The cost of mowing the lawn rising with record gas prices
The cost of mowing the lawn rising with record gas prices
The cost of gas climbed past $2.08 a litre in the capital again Tuesday and the surging prices are hurting some seasonal businesses.
It last hit 208.9 cents per litre on Sunday, setting a record for the city.
Lawn FX Landscaping owner Joanne Oldak says it’s not so green on the business side of things.
“We went to fill up two trucks and the machines, I have six machines, so that was 500 bucks,” says Oldak, adding that’s enough fuel for two days of work, maintaining customers’ lawns all across the city. “We had to increase our rate a bit, but there are seniors who can’t cut their grass, people with knee injuries, people that just don’t have time to do it … and their salaries aren’t going up. We need to stay in business, but if people can’t afford it there is going to be no small businesses. I mean, something needs to be done.”
Gas prices are chopping away at profits, as well as pocketbooks as per-litre-prices set new records each week.
“They will continue to rise so long as the supply is too short for the demand,” says Roger McKnight, chief petroleum analyst with En-Pro International. He says while government should intervene to cap the tax, it’s not likely. “The higher the prices go, the less I hear complaints from the government. The HST is not a fixed amount in the price of the gas; it varies, it’s a percentage, so the higher the pump price goes, the more revenue goes to the provincial and federal government.”
Mcknight predicts that Wednesday’s fuel prices in Ottawa will reach $2.10 a litre, noting that the HST on that amount is $0.24.
“Governments in general are depending on demand destruction to take over to lower the prices; in other words, the prices get so high that people say, ‘The heck with it, I’m leaving my car in the driveway. I ain’t going anywhere,’” says McKnight. “But I think they are misreading human nature. This is Memorial Day weekend coming up in ten days and this is Victoria Day weekend next week. People are going to get on the road and they are going to see those prices, and they’re going to get very, very annoyed because they aren’t going down anytime soon trust me.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Some emergency rooms across Canada shutting down amid staff shortages
Hospitals overwhelmed by the pandemic’s onslaught are still facing a number of challenges, causing unprecedented wait times in emergency rooms across the country.

'Incompetence is incalculable': Airport frustrations sour Canadians' summer travel plans
CTVNews.ca asked Canadians to share their travel horror stories as cancelled flights, delays and lost luggage throw a wrench in Canadians' summer travel plans, due in part to staffing shortages at Canadian airports. Some report sleeping at airports and others say it took days to get to or from a destination.
Gunmen killed in Saanich bank shootout identified as twin brothers
Twin brothers in their early 20s were responsible for the shooting that injured numerous police officers at a bank in Saanich, B.C., earlier this week, RCMP alleged Saturday.
TD 'significantly' downgrades home sale, price forecasts
A new report from TD says Canadian home sales could fall by nearly one-quarter on average this year and remain low into 2023.
Russia claims capture of pivotal city in eastern Ukraine
Russia's defence minister said Russian forces took control Sunday of the last major Ukrainian-held city in Ukraine's Luhansk province, bringing Moscow closer to its stated goal of seizing all of Ukraine's Donbas region.
Calgary's new 'Museum of Failure' aims to spark creativity
It's been said no one's success is complete without failure, but a new international exhibit in Calgary is proving that even some of the most talented innovators had some of the worst ideas for consumers.
'Ungrading': How one Ontario teacher is changing her approach to report cards
An Ontario high school teacher plans to continue with an alternative method of grading her students after an experiment last semester in which students proposed a grade and had to justify it with examples of their work.
Heavy rains, floods prompt evacuations of Sydney suburbs
Thousands of residents in Sydney suburbs were told to evacuate their homes on Sunday after heavy rains caused floodwaters to rise and rivers to overflow in what authorities called life-threatening emergencies.
Children among 77 kept in Nigeria church for rapture, police say
Police in Nigeria have freed at least 77 people who were kept in a church basement by pastors who preached to them about Christian believers ascending to heaven with the second coming of Jesus Christ, authorities said Sunday.