The Hamilton Spectator

Ottawa signs 10-year, $8.4B funding deal with Ontario

Trudeau says agreements in principle also reached with Atlantic provinces

- LIAM CASEY

Ontario and the federal government have reached a 10-year deal in principle on health care, paving the way for both sides to iron out the details of how the new money will be spent.

Health Minister Sylvia Jones said the province accepted the deal on Wednesday after the two sides agreed to add reviews into the deal to ensure long-term sustainabi­lity.

“As Ontario continues to invest at record levels in our publicly funded system, this additional funding will bolster Ontario’s investment­s in health care as we implement our plan for connected and convenient care,” Jones wrote in a statement Thursday.

“We look forward to working with our federal counterpar­ts to reach common ground on ensuring there is sustainabl­e federal health-care funding for generation­s to come. Ontarians deserve no less.”

Canada’s premiers agreed earlier this month to accept Ottawa’s offer of more than $46 billion to augment the Canada Health Transfer.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the federal government had also agreed to healthcare deals in principle with all four Atlantic provinces. Trudeau said the developmen­t was “great news.”

“I’ve signed memorandum­s of understand­ings to start the negotiatio­ns right now on how we’re going to deliver these better outcomes for Canadians,” he said in Halifax. The premiers have said they were disappoint­ed with the deal, but would take any new money on the table. Premier Doug Ford has said the deal was a good “down payment.”

Since 2020, the premiers have been asking Ottawa to increase the annual health transfers to cover 35 per cent of provincial health budgets, up from the current 22 per cent. To get there, the premiers said they wanted an immediate increase of $28 billion a year, and then an additional five per cent annually after that. The federal government is working out separate bilateral deals with the provinces and territorie­s to address needs specific to each jurisdicti­on.

Ottawa said the deal with Ontario includes $8.4 billion in new money plus $776 million in a one-time top up to address “urgent needs, especially in pediatric hospitals and emergency rooms, and long wait times for surgeries.”

“Today’s agreement in principle with Ontario is an opportunit­y to continue our collaborat­ion and improve the experience of health workers and those they care for,” federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos wrote in a statement.

“It will modernize our health-care system, improve access to family health services and mental-health services, reduce surgical backlogs and support health workers. Better quality of care means helping Canadians live longer, healthier lives.”

The money comes after several difficult years for hospitals across Ontario. COVID-19 forced them to cancel surgeries in an attempt to deal with a flood of sick patients that overwhelme­d emergency department­s and intensive care units.

The province said there are more than 200,000 surgeries in its backlog. In the fall, young children inundated Ontario’s four children’s hospitals with particular­ly harsh strains of influenza and respirator­y syncytial virus. Those hospitals, too, had to cancel surgeries in order to redeploy staff to emergency department­s and ICUs.

There are nearly 12,000 children who need surgeries, the majority of whom have waited longer than the clinically determined benchmark.

The agreement in principle now allows for further discussion­s on how the new money will be spent. The province said those talks are expected to last several weeks as they negotiate the details before the deal is finalized.

Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfal­vy said Thursday the province is committed to spending the new money on health care.

“We will spend the health-care money because the No. 1 priority is to make sure that not only do we have the investment­s ... but we need to make sure that it’s sustainabl­e for the future,” Bethlenfal­vy said.

 ?? RILEY SMITH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers questions at a media scrum in Halifax on Thursday. Ontario, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have formally agreed to the federal health-care funding deal.
RILEY SMITH THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau answers questions at a media scrum in Halifax on Thursday. Ontario, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick have formally agreed to the federal health-care funding deal.

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