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Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps speaks during a vigil to honour the victims of the Quebec City mosque shooting in Victoria, B.C., on Jan. 31, 2017. The City of Victoria has moved a step closer to introducing a voluntary reconciliation fund that will give homeowners the option of contributing financially to local Indigenous nations later this year.CHAD HIPOLITO/The Canadian Press

Victoria has moved a step closer to introducing a voluntary reconciliation fund that will give homeowners the option of contributing financially to local Indigenous nations later this year.

A majority of city council committee members voted in favour on Thursday of supporting the fund, which will ask homeowners to voluntarily add between five and 10 per cent extra to their annual property tax bill when tax notices are issued in June.

The proposal goes to a final council vote on April 7.

Mayor Lisa Helps says the plan is for the city to collect the money and provide it to the Victoria-area Songhees and Esquimalt Nations, along with a $200,000 reconciliation grant the council has previously approved.

The mayor says many non-Indigenous people in Victoria have expressed wishes to do more for reconciliation and the council considers a voluntary financial contribution as a meaningful reconciliation commitment.

Council member Stephen Andrew spoke out against the fund at the committee meeting, saying people are free to make contributions to local Indigenous nations on their own and don’t need to look to a city program.

“I support reconciliation efforts,” says Andrew, who has announced his candidacy for mayor in this fall’s municipal election. “However, this motion is yet another foray by this council into what is plainly provincial and federal jurisdiction. To me, this is straight virtue signalling.”

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