Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

N.B. leaders prepare for final exchange

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Sep, 2020 06:12 PM
  • N.B. leaders prepare for final exchange

The Progressive Conservatives in New Brunswick have released a platform with $11.4 million in new spending promises, just hours ahead of the final televised exchange between party leaders.

The document using the slogan, "Recover. Reinvent. Renew," is coming out in the final stretch of the campaign before Monday's vote.

The platform repeats last year's budget plan to provide a modest spending increase in health care, it continues a push to retain immigrants, and it commits to provide updated civics classes and better internet service to schools.

However it also details new spending commitments that include $1.4 million annually for nurses to support the transition of seniors out of hospital and into their own homes or nursing homes, and $3.5 million annually for improvements in mental health services.

There will also be an added $1 million for a school food program and pay increases for early childhood educators that will cost $3.5 million a year. The platform also includes an increase of $2 million annually for policing.

Party leaders will have a chance on Thursday evening to debate the latest Tory proposals during a roundtable discussion being hosted on CTV. The four leaders whose parties have members in the legislature are taking part in the virtual event.

The Tory platform summarizes the kind of message leader Blaine Higgs has been delivering on the campaign trail and in the party debates.

In its opening pages, Higgs says the minority Tories achieved 62 per cent of the party's promises from the 2018 election, noting that prior to COVID-19 there was net debt reduction of $129.3 million.

The document also emphasizes that Statistics Canada is projecting the province will achieve a rapid return to pre-COVID-19 employment levels.

Health care has been a tender area for the Progressive Conservatives — and the platform emphasizes that the prior budget's small spending increases will be maintained if the party is re-elected.

Earlier this year, Higgs had to retreat from his party's plan to reduce emergency room hours and convert acute-care beds into long-term care at six rural hospitals after a public outcry.

Liberal party leader Kevin Vickers has accused Higgs of having a secret plan to cut health services.

However, the Tory platform repeats prior announcements on health care to provide $5 million to recruit doctors in rural areas, $4.2 million to add nurse practitioners to clinics and ERs, and to cut "excessive wait lists" for hip and knee replacement in half by next March.

The spending increase on early childhood education confirms this year's 75-cent increase in the hourly wage, and the platform promises wages will go from $16 to $19 hourly by 2023.

Monday's election is the first in the country since the start of the pandemic.

MORE National ARTICLES

Victoria mural sponsor doesn't approve of acronym

Victoria mural sponsor doesn't approve of acronym
Victoria police Chief Del Manak has said the city-sponsored mural on justice issues disrespects members of the police department.

Victoria mural sponsor doesn't approve of acronym

UPDATE: Vancouver Police Looking for Woman With Alzheimer's

UPDATE: Vancouver Police Looking for Woman With Alzheimer's
UPDATE: She has been found safe and sound. Shirley Gamlin left her residence in the area of West 41st Avenue and West Boulevard yesterday morning.

UPDATE: Vancouver Police Looking for Woman With Alzheimer's

No charges for spouse of police chief in Delta, B.C.

No charges for spouse of police chief in Delta, B.C.
The police board says in a statement that it has learned the Crown has not approved criminal charges and referred the matter to alternative measures.

No charges for spouse of police chief in Delta, B.C.

Pooled testing could help with back to school

Pooled testing could help with back to school
Some epidemiologists believe testing a group of COVID nasal-swab samples together — a strategy known as pooled testing or batch testing — might be a more efficient method for dealing with a large number of tests that could potentially be coming in.

Pooled testing could help with back to school

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk
While about a dozen demonstrators rallied on the Boardwalk, about a half-mile away, volunteers for the city painted the words “Black Lives Matter” in bold yellow on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

Compromise keeps 'Black Lives Matter' paint off Boardwalk

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court
The woman was seeking a stay of a lower court ruling that rejected her request for an injunction, having concluded the 83-year-old man with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease — identified as Mr. X — was entitled to the procedure because he met the criteria under federal law.

N.S. assisted death case: wife loses in court