Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Set To Deliver Fourth Straight Balanced Budget

The Canadian Press, 15 Feb, 2016 10:47 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's Liberal government is set to deliver a fourth consecutive balanced budget Tuesday with sprinkles of relief expected for first-time home buyers trying to get into a red hot real estate market. 
     
    Tweaks were also signalled on medical services premiums and more cash promised for social service programs in a throne speech last week that said the government will "resist the temptation to spend our way into trouble."
     
    Premier Christy Clark said the budget targets affordability on several fronts, but the measures will be incremental.
     
    "The budget, what you'll see, is relief across the board for people in all different sectors," she told reporters last week in Vancouver.
     
    Clark said the government has already moved to help single-parent families with cuts to their medical premiums, but a massive overhaul or elimination of the program — called for by the Opposition New Democrats and the Green party — is not in the cards, yet.
     
    "It's antiquated, it's old, and the way people pay for it generally doesn't make a whole ton of sense," Clark said.  "I think in terms of wholesale change though, it's going to take a little longer for us to work through some of that, but you will see some things in this budget."
     
     
    B.C.'s next provincial election is set for May 2017.
     
    NDP finance critic Carole James said the medical premiums are an unfair tax that results in people earning $30,000 annually or more paying the same rates as those who earn $1 million.
     
    "We have to get rid of this unfair tax," she said.
     
    James said B.C. families are being squeezed with fee and rate increases, including hydro, insurance, tuition and medical premium rates.
     
    "The piece I'll be looking for in the budget is the issue of affordability for families," she said. "If you take a look at how difficult it is for people right now, and the fees and services and increased taxes this government has put on families, it is getting tougher and tougher."
     
    B.C. Hydro rates jumped four per cent last month and the Canadian Taxpayers Federation says B.C.'s medical premium rates have increased 39 per cent since 2009, from $108 a month for a family with children to $150 per month now.
     
    Finance Minister Mike de Jong said the medical premium payments, which collect more than $2 billion annually, account for about 14 per cent of B.C.'s health budget of almost $19 billion.
     
    He said the government is looking at being more flexible with medical premiums but he rejects calls to make the payments part of the income tax system.
     
    "I disagree with that," he said. "All you are doing is creating the illusion health care is free, and it's not."
     
    De Jong said the major achievement of his latest budget remains the fact it will be balanced, an accomplishment most provinces and the federal government won't realize this year.
     
     
    The Royal Bank forecasts B.C.'s economy to lead Canada's growth rate this year at 3.1 per cent and 2.9 per cent in 2017. The B.C. government has forecast growth at 2.4 per cent this year.
     
    Last fall, de Jong forecast the budget to include a surplus of $265 million, down about $20 million from the original estimate due largely to falling resource revenues, particularly natural gas.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck
    The SPCA responded to a call last February about a tethered young pit-bull cross in distress on Daniel Elliott's property near Ladysmith, B.C.

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck

    RCMP Credit Horn-honking Homeowner For Halting Thefts In Salmon Arm, B.C.

    RCMP Credit Horn-honking Homeowner For Halting Thefts In Salmon Arm, B.C.
    SALMON ARM , B.C. — A Salmon Arm, B.C., man didn't need a cellphone to call for help as he chased robbers from his home when a lower-tech method proved just as effective, and a lot noisier.

    RCMP Credit Horn-honking Homeowner For Halting Thefts In Salmon Arm, B.C.

    Death Toll Now At 2: Worker Badly Burned In Alberta Oilsands Explosion Dies

    Death Toll Now At 2: Worker Badly Burned In Alberta Oilsands Explosion Dies
    The critically injured man had been transported to the burn unit at an Edmonton hospital, where his family from Nova Scotia stayed by his side.

    Death Toll Now At 2: Worker Badly Burned In Alberta Oilsands Explosion Dies

    Justin Trudeau May Regret Resource Industry Comments Made In Davos: B.C. Mines Minister

    Justin Trudeau May Regret Resource Industry Comments Made In Davos: B.C. Mines Minister
    Bill Bennett says Trudeau may come to regret saying in a speech that Canada amounts to not just the resources under Canadians' feet but rather their resourcefulness and what lies between their ears.

    Justin Trudeau May Regret Resource Industry Comments Made In Davos: B.C. Mines Minister

    Military Reserve Running 19 Per Cent Under Strength As Part-Timers Bail

    Military Reserve Running 19 Per Cent Under Strength As Part-Timers Bail
    The numbers were released in federal departmental performance reports for the last budget year, which also show the military's medical branch has 367 unfilled positions — both uniformed and civilian.

    Military Reserve Running 19 Per Cent Under Strength As Part-Timers Bail

    New Documents Offer Little Insight On UBC President Arvind Gupta's Resignation

    The university has released 861 pages of documents in response to a series of Access to Information requests, including meeting agendas, receipts, emails and the terms of Gupta's resignation.

    New Documents Offer Little Insight On UBC President Arvind Gupta's Resignation