Ontario, for those of you not privileged enough to live here, has been relentlessly jacking up the cost of power. People come home to find little notices on their doors indicating they’ve been switched over to a “smart meter”, which calculates rate charges according to a grid based on the time of consumption. Use power during busy periods, and pay through the nose. Figure out a way to do your laundry at 3 am, and … well, you still pay through the nose, because good old Dalton has also just introduced the harmonized sales tax, which applies to home power consumption. Whoopie! We love spending a fortune to heat or cool our homes! Because we have a choice. It’s … it’s … OK, we don’t have a choice. We have to heat the damn place whether we like it or not.
To preclude people complaining about this, the government introduced a subsidy program designed to encourage the use of alternative sources of energy. Solar power, to be specific. Under the microFit program, the government promised to pay 20 times the usual rate for electricity, if it was generated by solar panels rather than by a big, evil nuclear reactor. People thought it was such a great offer that 16,000 applied to take part, many of them farmers with lots of land for erecting solar operations. That’s when the government got nervous: They hadn’t actually expected the program to succeed. They’d expected a limited number of applications, allowing them to waste money on a do-nothing program while proclaiming their dedication to conservation. If the program actually succeeded, they could be on the hook for $1 billion. So they broke their promise, backtracked on the program, and slashed the size of the subsidy. On a Friday afternoon during a heat wave when no one was looking.