Truro News

Investing a windfall

-

Premier Stephen Mcneil and Finance Minister Karen Casey held an unusual press conference last Thursday to preempt the provincial budget that Ms. Casey will table this week with a cornucopia of one-time investment­s.

They’re mostly in new broadband infrastruc­ture and in health, oceans and IT research. Yet there are also funds for heat and shelter programs, primary health-care access, opioid countermea­sures, primary healthcare and employment assistance for people with autism spectrum disorder.

The reason for the prequel isn’t surprising. The province will show a huge offshore royalty windfall for the 201718 fiscal year that ends March 31. Mr. Mcneil says the finances are healthy enough to let him to spend it on economic and community priorities — stuff that premiers’ news conference­s are made of. He says the investment­s will drive growth, attract matching private and federal funds and meet compassion­ate needs in health and housing.

The windfall, estimated at $250 million, comes from winning an arbitratio­n on how much producers could deduct from gas royalties for their pipeline costs. Eighteen years of royalties were recalculat­ed and the added amount must be recognized in this year’s revenue. The responsibl­e options were to use it to pay down debt, make one-time payments on priorities matters or do both.

The government is picking door No. 2: keep the surplus where it was ($139 million in December’s update) and make one-time investment­s that will boost economic capacity and address some severe social needs. Is this a good choice? It depends on the quality of the investment­s.

Few would argue that we shouldn’t be preparing for an opioid scourge or that $18.2 million for primary-care access is wasted when 40,000 people are looking for a doctor or primary- care team. If anything, the public would give this the highest priority in making the province more attractive.

There is also a good record of provincial investment­s in health, oceans and IT research and innovation reaping matching funds and creating employment opportunit­ies.

It’s the biggest bet — putting $120 million into an Internet Trust to improve broadband infrastruc­ture and boost high-speed access — that’ll raise the most questions. Yes, slow or no broadband is a serious barrier to economic growth in rural Nova Scotia. Changing that is a legitimate priority. But we could have had some public examinatio­n first of the trust concept, of the $120-million budget and of the strategy adopted from a report, released only Thursday, from consultant­s Brightstar Canada. High speed is great for broadband, less attractive in scrutinizi­ng public spending.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada