Transform SK report provides more insight than ugly protests
It appears reasonableness doesn’t take one very far in political discourse these days.
As we see to the south of us, the more you obstreperously oppose everything, the more likely you are to get your way. Just yell louder. Be more threatening. Your tribe will eventually get its way ... although you might not necessarily like what you get.
Politics has also always been tribal, but seldom have tribes been so uncivil.
Sadly, at last week’s rally/protests against Premier Brad Wall’s Saskatchewan Party fundraising dinner, we saw some embrace the Trump-era tactics ... although we need to keep this in perspective.
The vast majority of Saskatoon protesters were well-behaved. They were not jumping on cars or swearing or giving the finger to those paying $250 a ticket to a gain access to Wall and the Sask. Party cabinet.
That unfairly portrays the majority who weren’t being ignorant, self-indulgent idiots, and had a strong, collective message to bring concerning the Sask. Party government’s 2017-18 budget cuts and how one of its bigger problems is favouritism to business that is still clearly buying access.
Protest all you want. Even post pictures of Porsches, Mercedes (and, of course, CPR company vehicles) driving into Wall’s dinner, if you feel that helps. But when you do something ignorant, stupid and illegal, you lose.
Alas, the bigger-picture problem is that such bad behaviour isn’t only counterproductive for the perpetrators. It detracts from conversation as a whole that should be about ideas and sensible alternatives.
For losing sight of this, may I offer my own apologies. And allow me to make amends by revisiting one reasoned discussion last week that didn’t get nearly enough play.
A week ago, five high-level Saskatchewan business groups — the Saskatchewan Chamber of Commerce, Saskatchewan Construction Association, Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Mining Association and Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters — Saskatchewan — outlined their Transform SK report.
The timing would have been better had the report arrived before all the carnage in the 2017-18 March 22 budget presentation. After all, the business nature of these organizations gives them a certain sway.
That said, of the 45 calls to action, many focused on longterm economic prosperity, but many also took a surprisingly serious look at how social issues are integrated with business ones. The result is a lot of reason.
Besides practical considerations like “a five-year rolling financial planning cycle within the Government of Saskatchewan and all Saskatchewan municipalities” and “Transition Deputy Ministers to departmental, competencybased Chief Executive Officers,” the report’s recommendations touch on key political issues of the day like “Clearly defining the long-term role of Crown corporations,” and “consider legislative changes authorizing municipalities to generate reasonable ownsource revenue.”
Such advice would have been helpful to the Wall government, pre-budget. And in a fair-minded way, the business leaders’ report hits on important social issues that call on government to:
Fully consult on, review, and execute a ‘Saskatchewan response’ to the calls to action outlined within Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation (TRC) report.
A graduated plan to expand the role of Indigenous Peoples in government procurement.
Commit, at all levels of government, to a Saskatchewan Students’ Charter.
Ensure ‘money follows the need’ — that schools receive the necessary funds to react to changing special needs realities throughout the year.
Immediately shift policies and resources toward preventive and community-based service to reduce the ‘downstream’ financial pressure on the acute care system.
Pilot, for full-scale evaluation, a universal basic income (UBI) program.
A business report considering universal basic income?
Now, that’s a lot more interesting than some protester giving a Wall supporter the finger and the Wall supporter returning the gesture in kind.
One only wishes all would listen to reasoned argument as well as the Transform SK group has.