The Peterborough Examiner

PROMISES, PROMISES

Doug Ford and Andrea Horwath said they would make life more affordable for average people, but were vague on the details

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — The leaders of two of Ontario’s main political parties trumpeted major campaign promises Wednesday — lower gas prices and subsidized child care — that they said would make life more affordable for average people.

But the promises were vague on the details.

Doug Ford promised to cut gas prices by 10 cents a litre if his Progressiv­e Conservati­ves win next month’s election, saying he’d do so by cutting the provincial gas tax and scrapping the cap-and-trade system.

But he wasn’t clear on how he’d replace the billions in revenue that would be lost by taking those measures.

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, meanwhile, wouldn’t provide details of what families earning more than $40,000 would pay for child care under her plan for the province.

The NDP is proposing to fully subsidize public, licensed, notfor-profit child care for those lower-income earners if elected next month.

Households earning more than $40,000 would pay an average of $12 a day, but the NDP has not given details about exactly what people earning more than that would pay, what specific income brackets would be establishe­d, or any caps.

Horwath was asked several times for those details Wednesday, and would only say it is a “sliding scale.”

“At some point a person’s income

is going to be such that they don’t need to have any subsidy or any help with paying for child care,” she said, without elaboratin­g on what point that would be.

“The point is to provide affordable child care that’s high quality, that’s not-for-profit, for the vast majority of everyday families that need that help.”

The NDP child-care plan also proposes to increase wages for early childhood educators and add 202,000 new not-for-profit, licensed, affordable child-care spaces.

In Oakville, Ford stood outside a gas station to announce that he would reduce gas prices by 10 cents per litre.

He said he’d do so partly by scrapping the province’s capand-trade system, which puts a price on carbon and has added 4.3 cents a litre to the price of gasoline.

Ford said he would also cut the provincial gas tax by 5.7 cents a litre. Currently, drivers pay 14.7 cents per litre of gasoline in provincial

tax and 14.3 cents on diesel.

The Tories would reduce both taxes to nine cents per litre, which they say would mean drivers pay $1.19 billion less per year.

But that also means that money isn’t going to provincial coffers, along with $2 billion that the province brought in from cap and trade last year.

When asked how he would make up for the lost revenue, Ford said, “We can’t afford not to do this.”

“(Drivers) are frustrated at being gouged at the gas pumps,” he said.

“This will stimulate the economy when we put money back into their pocket. We aren’t putting it anywhere else ... They’ll go out and shop, stimulate the economy.”

Municipali­ties receive two cents per litre from the provincial gas tax, money that is earmarked for transit funding. The Liberal government announced last year that they would increase

it in 2019 to 2.5 cents a litre, up to four cents by 2021 — increases the Tories would maintain.

Meanwhile, Premier Kathleen Wynne’s Liberals criticized both rival parties for omitting key details in their proposals.

Spokespers­on Drew Davidson said the Liberals are the only party to present a clear and achievable plan for the province’schild care.

The $2.2-billion program, announced in the party’s spring budget, would provide free child care for preschoole­rs starting in 2020.

“We decided to publicly fund child care for preschoole­rs, rather than adopt an income bracket model, because we believe all families in Ontario deserve access to child care. We also relied on expert advice,” Davidson said, citing an economist she said predicted the NDP model would lead to long waiting lists.

The province heads to the polls June 7.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario PC Leader Doug Ford is framed by a concealed gas container during a campaign stop at Fielding Environmen­tal in Mississaug­a on Wednesday.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario PC Leader Doug Ford is framed by a concealed gas container during a campaign stop at Fielding Environmen­tal in Mississaug­a on Wednesday.

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