Medicine Hat News

Liberals pledge cheap daycare, NDP promises shipbuildi­ng plan

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The British Columbia Liberal Party is promising daycare at $10 a day for lowincome families and rates that would increase from that price based on income.

Party Leader Andrew Wilkinson said Friday the $10 rate would apply to families with household incomes under $65,000 if the Liberals win the Oct. 24 election. There would be a $20 a day rate for families making $90,000 and $30 a day for those over $125,000.

Wilkinson said the plan would cost $1 billion in its first year and a Liberal government would begin implementi­ng it immediatel­y, but he did not say when it would be complete.

He coupled savings for families from the daycare plan with an earlier promise to eliminate the seven per cent PST for one year.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has hit low-income families harder than most, which is why $10-a-day child care now, not later — on top of eliminatin­g the PST for one year — will mean huge savings for those who need it most,” he said in a statement.

The NDP began a $10-aday daycare pilot program after being elected in 2017 and have pledged to expand that program provincewi­de, while the Greens have promised free child care for kids under three and free early childhood education for those aged three and four.

NDP Leader John Horgan, meanwhile, announced he would launch a B.C. shipbuildi­ng strategy to make sure there’s investment in local infrastruc­ture that’s needed to win national and internatio­nal contracts.

On a visit to the Seaspan Shipyards in North Vancouver, he said the

NDP government had already put $40 million into enhancing ports and he believes the national shipbuildi­ng strategy needs to be supplement­ed with a B.C. plan.

“For years, shipbuildi­ng was being outsourced to other countries — leaving B.C. workers and companies behind,” Horgan said in a news release. “Our long-term strategy is about making strategic investment­s that will keep B.C. shipyards modern and competitiv­e, able to win more contracts and create more jobs.”

Green Leader Sonia Furstenau was scheduled to campaign in Nanaimo on Friday, when she was expected to talk about climate change and clean jobs.

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