Toronto Star

Tories cut taxes, slash role of watchdogs

Fall statement forecasts small reduction in deficit while loosening laws on political fundraisin­g

- ROB FERGUSON AND ROBERT BENZIE

Premier Doug Ford is cutting taxes for low-income earners, lifting some rent controls, and slashing oversight protection­s for the environmen­t, vulnerable children and Ontario’s French-speaking minority.

Ford’s changes, which also include loosening restrictio­ns on political fundraisin­g, came in Thursday’s fall economic statement from the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves with a smallertha­n-expected $500-million drop in the $15-billion deficit and no timeline for balancing the provincial budget.

Finance Minister Vic Fedeli called the slight shrinkage in red ink “a pretty good start,” but warned further cuts loom in next spring’s budget.

“It’s going the right way and it will take time and it will require an extraordin­ary effort,” added Fedeli, blaming the previous Liberal government for “15 years of reckless spending and mismanagem­ent.”

In the meantime, Ontarians will have more time to stock up on beer, wine and liquor as the government allows authorized retailers like the LCBO, the Beer Store and some supermarke­ts to sell alcohol between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m. seven days a week. But critics denounced the eliminatio­n of the environmen­tal commission­er, the child advocate, and the French-language services commission­er as independen­t officers of the legislatur­e.

Instead, starting next May, the environmen­tal watchdog function will be folded into the auditor general’s operation, while the other two will be melded with the ombudsman’s office.

Fedeli’s economic update said that is “to reduce unnecessar­y cost while preserving critical functions,” but the government couldn’t yet say how many jobs will be cut.

“Mr. Ford thinks he can do anything, say anything and have no accountabi­lity whatsoever,” NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said. “That’s not what democracy is … you should be able to take criticism and make sure your government is being held to account.

“This is a government that doesn’t even have an environmen­tal climate change in place” after scrapping the previous Liberal government’s cap-and-trade program, she said.

Ending that environmen­tal pact with Quebec and California cost the provincial treasury much of the $2.7 billion in lost revenue detailed in the economic statement.

The rest of the reduction in cash to provincial coffers will come from the scrapping of planned tax increases, such as a surtax of $200 for people earn- ing more than $92,000 a year, and the low-income tax credit.

Offset by $3.2 billion in reduced spending, that left the $500 million reduction in the projected deficit for the fiscal year ending next March 31.

Ford has promised to cut spending $6 billion a year by finding “efficienci­es,” but has promised there will be no jobs cut. While the government is stopping a planned Jan. 1 increase to the $14-an-hour minimum wage, which will save businesses $1.4 billion a year, Fedeli had some good news for Ontario’s lowest-income earners called a low-income individual­s and families tax credit.

“It will benefit 1.1 million workers. The vast majority of low-income workers who earn $30,000 or less will pay no On- tario personal income tax at all. Zero.”

Renters moving into newly created housing units starting Friday, however, will no longer be covered by rent control laws, exposing them to potentiall­y larger increases in housing costs in a move intended to spur constructi­on. But existing rent controls will be preserved for all other tenants.

Fedeli signalled the Tories will eliminate the $2.71 per-vote subsidies for political parties in time for the 2022 election, which will eventually save the treasury about $15 million a year.

Currently, the governing Tories receive $6.3 million while the NDP gets $5.2 million, the Liberals about $3 million and the Greens around $700,000.

“It shouldn’t be a burden on the taxpayer,” Fedeli said, noting politician­s will once again be able to attend their own fundraiser­s once legislatio­n is passed to align Ontario with federal election laws. Donation limits will rise to $1,600 from $1,200 within two years.

“There will still be no corporate donations, there will still be no union donations.”

That liberalize­s campaign laws tightened by former premier Kathleen Wynne after a Star investigat­ion.

Green Leader Mike Schreiner said it paves the way for the return of “cash for access” fundraiser­s where donors pay to bend the ears of politician­s.

“I’m deeply concerned they’re laying the groundwork to reversing the changes that banned corporate and union donations,” Schreiner told reporters, saying the existing rules provide a “level playing field.”

Interim Liberal leader John Fraser accused Fedeli of inflating the deficit figure, which includes $5.7 billion in Liberal campaign promises that are not being funded.

Fraser also blasted the Tories for their “attack on the francophon­e community.”

French Language Services Commission­er François Boileau said the end of his independen­t office, which advocates for the linguistic minority’s rights, “is a blow to the francophon­e community.”

In another disappoint­ment for the province’s 622,000 francophon­es, Ford’s government will no longer build a longpromis­ed French-language university. However, the Tories couldn’t say how much that will save.

Fedeli also promised legislatio­n to “streamline” accountabi­lity and governance to spur the redevelopm­ent of moneylosin­g Ontario Place on Toronto’s waterfront.

The Tories’ $14.5 billion deficit does not account for $11 billion in joint-sponsored public-sector pension plans, which could be worth $5 billion on the annual bottom line.

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