Close X
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Provincial Finance Ministers Divided On Top Priority For Meeting With Morneau

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2019 07:19 PM

    OTTAWA - Provincial finance ministers appeared divided into two camps going into a Tuesday meeting in Ottawa with federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau, who indicated that few concrete decisions would be made at the gathering.

     

    Ministers from Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador declared the need to expand the fiscal stabilization program as their top priority in talks with the federal finance minister.

     

    "We believe that the fiscal stabilization program needs fundamental change in order to deliver on its purposes," Travis Toews, the Alberta finance minister, declared on his way into the meeting.

     

    "Our No. 1 priority is to request that the caps be lifted."

     

    The fiscal stabilization program is easier to change than the more complex equalization program, and amendments could be worth billions to provinces whose finances have been hit by low oil prices.

     

    The stabilization program provides financial assistance to provinces facing a year-over-year decline in its non-resource revenues, but the money available to eligible provinces is capped at just $60 per resident.

     

    Toews said those rules left Alberta to pretty much fend for itself when it was facing a budget deficit resulting from cratering oil prices.

     

    Prior to attending a working dinner Monday evening with his provincial and territorial counterparts, Morneau acknowledged the program, which has not changed since 1995, needs some adjustments to how stabilization payments are calculated.

     

    "The calculations are antiquated and no longer reflect the priorities of provinces, especially resource-producing provinces," said Newfoundland and Labrador Finance Minister Tom Osborne.

     

    Meanwhile finance ministers from some other provinces, including Manitoba, Prince Edward Island and Quebec, said increasing federal transfers for health care was their most pressing concern.

     

    "I know from talking to my colleagues, and I know from talking to Minister Morneau, that health care is a key priority of this government and additional support from the federal government is going to be critical to doing that," said Ontario Finance Minister Rod Phillips.

     

    For his part, Morneau said it came as no surprise that the provinces would be requesting more funding at their meeting. He suggested, however, that the Trudeau government would not be making any near-term commitments to additional spending on the stabilization program.

     

    "I think it's important for us to listen to the issues that we hear today and to take that back, and consider how we can look at the program in a way to make sure it continues to be effective," Morneau told reporters.

     

    None of those going into the meeting Tuesday morning expressed strong concerns about the federal government’s ballooning budget deficits, saying they believe Ottawa has more room to manoeuvre.

     

    Figures released Monday showed the federal deficit is slated to hit $26.6 billion this fiscal year, up from last spring's projection of $19.8 billion.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Cat lovers across Atlantic Canada are rallying to save feral felines in a Newfoundland town that will soon be abandoned, as the provincial government backs down from a plan to euthanize the animals.    

    Animal Rescuers Rally To Save Feral Cats Soon To Be Left Alone In N.L. Town

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    OTTAWA - New Brunswick consumers will get a break at the gas pumps come April, after the federal government approved the province's carbon-tax proposal Wednesday.    

    Ottawa Accepts New Brunswick's Carbon-Tax Proposal

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers
    A national agriculture group says farming needs to change to help save the climate and the industry.    

    Report Suggests Agriculture Needs Changes To Save Climate And Farmers

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home
    OTTAWA - Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is raising the case of a Canadian man detained in Cairo with the Egyptian government today.

    Family Of Man Detained In Egypt Urges Champagne To Help Bring Him Home

    Alberta Premier Opens War Room To Promote 'Truth' About Energy Industry

    CALGARY - Alberta Premier Jason Kenney has officially opened what he has called a war room to fight what he says is a campaign of lies about the province's energy industry.    

    Alberta Premier Opens War Room To Promote 'Truth' About Energy Industry

    Ten Of 11 People Taken Into Custody After Shooting In Surrey Have Been Released

    Ten Of 11 People Taken Into Custody After Shooting In Surrey Have Been Released
    Surrey RCMP is providing an update to the investigation of a shooting which occurred in the early morning hours of December 7, 2019.  

    Ten Of 11 People Taken Into Custody After Shooting In Surrey Have Been Released