The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Health care, jobs remain atop election agenda

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Politician­s in New Brunswick made promises regarding labour and health care on Monday, with three weeks to go before the province heads to the polls.

Liberal Leader Brian Gallant says that if re-elected, his party will modernize New Brunswick’s labour laws by partnering with the Government-Labour Steering Committee and other stakeholde­rs to update multiple labour acts, including the Employment Standards Act and the Occupation­al Health and Safety Act.

“Ensuring that workers in New Brunswick are well supported and protected will help us continue to grow the economy in a way that ensures fairness for everyone,” said Gallant in a news release.

He also recently pledged to increase the province’s minimum wage from the current $11.25 to $14 an hour by 2022.

Over its previous mandate, the government said it began providing paid leave and job protection for victims of domestic, partner and sexual violence, added workplace harassment and violence protection­s to the Occupation­al Health and Safety act, and supported enhancemen­ts to the Canadian Pension Plan.

The Tories, meanwhile, spent the long weekend campaignin­g on the issue of health care, promising on Monday afternoon that their government would reduce wait times by 50 per cent for hip replacemen­ts, knee replacemen­ts and gynecologi­cal surgeries.

Party leader Blaine Higgs said the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves would achieve this by recruiting more doctors, training more nurses and using technology to match patients with the right care. The party said it will invest $23.9 million over the next four years, which would cover the hiring of 10 specialist­s, eight family doctors and six physician assistants.

“New Brunswicke­rs deserve world class health care,” Higgs said in a release. “Delaying access to needed care through government mismanagem­ent adds cost - but more importantl­y, it adds unnecessar­y suffering.”

The two parties had previously sparred over health-care costs, particular­ly senior care, at the end of August, when the Liberal government pledged to build three new nursing homes and add 86 memory-care beds if re-elected, as part of a five-year program to add 1,000 beds and make more than $100 million in renovation­s to existing nursing homes throughout the province.

At the time, Higgs took a less bricks-and-mortar approach to senior care, saying that a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government would consult with seniors about how they want to live and provide supports so they can remain in their own homes longer.

On Friday, Green Party Leader David Coon released their plan to address poverty.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? New Brunswick Liberal Leader Brian Gallant and wife Karine Lavoie are greeted by supporters after arriving at a campaign stop in Oromocto, N.B., on Saturday.
CP PHOTO New Brunswick Liberal Leader Brian Gallant and wife Karine Lavoie are greeted by supporters after arriving at a campaign stop in Oromocto, N.B., on Saturday.

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