The Niagara Falls Review

Wynne would offer seniors free pharmacare

Premier promises to expand prescripti­on drugs to Ontarians 65 and older if Liberals re-elected in June election

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — A day after promising significan­t new spending on a several social programs in its spring budget, Ontario’s Liberal government rolled out one of its first major policies ahead of the spring election — free prescripti­on drugs for seniors 65 and older.

Premier Kathleen Wynne said Tuesday that starting Aug. 1, 2019, people aged 65 or older will no longer have to pay a deductible or co-payment for more than 4,400 prescripti­on drugs. Wynne said the program will cost $575 million a year when it is fully operationa­l in 2020-21.

“It’s going to mean one less thing people have to worry about and it’s going to deliver real savings to help manage the rising cost of living,” Wynne said.

Drugs covered in the program include medication­s for cholestero­l, hypertensi­on, diabetes and asthma. The government estimates the program will save the average senior $240 a year.

Last year, the province created its OHIP+ pharmacare program that provides free prescripti­on drugs to people under age 25.

The announceme­nt comes a day after the government pledged in a throne speech to fund a series of new programs — including the expanded pharmacare plan — the details of which will be included in the provincial budget set to be tabled March 28.

That budget could run a deficit as high as $8 billion, breaking a key government promise to balance the budget this year. Wynne said the spending is necessary to help Ontario residents who are struggling to make ends meet.

“We’ve made a conscious and deliberate decision that we need to invest in people’s care,” she said. “We’ve done a lot of work. We’ve put in place OHIP+ for kids. We’ve put in place free tuition. We raised the minimum wage .... but still people are coming to us and saying we need more support.”

Wynne still favours a federal pharmacare plan for Canadians, but until then will cover the costs for young people and seniors.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve health critic Jeff Yurek said his party is committed to a “proper” provincial pharmacare plan, but said the timing of the Liberal government’s announceme­nt calls into question their dedication to the plan.

“The Wynne Liberals have been in power for 15 years, and they’ve had 15 years to address health-care challenges for seniors,” he said in a statement. “It’s only now in an election year that they’ve decided to take any action.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the Liberal’s pharmacare plan still leaves nearly 2.2 million Ontario residents without drug coverage and its implementa­tion is still over a year away.

“Families are being forced to empty their wallets to get the medicine they need,” she said. “Too many people cut their pills in half to make the bottle last longer. One in four Ontarians can’t afford the medication prescribed by their doctor.”

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