Times Colonist

Alberta premier shuts door on sales tax

- DEAN BENNETT

EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley is shutting down suggestion­s her spend-heavy budget may ultimately trigger a sales tax to pay for it all.

Notley told the house during question period Wednesday that no sales tax or harmonized tax will be created on her watch.

“That budget nor any other budget in the term of this government will not and does not include a PST,” said Notley.

The budget presented by Finance Minister Joe Ceci uses low interest rates and a downturn in the economy to ramp up constructi­on and refurbishm­ent of roads, schools and hospitals.

It projects $34 billion in capital spending over the next five years and $47 billion in total debt by 2020.

The government intends to keep hiring to a minimum, but doesn’t plan to drasticall­y reduce staffing levels in key areas such as health and education.

The result is a budget that forecasts multibilli­ondollar deficits for the next four years, including $6.1 billion in the current fiscal year, which ends March 31.

Wildrose Leader Brian Jean told Notley the borrowing could trigger a cut in the province’s AAA credit rating, leading to higher interest rates and even more red ink.

“This budget has too much debt and no plan to pay it back,” Jeansaid.

Notley noted the government will pass a bill this session to head off downgrades by limiting debt to 15 per cent of the province’s nominal gross domestic product. She said the current ratio is about six per cent of GDP.

She said her job is to find the best long-term plan and stick with it rather than simply hacking and slashing when prices fall in Alberta’s wellspring oil economy. “This budget is investing in the future well-being of Albertans,” said Notley.

“The drop in the price of a barrel of oil should not be something that every teacher looks at every morning to find out if they have a job that day.”

Jean and other opposition leaders have criticized Notley for borrowing not just for capital projects but also, starting next year, to pay for day-to-day programs and salaries.

Notley, who was in Calgary Wednesday morning to announce the province will go ahead with a new cancer-care centre there, told reporters that not doing so would require deep and devastatin­g cuts in public services.

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