Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Kathleen Wynne Defends $100,000 Threshold For Sunshine List Of Public Sector Workers

The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2016 11:43 AM
    TORONTO — Premier Kathleen Wynne says the Liberal government has no plans to raise the $100,000 threshold for Ontario's so-called sunshine list of public sector workers.
     
    The list comes out later today, and will provide salaries and benefits for tens of thousands of workers, including police, firefighters, nurses, teachers, librarians and civil servants.
     
    The $100,000 limit for the sunshine list was set 20 years ago, but Wynne says that's still a lot of money for many people.
     
    She says the threshold is "still relevant at that rate," which is why her government is leaving it there — the same comments she made when last year's sunshine list was released.
     
    There are usually thousands of workers in Ontario's electricity sector on the sunshine list, but the government removed Hydro One workers from the list when it started to privatize up to 60 per cent of the transmission agency.
     
    Wynne denies the government is trying to bury the sunshine list by releasing it at the start of a four-day long weekend.
     
    It is expected to be released around noon.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Funding Adds New Quake Sensors Off B.C. Coast, Able To Sound Early Alarm

    The B.C. government has provided $5 million, allowing Ocean Networks Canada to install eight more sensors on the ocean floor west of Vancouver Island

    Funding Adds New Quake Sensors Off B.C. Coast, Able To Sound Early Alarm

    Actress Pamela Anderson Asks Justin Trudeau To Cut Federal Aid For The Seal Hunt

    Actress Pamela Anderson Asks Justin Trudeau To Cut Federal Aid For The Seal Hunt
    In a letter to Trudeau, the Canadian-born actress asks him to meet her to discuss phasing out or ending federal subsidies for the East Coast commercial seal hunt.

    Actress Pamela Anderson Asks Justin Trudeau To Cut Federal Aid For The Seal Hunt

    Some $16 Million Raised For Syrian Relief To Be Matched By Feds, Well Short Of Goal

    Some $16 Million Raised For Syrian Relief To Be Matched By Feds, Well Short Of Goal
    Monday marked the final day for Canadians to give money for Syrian aid in order to ensure those dollars were matched by the federal government.

    Some $16 Million Raised For Syrian Relief To Be Matched By Feds, Well Short Of Goal

    RCMP Nab Fugitive Moncton Murder Suspect Known For Her Changing Looks

    RCMP Nab Fugitive Moncton Murder Suspect Known For Her Changing Looks
    RCMP said they arrested Marissa Shephard at 12:30 Tuesday in Moncton

    RCMP Nab Fugitive Moncton Murder Suspect Known For Her Changing Looks

    Imperial Tobacco Challenges Quebec Law Banning Flavoured Tobacco, Menthol Smokes

    Imperial Tobacco Challenges Quebec Law Banning Flavoured Tobacco, Menthol Smokes
    The Montreal-based firm suggests the government's move to prohibit flavoured tobacco and menthol cigarettes will help fuel the contraband trade.

    Imperial Tobacco Challenges Quebec Law Banning Flavoured Tobacco, Menthol Smokes

    Not Just Durga, Mahishasur Also Worshipped In India

    Not Just Durga, Mahishasur Also Worshipped In India
    HRD Minister Smriti Irani's controversial comments on Durga and Mahishasur appear to ignore the varied folk traditions in which the latter is adulated as a king and an ancestor

    Not Just Durga, Mahishasur Also Worshipped In India