dollars….and as I said before, what exactly do we have to show for it?   What?  Everything is always dependent on funding from senior levels of government.  If we saved some of TbayTel’s monies, and a couple of years we could pay for an indoor soccer place or a nice trail system around the city or a new botanical garden or a new historical museum or anything we want.  Instead,  that money is thrown into general revenue, never to be seen or heard from again.

The TbayTel dividend is a tax on the patrons of the phone company.  Tbaytel can be used to launder money for the city.  How?  Well Tbaytel borrows money and the gives that money to the City of Thunder Bay in the form of a dividend.   The city gets money and TbyTel patrons have to pay it back.

Oh and before you dump all over the people that use over carriers, try to remember what cell service was like BEFORE cell phone competition arrived.   As soon as Bell arrived, many people switched over. Why?  Bell, a company that was not the most beloved by its customers was still better than TbayTel at that time. TbayTel’s service sucked. Competition changed that.

Internet hotspots?   It was Shaw that started that, not Tbaytel. Once again, competition.