Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Feds rankle provinces with spring timeline for stabilizat­ion fund edits

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OTTAWA A federal program that tops up provincial revenues in response to sudden economic downturns won’t be getting any changes until at least this spring.

Finance ministers in Alberta and Saskatchew­an say they expected short-term fixes to the fiscal stabilizat­ion fund earlier than that and are now wary they will have to wait until after the federal budget to learn about the impact on their own finances.

The program, which has not changed since 1995, provides help to provinces facing a year-overyear decline in non-resource revenues, but the money available to eligible provinces is capped at just $60 per resident.

Increasing the amount of money it provides was a key demand from western provinces in particular following the October federal election that saw the Liberals lose a great deal of electoral support in the region and shut out of Alberta and Saskatchew­an entirely.

The fiscal stabilizat­ion program is easier to change than the more complex equalizati­on program, and amendments could be worth billions to provinces whose finances have been hit by low oil prices.

Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau had promised provincial finance ministers at the end of last year that he’d get back to them by the end of January with a process for updating the decades-old program. In a letter to his provincial counterpar­ts this week, Morneau says he has now instructed his officials to report back this spring, without a specific date.

The letter said the ideas the provinces put forward on how to reform the fiscal stabilizat­ion program are still being analyzed by Finance Department officials, who are reaching out to their provincial counterpar­ts for more informatio­n and clarificat­ion so the Liberals can understand them fully.

“I have also instructed my officials to provide me advice on potential adjustment­s to the fiscal stabilizat­ion program, including analysis of the potential fiscal risk for the federal government, for considerat­ion in spring 2020,” he wrote in the letter obtained by The Canadian Press.

Pierre- Olivier Hebert, Morneau’s spokesman, said the letter is the update he promised.

Saskatchew­an Finance Minister Donna Harpauer said the finance ministers expected some “immediate steps” on the program.

“What he committed to at the (December) meeting was that he would let us know the timeline by before the end of January,” she said Thursday. “There’s still no next steps ... there’s no obvious point where decisions will be made that we’re being apprised of.”

Alberta Finance Minister Travis Toews told Morneau in a phone call this week the province is looking for concrete action, according to a spokeswoma­n.

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