Toronto Star

Conservati­ves say election promises will cost $6.8B

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RICHMOND, B.C.— The full Conservati­ve party platform says its campaign promises will cost $6.8 billion over four years, with much of the spending coming in the final years of the mandate.

The 159-page document says the pledges will cost $590 million next year and gradually rise to $2.9 billion by 2019-20, as about $1 billion in compensati­on costs for the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p trade deal kicks in.

The party is also promising budget surpluses of $1.7 billion in 2016-17 and $1.4 billion the year after.

The projected surplus would then dip to $947 million, due mainly to the rising cost of compensati­ng dairy and automotive industries under the trade deal agreement.

The surpluses would come after money is set aside for contingenc­ies, including emergencie­s and natural disasters.

The platform includes costs for programs already announced during the campaign, such as the $1.5-billion home renovation tax credit Stephen Harper proposed in August.

New programs include $100 million over three years for a program to support crop science, which was sought by Saskatchew­an Premier Brad Wall.

There is also $3 million a year for a Correction­al Service Canada program to have prisoners build homes in partnershi­p with Habitat for Humanity and $10 million a year to fund summer jobs in the trades for high school students.

However, a re-elected Conservati­ve government would continue a freeze on federal operating budgets, with savings estimated at $565 million next year.

The freeze was originally to expire this year, but is being extended by a year.

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