Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Premiers To Push PM On Health Transfers Over Dinner After Climate Talks Wrap Up

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Dec, 2016 12:59 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is sitting down with premiers to finalize a long-awaited national plan on climate change, but once those discussions wrap up, they will move right into a heated debate over health care funding.
     
    "We want to talk about health care," Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall said Wednesday, pointing out that the first ministers meeting beginning Thursday in Ottawa is the second such gathering devoted to curbing greenhouse gas emissions.
     
    "We hope even if it's only shoe-horned into the agenda, that we can have some discussion about what's going to be taking place in health care funding."
     
    That discussion is expected to take place at a working dinner Friday evening — after the official meeting on climate change is through — when federal sources say Trudeau will tell the provincial and territorial premiers he is ready to listen to any of their concerns unrelated to the environment.
     
    The only topic anyone is expecting to come up, however, is health care spending, and whether the Liberals are willing to budge on cutting the annual increase to the Canada Health Transfer from six per cent to three per cent — a plan brought in by the Conservatives that is set to take effect in April 2017 — and what they might ask for in return.
     
    The premiers had demanded some face time with Trudeau on the subject, saying they wanted that to come before they were willing to talk about climate change. The working dinner is viewed as a compromise meant to allow room for talking about health care without derailing the main event.
     
    No one is expecting a new deal to be reached by the time dessert is served — especially if there are lingering tensions from the climate change talks — but those on both sides of the argument are hoping for a meaningful discussion that lays the groundwork for more detailed negotiations to come.
     
    That would include a Dec. 19 meeting of finance ministers, which the health ministers have been invited to join, but sources from two provincial governments said they are also still insisting on a full-fledged gathering of premiers with Trudeau on the issue early next year.
     
    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said she and her fellow premiers are agreed that a three-per-cent annual increase is not enough.
     
    "There is a real unanimity across the country among premiers and ministers of health that the cut from a six-per-cent increase to a three-per-cent increase is going to have severe impacts on our health care system," said Wynne.
     
     
    "I just don't see the wisdom in forcing cuts in the health care system at this moment in time," echoed B.C. Premier Christy Clark.
     
    The federal government, meanwhile, has been trying to separate the amount of the health transfer from a new health accord, which they view as a way to set shared goals on priorities such as home care and mental health.
     
    Senior government sources also said Trudeau plans to stick by his message that funding for the accord must be targeted at agreed upon priorities.
     
    The Liberal government has promised $3 billion over four years to improve access to home care — separate from the transfer payments — but is open to increasing that amount, as well as the time period, if it applies to other shared priorities such as mental health.
     
    That could be where they find a compromise, as the provinces were concerned about having to deliver new services and then be stuck covering their cost after the time-allocated funding ran out.
     
    A senior federal source also said there is little opposition to the idea that Quebec might negotiate its own agreement, as has happened in the past.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott said Wednesday that nothing has been decided yet.
     
    She also suggested funding for home care and other priority areas could go up in the future if it proves to be a good investment.
     
    "If in fact we come to some agreement around investments in mental health, for example, and we see that our investments have done well and that in fact people are able to get better access to care, are able to achieve better health outcomes, that would certainly encourage us to continue our investments," Philpott said.
     
    "That's one of the reasons why it's important for us to make sure we target those funds and we look at the outcomes achieved," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Robs Nobleton, Ont., Drug Store Wearing Santa Hat And White Beard: Police

    Man Robs Nobleton, Ont., Drug Store Wearing Santa Hat And White Beard: Police
    York regional police say a man entered the drug store on Wednesday afternoon and went to the prescriptions counter.

    Man Robs Nobleton, Ont., Drug Store Wearing Santa Hat And White Beard: Police

    U.S. VP Biden visits Ottawa under a shroud and secrecy and speculation

    U.S. VP Biden visits Ottawa under a shroud and secrecy and speculation
    OTTAWA — U.S. Vice-President Joe Biden is to arrive in Ottawa later today on a visit shrouded in secrecy and speculation.

    U.S. VP Biden visits Ottawa under a shroud and secrecy and speculation

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police
    Transit officers came across the young woman outside a downtown Vancouver SkyTrain station on Dec. 1 with a hospital identification bracelet around her wrist in temperatures of -3 C.

    Stranger's Random Act Of Kindness Reaps Plaudits From B.C. Transit Police

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver
      The regional board says it will push for the change ahead of the provincial election in May following an unprecedented rise in home prices.

    High Property Prices Mean Change Needed For Home Tax Breaks: Metro Vancouver

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January
    The case of a nurse accused of killing eight seniors at two long-term care homes in southwestern Ontario has been put over until Jan. 6.

    Nurse Accused Of Killing Seniors Had Case Put Over Until January

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police
      Det. Len Nicholson told reporters a news conference Wednesday night that the tip came from a member of the public on Dec. 1, when a person saw the threat on a blogging site.

    Attack On Toronto High School Thwarted, 17-year-old Under Arrest: Police