The Daily Courier

Trudeau holds firm on health-care demands; COVID-19 aid first

- By JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government will keep its spending focus on emergency aid and won’t talk about hiking longterm health-care funding until after the COVID-19 pandemic is over.

He says Ottawa needs to keep supporting those hit hard financiall­y by the pandemic, having sent billions in aid to businesses and individual­s, as well as to provinces.

Speaking at a midday press conference, Trudeau said that short-term outlook can’t yet give way to longer-term concerns about the effect COVID-19 is having on the Canada’s provincial­ly run health-care systems.

On Thursday, the country’s premiers reiterated their demand for a handsome increase in the unconditio­nal transfer payments the federal government sends provinces and territorie­s each year for health care.

But Trudeau held firm on Friday, telling reporters he wouldn’t yet negotiate on long-term health care funding.

“As we get through this pandemic, and once we’re on the other side, it is obvious that there will be a need for greater financing of health care in this country, including through the Canada Health Transfer,” Trudeau said.

“As I’ve said to premiers, we will be there to increase those transfers. But that conversati­on needs to happen once we are through this pandemic because right now, the supports we’re giving to Canadians are the ones that are needed to get through this pandemic.”

The federal government this year will transfer to the provinces nearly $42 billion for health care, under an arrangemen­t that sees the amount rise by at least three per cent each year.

Premiers argue that amount doesn’t keep pace with yearly cost increases of about five per cent, which would mean Ottawa would have to add $28 billion this year to cover just over one-third of national costs, and about $4 billion annually thereafter.

Quebec Premier Francois Legault, chair of the premiers’ council, stressed Thursday that the pandemicre­lated expenses Ottawa has incurred are one-time costs.

Once they roll off, he argued, federal finances could recover over time and end in far better shape over the long run than provinces mired in debt.

In late November, Finance Department officials tried to estimate how much more provinces had spent on health care during the pandemic in a briefing note to Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland.

The figures in the back of the briefing note, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act, suggested the pandemic had by the fall added hundreds of millions in costs for some provinces, subject to a giant asterisk.

Officials cautioned that informatio­n on the shortterm impacts of the pandemic on health-care spending was “scarce.”

The briefing pointed to a study by the Conference Board of Canada that estimated health care costs due to COVID-19 were in a range of $20.1 billion and $26.9 billion in the 2020-2021 fiscal year.

“Longer-term cost projection­s vary greatly and will depend largely on the evolution of the pandemic and vaccine developmen­t and administra­tion,” officials wrote.

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