The Peterborough Examiner

Ontario budget 2017

Ontario’s first balanced budget in decade promises billions in health care

- ALLISON JONES THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Ontario’s Liberal government is promising to inject billions of new dollars into health care in its first balanced budget in a decade, a fiscal plan designed to appeal to nearly everyone in the province ahead of an election next summer.

Crafted by a party in power since 2003 that has been faring poorly in recent polls, the $141-billion budget tabled Thursday has measures targeted at both young and old, people who access the health-care system and anyone who owns or rents a home and pays an electricit­y bill.

The centrepiec­e of the plan is a $465-million-a-year pharmacare program for children and youth, which would cover prescripti­on medication­s to treat most acute and common chronic conditions for people 24 and under, with no deductible or co-payment. It would start Jan. 1.

The plan will be most beneficial for youth who currently are not covered under private plans or the Ontario Drug Benefit program for social assistance recipients, but government officials weren’t able to say how many people that captures.

In total, the government is promising $11.5 billion in new spending on health care over three years, including money to address hospital overcrowdi­ng, funding for mental health and addiction services, cash for hospital constructi­on projects and home care funding.

The budget also includes funds for new child care spaces, money to build schools, measures aimed at seniors and previously announced cuts to electricit­y bills and plans to cool the housing market.

Much of the projected spending, however, is spread out over multiple years, well past the June 2018 election. But Finance Minister Charles Sousa said his “socially progressiv­e” budget is not a ploy for votes.

“These decisions that we’re making today are not based on election cycles, they’re based on long-term benefit for the people of Ontario,” he said.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown said the budget is not, in fact, structural­ly balanced, because of one-time asset sale money — such as the sale of shares of Hydro One — and accounting “tricks,” such as counting public pension surpluses as assets, against the advice of the province’s auditor general.

“This budget is a patchwork attempt by a desperate government to fix the mess they’ve created before the next election,” he said. “If they lose this next election this is spending they’ll never have to be accountabl­e for.”

The price tag for the pharmacare plan was not in the budget itself and was provided only verbally by staffers.

“Listen, that document is what, 296 pages long,” Sousa said when asked about the absence. “You can’t put everything in the document.”

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, who just this week announced a New Democrat government would bring in universal pharmacare for people of all ages, said the Liberal plan seems last minute.

“All I can think of is that they made it up on the back of a napkin before they got to today,” she said.

Health-care advocates applauded the drug coverage plan, but said the increase in hospital dollars wasn’t enough.

“We’ve come off nine years in a row of hospital cuts or budget freezes, so we’re a long way behind now,” said Natalie Mehra of the Ontario Health Coalition.

Health Minister Eric Hoskins said he’s confident the funding increase will allow for improvemen­ts in care. On pharmacare, he said the government will immediatel­y begin working with insurers to make sure their cost savings are passed on to employers and employees.

The Liberals had promised no new taxes on families, though they are increasing tobacco taxes by $10 per carton over the next three years and giving municipali­ties the power to introduce a hotel tax.

In addition to balancing the books this year, the government is now projecting balanced budgets through to 2019-20. Despite reaching balance, however, the province’s debt continues to grow.

It is projected to be $312 billion this year, growing to $336 billion in 2019-20. Interest on debt is the fourth largest spending area, at $11.6 billion.

Historical­ly low interest rates helped the province get to balance, but interest on debt is still projected to be the fastest growing expenditur­e area, at an average 3.6 per cent from 2015 to 2020.

Nonetheles­s, the government paints a rosy economic outlook, projecting two per cent average GDP growth through to 2020, driven by exports and business investment.

On the infrastruc­ture front, spending is growing from a promise last year of $160 billion over 12 years to $190 billion over 13 years. The additional $30 billion will go toward new hospital projects, school renewal and child care expansion.

Ontario will also move ahead with planning a high-speed rail corridor between Toronto, KitchenerW­aterloo, London and Windsor, the government said in the budget. The project could cut in half the fourhour travel time from Toronto to Windsor.

Under the education banner, about $16 billion is earmarked over 10 years to build and improve schools at a time when the government is coming under fire for rural school closures. Another $200 million will go to creating 24,000 child care spaces and subsidizin­g 60 per cent of them.

Post-secondary graduates will now have to start repaying the provincial part of their student loans when they are earning a $35,000 salary, up from $25,000, which student groups applauded.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa, right, delivers the 2017 Ontario budget next to Premier Kathleen Wynne at Queen’s Park in Toronto on Thursday.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa, right, delivers the 2017 Ontario budget next to Premier Kathleen Wynne at Queen’s Park in Toronto on Thursday.

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