The Peterborough Examiner

Premier Ford lists three priorities for 2019

PCs will focus on health care, jobs and the budget, premier says in letter

- ROBERT BENZIE

TORONTO — Premier Doug Ford says improving health care, continuing Ontario’s jobs boom, and “balancing the budget in a responsibl­e manner” are his government’s top priorities this year.

In a New Year’s letter to Ontario’s 68,000 public servants sent Monday, Ford thanked them for “providing consistent, highqualit­y, non-partisan profession­al advice” as the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves took power last June after almost 15 years of Liberal rule.

“Any time there is a change in government there are new demands placed on each of you to ensure a seamless transition and encourage effective policy making without disrupting any of the government’s core services,” the premier wrote in his missive signed “Doug.”

“With your support, we have been moving forward at a lightning pace,” he continued, emphasizin­g the Tories “came into office with a clear blueprint” to cut taxes, “clean up Ontario’s hydro mess … and take steps to end hallway health care.”

Ford told bureaucrat­s that “we have a lot of work ahead of us in 2019.”

The premier said Health Minister Christine Elliott is working hard to protect the province’s medicare system.

“Our government will continue to ensure necessary funding for world-class health care in Ontario, but this issue must be about more than money,” he said.

“It will also be about embracing change and innovation, deploying technology more effectivel­y, and committing to new models of collaborat­ion and patient care.”

While he did not mention the government’s fractious relationsh­ip with Ontario’s doctors, who also sparred over compensati­on with previous Liberal administra­tions, he praised “our incredible nurses, doctors and frontline health-care profession­als.”

As well, Ford, who campaigned on making the equivalent of $6 billion in budget cuts though he has promised “not one” job would be eliminated, warned belt-tightening looms as the Tories tackle a $14.5-billion shortfall.

“If we allow this deficit to continue to fester and grow, it will end up imperiling our hospitals, schools and other public services.

“We cannot allow this to happen,” he wrote.

“The good news is that, with your support and under the leadership of (Finance Minister) … Vic Fedeli and (Treasury Board President) Peter Bethlenfal­vy, our government has already taken a number of measures to restore fiscal discipline to Ontario.”

Opposition parties have charged for months that the Tories are exaggerati­ng the fiscal challenge to justify reduced spending.

“We’ve seen them cut programs that go to help young people learn about truth and reconcilia­tion, cut programs for our most marginaliz­ed young people, and this government should be ashamed of itself,” Liberal MPP Michael Coteau (Don Valley East) said last month in reference to the first wave of spending cutbacks that hit some Indigenous and youth services.

The New Democrats have also said Ontarians should brace themselves for a Conservati­ve austerity push this year.

“These cuts are going to be deeply felt by students,” NDP MPP Marit Stiles (Davenport) said last month, referring to lower education grants to school boards.

“Doug Ford’s cuts in classrooms are callous, and will only make the education and learning outcome challenges Ontario is facing even worse.”

The province’s independen­t financial accountabi­lity officer said the deficit is at least $1.2 billion lower than the government’s forecast.

Despite the imminent end of General Motors Canada’s historic manufactur­ing of vehicles in Oshawa, Ford said in his letter that “the positive job-creation numbers we saw in December should be encouragin­g to us all.”

“We know opportunit­ies are out there.

“Indeed, whenever I travel the province I hear from prospectiv­e employers who are desperate to bring on more workers,” he wrote.

Ford said that Economic Developmen­t Minister Todd Smith would be working with bureaucrat­s to “connect more workers to good paying jobs while encouragin­g job creation, investment and trade both inside and outside of Canada.”

He heralded the Tories for “eliminatin­g the cap-and-trade carbon tax,” Ontario’s environmen­tal alliance with Quebec and California, which led to higher gasoline and natural gas prices while bringing in $1.9 billion to the treasury.

But that has now exposed the province to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s federal carbon “backstop,” which the Tories are spending $30 million to fight with a constituti­onal court challenge.

The premier closed his letter by hailing their retiring boss, Steve Orsini, the secretary of cabinet, who leaves later this month after 27 years of public service.

“Steve played a key role in ensuring our government could set such an ambitious pace throughout 2018 and I will certainly miss his counsel, strategic insights and understand­ing of how the government of Ontario touches people’s lives,” he wrote.

“I want you to know that a thorough search for Steve’s successor is already underway and we will share an update with you shortly.”

Sources have told The Toronto Star that the front-runner to succeed Orsini is deputy attorney general Paul Boniferro.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Ontario Premier Doug Ford warned in a letter to bureaucrat­s that Ontario’s deficit threatens to imperil “our hospitals, schools and other public services.”
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS Ontario Premier Doug Ford warned in a letter to bureaucrat­s that Ontario’s deficit threatens to imperil “our hospitals, schools and other public services.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada