Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Finance Minister Bill Morneau Says Commitment To Health Care Remains, Although Not In Budget

The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2016 12:15 PM
    OTTAWA — Finance Minister Bill Morneau says the federal Liberal government remains committed to boosting funding for health care, even though his maiden budget devotes not a dime to home care or a new health accord with the provinces.
     
    The Liberals made "an immediate commitment" in last fall's election platform to invest $3 billion over four years to deliver more and better home care, including palliative care, starting with a $415-million infusion this year.
     
    They also promised to restart negotiations with the provinces on a new health accord, although no price tag was ever attached to that promise.
     
    Morneau says the only way to improve the health system is by working with the provinces, which have constitutional responsibility for delivering health care.
     
    He says those discussions haven't progressed far enough yet to include a funding commitment in Tuesday's budget.
     
    But NDP health critic Don Davies says the omissions constitute a "completely broken promise."
     
    "During the last campaign, the Liberals told Canadians they would invest $3 billion over four years in home care," Davies told the House of Commons on Thursday.
     
    "What does the Liberal budget commit? Absolutely nothing."
     
    Earlier Thursday, during a roundtable interview with The Canadian Press, Morneau insisted the Liberals "remain committed to our health care system."
     
    "We know that that's important for every single Canadian. We also know that the only way to get to good conclusions on health care in our country is by working together with the provinces."
     
     
    Morneau said negotiations with the provinces will include discussions on home care, palliative care and mental health but "we're just not at the stage where that was something that we wanted to put forward in the budget because those discussions need to happen for us to have a clear sense of direction."
     
    With the government poised to introduce a new law governing medical assistance in dying, health experts have argued it's crucial to simultaneously improve palliative care so that terminally ill Canadians won't feel they have little choice but to end their lives prematurely.
     
    In the Commons, Health Minister Jane Philpott assured Davies she's working "every day" with her provincial counterparts on a long-term health accord "that will include a number of initiatives, including a $3-billion investment in home care."
     
    The last 10-year health accord, which included an annual six-per-cent increase in health transfers to the provinces, expired in 2014. The previous Conservative government refused to renegotiate it and unilaterally declared that the six-per-cent escalator would end in 2017.
     
    Although they denounced the Conservative move and promised to negotiate a new accord with a long-term funding agreement, the Liberals did not specifically promise to reinstate the escalator. And Philpott appeared to suggest Thursday that it's not in the cards.
     
    At $36 billion, health transfers are already "the largest in Canadian history," she told the Commons.
     
    As for not putting the promised $3 billion in additional home care funding on the books yet, Philpott said later that the federal government first wants to strike an agreement with the provinces about how that money is to be spent "and what Canadians should expect to see as a result."
     
    However, Davies argued that if the money isn't in the budget, it will have to come out of existing funding for other health initiatives.
     
     
    "The minister can't skate on this," he said. "She can't claim to honour those promises and then not have that money in the budget to back up the promises. It's as simple as that."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Senator Don Meredith's Alleged Relationship With Teen Back Under Ethics Office Review

    Senator Don Meredith's Alleged Relationship With Teen Back Under Ethics Office Review
    OTTAWA — The Senate's ethics officer has resumed an investigation into allegations that Sen. Don Meredith had a sexual relationship with a teenager.

    Senator Don Meredith's Alleged Relationship With Teen Back Under Ethics Office Review

    Hells Angels Lose Court Bid To Take Back Clubhouse On Vancouver Island

    Hells Angels Lose Court Bid To Take Back Clubhouse On Vancouver Island
    The province seized the clubhouse in November 2007 under the Civil Forfeiture Act.

    Hells Angels Lose Court Bid To Take Back Clubhouse On Vancouver Island

    Ontario Added 19,800 Jobs In January, Only Province To Show Gains

    Ontario Added 19,800 Jobs In January, Only Province To Show Gains
    Despite the gains, Ontario's unemployment rate last month held steady at 6.7 per cent, below the Canadian average of 7.2 per cent.

    Ontario Added 19,800 Jobs In January, Only Province To Show Gains

    B.C. Says Economic Growth Keeps Greenhouse Gas Emissions Hovering At Two Per Cent

    B.C. Says Economic Growth Keeps Greenhouse Gas Emissions Hovering At Two Per Cent
    However, the Environment Ministry reports that overall industrial carbon dioxide emissions were up 2.1 per cent between 2013 and 2014.

    B.C. Says Economic Growth Keeps Greenhouse Gas Emissions Hovering At Two Per Cent

    Defence, Crown Debate Reliability Of Testimony From Dead Witness In Murder Case

    Defence, Crown Debate Reliability Of Testimony From Dead Witness In Murder Case
    Sheryl Ann Flynn's videotaped account of a frightening conversation she had with Thomas Ted Barrett in 2006 was ruled admissible Thursday in the Nova Scotia Supreme Court trial of the 40-year-old Cape Breton man.

    Defence, Crown Debate Reliability Of Testimony From Dead Witness In Murder Case

    Amish Give Up On Pricey Ontario, Head For New Life On Prince Edward Island Farms

    Amish Give Up On Pricey Ontario, Head For New Life On Prince Edward Island Farms
    According to realtor Brad Oliver, it has simply gotten too expensive in Ontario for the Amish communities to expand, and young people to own their own farms.

    Amish Give Up On Pricey Ontario, Head For New Life On Prince Edward Island Farms