Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 May, 2016 10:51 AM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — As Newfoundland and Labrador's governing Liberals fend off angry protests over a tax-hiking budget, another pricey item looms on their radar: a $32,000 pay hike for provincial judges.
     
    An independent tribunal has recommended increases totalling 14 per cent from 2013-14 to 2016-17, including accumulated retroactive pay of almost $1 million, a Justice spokesman confirms.
     
    If approved, 23 full-time provincial court judges now earning $215,732 would make $247,546 this year, said Luke Joyce in an emailed statement.
     
    Opposition Leader Paul Davis said the pay hike won't fly.
     
    "It wouldn't go over at all," the former Progressive Conservative premier said in an interview. "To see someone who has a salary today of over $200,000 looking at a potential raise that would increase their salary by an amount greater than what many Newfoundlanders and Labradorians earn, I think people would be irate."
     
    The average salary for a provincial court judge in Atlantic Canada was about $242,000 in 2015, Joyce said. The highest paid provincial court judges in Canada include Alberta, at almost $294,000, and Ontario, at $284,276, according to last year's Sunshine List.
     
    A judicial pay hike would come as Newfoundland and Labrador is caught in a daunting cash crunch.
     
    Despite sweeping tax and fee increases and a "deficit reduction levy" of up to $900 for top earners, the province is still forecasting a deficit of $1.8 billion this fiscal year. Offshore oil earnings that once provided about 30 per cent of government revenues have plunged to around seven per cent since Brent crude prices crashed.
     
    It's a jarring economic about-face. The province is now bearing the brunt of tax cuts and spending increases approved in fleeting boom times over the last decade.
     
    Incensed taxpayers have marched in protests across the province as the government braces for contract talks with public sector unions later this year. On top of about 650 job cuts outlined in the budget last month, Finance Minister Cathy Bennett has signalled more pain is coming to create a "sustainable" government workforce.
     
    Justice Minister Andrew Parsons declined through the ministry spokesman to comment on judges' salaries.
     
    "At this point, government has not made a final decision on whether to accept, alter or reject the recommendations from the tribunal," Joyce said in an emailed statement.
     
    By law, the government must table a resolution by June 1 on the non-binding proposals, he said.
     
    Independent compensation panels are meant to safeguard judicial independence and reliability in good fiscal times and bad, said Trevor Farrow, a law professor and associate dean of Osgoode Hall Law School in Toronto.
     
    He spoke about general legal principles, not specifically of Newfoundland and Labrador's tribunal report.
     
    Compensation recommendations can't be "out of whack" with economic realities, Farrow stressed.
     
    "But I think the conversation needs to be framed less about: Should judges be entitled to a particular salary? And more in the frame of: What are we as citizens wanting them to have in order to ensure that, hard times or easy times, we have a rock solid, independent judiciary?
     
     
    "Any province or jurisdiction that is thinking about questioning or rejecting that independent panel does need to do so very carefully."
     
    The Supreme Court of Canada in 1997 ruled that the 1867 Constitution Act calls for a separate process to assess judicial pay. Provincial compensation commissions or tribunals usually include one provincial and one judicial nominee and a chairperson selected to represent both viewpoints.
     
    Cases where provinces blocked related recommendations have repeatedly wound up in court.
     
    In Newfoundland and Labrador, recommendations from the last tribunal were fully accepted by government in May 2011. Judges received retroactive pay increases the following July.
     
    The report of the most recent three-member tribunal chaired by St. John's lawyer Bradford Wicks says it hopes the province will accept its proposals and avoid delays in appointing future members.
     
    "There must not be political interference or private interest, or the appearance of same, which would place the independence of the judiciary into question," it says. "This is guaranteed in large part by ensuring the financial security of the judiciary."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern

    Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern
    18-year-old Noah Kingston says his recent death-defying stunts as a so-called urban climber in Fredericton — all captured in jaw-dropping videos posted on social media — are just the beginning.

    Gut-Wrenching Images Of Urban Climber In Fredericton Spark Concern

    Calgary Landlord 'Shocked' To Find Unattended Senior In Rental Home

    69-year-old woman was taken to hospital for a checkup after she was discovered by the landlord in the northeast-area residence on Monday.

    Calgary Landlord 'Shocked' To Find Unattended Senior In Rental Home

    St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit

    St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit
    The jury deliberated eight hours Monday before ordering the company to pay $55 million to a South Dakota woman who blamed her ovarian cancer on years of talcum powder use.

    St. Louis Jury Awards $55 Million In Johnson & Johnson Cancer Suit

    Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board

    Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board
    Stuart MacLean says statistics from his office show there were 40 nursing home workers who ended up off work and receiving payments due to injuries in 2015.

    Nova Scotia Nursing Home Staff Off Due To Injuries From Violence Rising: Board

    Vancouver Island First Nations Leader Known As 'The General' Dies At 76

    Vancouver Island First Nations Leader Known As 'The General' Dies At 76
    The Nuu-chah-nulth Tribal Council said in a release that Nelson Keitlah passed away peacefully in his sleep Sunday morning at the age of 76

    Vancouver Island First Nations Leader Known As 'The General' Dies At 76

    Two Thirds Of Canadians Believe Majority Of Sex Assault Claims Are True

    Two Thirds Of Canadians Believe Majority Of Sex Assault Claims Are True
    TORONTO — Two thirds of Canadians questioned for a new online survey believe the majority of sexual assault claims are true.

    Two Thirds Of Canadians Believe Majority Of Sex Assault Claims Are True