Ottawa Citizen

Liberal leader pledges to expand dental care; Coalition talks taxes

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

The Quebec Liberals dusted off an old promise on Sunday to expand free dental coverage, this time to include children up to age 16 as well as low-income seniors, should they be re-elected come Oct. 1.

Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard made the pledge while campaignin­g in the Saguenay-LacSaint Jean region, reviving a promise made in part under former leader Jean Charest to beef up coverage for teens.

About 620,000 Quebecers currently qualify for free basic coverage, including children up to age 10 and people on social assistance.

With the proposed changes, nearly 1.2 million more Quebecers would qualify under the plan, Couillard said, including seniors 65 and older meeting the financial threshold (single seniors earning less than $18,096 a year or couples getting less than $24,000).

“Dental health is also a major factor (for seniors) because it’s very painful,” Couillard said from the region north of Quebec City, which includes his home riding of Roberval.

“At some point, seniors stop eating and that’s a major health issue if you’re already frail, very old, and you stop eating because you just can’t do it.”

The new measure would cost the government $150 million, and Couillard said the province’s improved financial situation makes it possible. The left-leaning Québec solidaire party has advocated for universal dental care, but Couillard dismissed that as far too costly.

The Liberal announceme­nt comes amid an ongoing conflict with the province’s dentists, who threatened to quit the public system over a contract dispute before the province intervened by decree to block the move.

“It’s not to punish dentists. It’s to protect Quebecers,” Couillard said of the decree, adding he was certain negotiatio­ns with the associatio­n representi­ng 4,300 members, who have been without a contract since 2015, wouldn’t be fruitful in the end.

Also on Sunday, Coalition Avenir Québec vowed to harmonize school taxes to 10 cents per $100 of evaluation if they take power.

Coalition Leader François Legault said school taxes have gone up 25 per cent in the past four years alone, and because of variable tax rates homeowners pay vastly different rates according to the school board to which they pay taxes.

Campaignin­g on Montreal’s North Shore on Sunday, Legault used the example of two homes behind him at a stop in Terrebonne, where one neighbour paid $269 to one board while another next door paid $690.

Legault defended harmonizin­g as opposed to abolishing school taxes as the party had previously championed, noting much had changed since the previous campaign. Harmonizin­g the taxes would cost $700 million, Legault said, assuring all of his party’s promises will be costed.

“We will table our financial forecast and you’ll see that it is balanced,” Legault said. “I have someone with me that’s keeping track of that. Don’t worry. We have a strong management team.”

The Parti Québécois didn’t make any announceme­nts on Sunday, with Leader Jean-François Lisée declining to criticize his rivals when pressed by journalist­s.

Lisée said he didn’t want to repeat mistakes from the 2014 campaign, when the PQ under former leader Pauline Marois fell from front-runner to second-place.

The current leader said he has a small book he carries with him with lessons learned from the previous campaign, but declined to detail those problems on Sunday.

“It’s a small book, but there’s a lot of things in it,” Lisée said, as he and deputy leader Veronique Hivon were formally named PQ candidates in their respective ridings of Rosemont and Joliette, where they were unconteste­d.

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