Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

Provinces Dig In Heels On Federal Health Funding, Renew Call For Trudeau Meeting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jan, 2017 12:16 PM
  • Provinces Dig In Heels On Federal Health Funding, Renew Call For Trudeau Meeting
OTTAWA — The federal government's push to close bilateral health-funding deals with individual provinces and territories appears to be losing momentum.
 
After talks to establish a national funding framework fell apart last month, the feds reached side deals with New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.
 
But health and finance ministers from the 10 other provinces and territories are now repeating their call for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to meet face to face with the premiers to resume negotiations.
 
In a letter Tuesday to their federal counterparts, they reiterated their objection to Ottawa's last offer — increasing health transfers by 3.5 per cent per year and $11.5 billion in targeted funding over 10 years — because it simply isn't enough.
 
"Canadians expect and deserve their governments to provide long-term sustainable support so that public health care is strong today and for future generations," reads the letter addressed to Health Minister Jane Philpott and Finance Minister Bill Morneau.
 
 
"The new federal government was elected, in part, on a mandate to engage in a constructive dialogue with provinces and territories to secure the future of health care."
 
Later Tuesday, a Trudeau spokeswoman said there were no immediate plans for a first ministers meeting on health.
 
In the letter, the provinces once again pointed to what they describe as an evidence-based estimate that predicts health-care costs to rise by 5.2 per cent annually. The ministers said this figure has been backed by independent organizations such as The Conference Board of Canada.
 
The feds have argued that they put forward a "historic" offer that is the best they could do within the confines of their own narrow fiscal framework.
 
Philpott has said Ottawa wants to transform the system because health-care outcomes in Canada are average compared to similar countries — even though Canadians pay some of the highest per-capita costs in the world.
 
A spokesman for Philpott wrote in an email Tuesday that the lines of communication with the provinces and territories remain open.
 
The federal efforts to reach bilateral deals appeared to drive a wedge between provinces and territories. 
 
 
After the federal-provincial talks collapsed in Ottawa, the provinces seemed united in their opposition to the federal proposal. However, three provinces broke ranks and inked their own deals with the feds.
 
Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard has called the federal government's divide-and-conquer approach on health care "deplorable."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian-U.S. Dual Citizen Who Allegedly Bilked Investors Extradited From Vietnam

Canadian-U.S. Dual Citizen Who Allegedly Bilked Investors Extradited From Vietnam
Federal prosecutors in Buffalo say 29-year-old Michael Wilson has been arraigned on wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy charges.

Canadian-U.S. Dual Citizen Who Allegedly Bilked Investors Extradited From Vietnam

Niagara Falls Lit Up On Dark Winter Nights

Niagara Falls Lit Up On Dark Winter Nights
A $3 million upgrade saw the installation of 1,400 new high-tech lights called luminaires that beam brighter and more vivid rainbows of light from Canada onto the famous waterfalls.

Niagara Falls Lit Up On Dark Winter Nights

Edmonton Conductor Finds Cat Nearly Frozen Under Train Engine, Brings Him Home

Edmonton Conductor Finds Cat Nearly Frozen Under Train Engine, Brings Him Home
A Canadian National Railway conductor was checking the engines on his train early Sunday in Wainwright, Alta., when he heard a pathetic cry.

Edmonton Conductor Finds Cat Nearly Frozen Under Train Engine, Brings Him Home

New Brunswick Government Recommends Winter Tires But Won't Make Them Mandatory

New Brunswick Government Recommends Winter Tires But Won't Make Them Mandatory
New Brunswick Public Safety Minister Denis Landry says while he encourages the use of winter tires, he has no plan to make their use mandatory

New Brunswick Government Recommends Winter Tires But Won't Make Them Mandatory

Conservative MP Ed Fast Recovering From Stroke In Abbotsford, B.C.

The former international trade minister suffered from the medical emergency Saturday at his home in Abbotsford, B.C.

Conservative MP Ed Fast Recovering From Stroke In Abbotsford, B.C.

Stories From People Who Have Lost Loved Ones To Opioids

Stories From People Who Have Lost Loved Ones To Opioids
A gradual surge in lethal opioid overdoses shows no sign of slowing, and some experts say the worst is yet to come unless governments do more to counteract the deadly crisis.

Stories From People Who Have Lost Loved Ones To Opioids