Lethbridge Herald

Alta. NDP defend CPP program

KENNEY, NDP TRADE BARBS ON PITCH FOR ALBERTA TO QUIT CPP

- Dean Bennett THE CANADIAN PRESS — EDMONTON

Alberta’s Opposition says having the province quit the Canada Pension Plan is a massive moneylosin­g propositio­n and that Premier Jason Kenney is pursuing it out of spite against his nemesis, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Kenney, however, says the proposal put forward by his Fair Deal panel could save billions of dollars and, in question period Thursday, he accused the NDP of being afraid to be bold.

“We’re going to do an exhaustive study on the costs, benefits and structure of a potential Alberta Pension Plan because we believe Albertans are every bit as capable as Quebecers or the federal government in managing a public pension plan,” Kenney told the house.

NDP labour critic Christina Gray accused Kenney of hiding the price of creating such a pension fund. It could cost billions to administer, insure and underwrite, she said, while shutting Albertans out of the benefits of being part of the national plan.

Gray added that comparing returns on Canada Pension Plan investment­s with the province’s Alberta Investment Management Corporatio­n could potentiall­y see Alberta miss out on more than $13 billion in the first five years.

“Are you only doing this to get back at your former political opponents in Ottawa?” Gray asked Kenney.

Kenney squared off against Trudeau as a former member of Parliament. As Alberta’s United Conservati­ve premier he has accused Trudeau’s Liberal government of pursuing regulatory policies aimed at hamstringi­ng the province’s oil and gas industry.

Kenney’s comments come one day after he released recommenda­tions from his Fair Deal panel, which he created last year to gauge the mood of Albertans and determine better ways the province could assert itself in Confederat­ion.

One recommenda­tion is to pursue an Alberta Pension Plan, similar to one run by Quebec.

The panel, in its report, said Alberta’s comparativ­ely young population means it has a higher contributi­on rate, which would be money that could be kept in the province if it went its own way.

“If Alberta withdrew from the CPP and created an Alberta Pension Plan, Alberta’s hypothetic­al contributi­on rate could be reduced from the present rate of 9.9 per cent to as low as 8.5 per cent,” said the report. “That represents an opportunit­y for Albertans to keep the approximat­ely $3-billion annual subsidy to the rest of Canada.”

Kenney said the government’s cost-benefit analysis will come back next year and, if the review shows an Alberta plan would be a net benefit, it will put the issue to Albertans in a referendum.

The report does not provide evidence to demonstrat­e a groundswel­l of support for a separate pension plan. In fact, it states that in its telephone poll of 1,000 Albertans, almost six in 10 want to stay with the CPP.

Kenney said his government has conducted independen­t polling “which has found pretty significan­t support for the possibilit­y of an Alberta provincial pension plan.’’

Also Thursday, the NDP accused Kenney of fanning the flames of separatism by appointing United Conservati­ve backbenche­r Drew Barnes to the Fair Deal Panel.

Barnes, in a public letter to Kenney this week, urged him to take a hard line with Ottawa on a range of shared issues to ensure fairness for the province.

“If this is not possible, the majority of my constituen­ts in Cypress-Medicine Hat and from across our land have made clear that we must seek another relationsh­ip as a sovereign people,” wrote Barnes.

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