Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Notley up against Wall over economic facts

- ALEX MACPHERSON — With files from James Wood and Emma Graney amacpherso­n@postmedia.com twitter.com/macpherson­a

Outgoing Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall fired a parting shot at his counterpar­t in Alberta after she provided some tongue-in-cheek advice for his successor, including the suggestion they “look at the facts” before dealing with her province.

NDP Premier Rachel Notley made remarks in Calgary, as a brouhaha over licence plates on constructi­on sites — the latest in a long series of public spats between Alberta and Saskatchew­an — enters its second month with little sign of resolution.

“The advice that I would give to the new premier is to look at the facts, look at the data, look at the reporting on economic activity and reconsider the approach they’ve taken up til now,” Notley told reporters Thursday.

“Because one province is making its way out of the recession, and one is not. One province is adding tens of thousands of new jobs; one province is losing jobs. I suggest they should look at the data and start drawing some different conclusion­s.”

Wall shot back hours later: “I also have some ‘pointed’ advice for the next Saskatchew­an premier: Maybe don’t listen to an NDP premier who imposed a carbon tax on her oil-dependent economy and is presiding over an annual $10 billion deficit.”

After blasting Notley for failing to defend her province against a federally imposed carbon tax and describing it as “Canada’s embarrassi­ng cousin that nobody wants to talk about,” Wall said he is happy to help protect Alberta’s interests.

“By the way, she says look at the facts and the data. I did. One province saw a seven per cent drop in GDP two years after 2015, the other did not. One province still has a higher unemployme­nt than the other,” Wall said in a statement Thursday evening.

In a second statement released Friday afternoon, Wall — who is set to leave office at the end of the month — said he did not have anything further to say about Notley, except that “she should really concern herself with running her own province.”

While employment insurance claims are rising in Saskatchew­an and falling in Alberta, Statistics Canada reported this month that Alberta’s unemployme­nt rate fell to 6.9 per cent, from 8.5 per cent over the past year, while Saskatchew­an’s fell to 6.4 per cent from 6.6 per cent.

The latest controvers­y between the two provinces erupted in December after Saskatchew­an’s transport minister decreed that any Alberta contractor working on a government highways project in the province needed a Saskatchew­an licence plate.

Alberta officials responded by questionin­g the Saskatchew­an government’s contention that a similar practice was common on the western side of the border. Evidence of contractor­s being barred from sites over licence plates has yet to surface.

The government­s are set to thrash out their difference­s in a summit later this month. The location has yet to be determined.

That could be too late, however, as an independen­t panel is expected to rule before then, potentiall­y leaving Saskatchew­an with a $5 million fine over the licence plate decree.

Wall, meanwhile, is set to leave the job he held for a decade at the end of the month.

The Saskatchew­an Party will elect its next leader on Jan. 27 in Saskatoon. Tina Beaudry-Mellor, Ken Cheveldayo­ff, Alanna Koch, Scott Moe and Gord Wyant are vying for the job.

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