Close X
Tuesday, December 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rachel Notley Dismisses Concerns Minimum Wage Hike, Carbon Tax Will Hurt Alberta Economy

The Canadian Press, 28 Sep, 2016 11:51 AM
    CALGARY — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says she rejects the notion that a minimum-wage hike and carbon tax will hurt the provincial economy.
     
    Opposition parties have lambasted the NDP government for charging ahead with those two policies at a time when the province's economy is ailing.
     
    But Notley told reporters Tuesday that she believes most Albertans support the government's direction on those issues
     
    On the minimum wage issue, Notley says her government is trying to strike a balance between supporting businesses and tackling inequality.
     
    On Saturday the minimum wage will rise by $1 to $12.20 an hour, gradually increasing to $15 an hour by 2018.
     
    An economy-wide carbon tax is set to take effect in the new year as part of a sweeping climate-change strategy that also includes a cap on oilsands emissions and the phase-out of coal.
     
    Notley said the tax, which will eventually reach $30 per tonne of carbon dioxide in 2018, will help diversify the economy and support the case that Alberta's energy resources should be developed and shipped to market.
     
     
    Ten months after the NDP government announced its climate-change strategy, pipeline proposals to the east and west coasts remain in limbo, but Notley said the tenor of the discussion has improved.
     
    "We're not sort of sitting in our own echo chamber talking to ourselves while the opponents to pipelines sit in their own echo chamber talking to themselves and nobody actually connects and finds any kind of alignment," she said.
     
    "So does that mean that right now a whole bunch of previous opponents are out there declaring their support for the pipeline? No. Does it mean that the conversation has improved in a lot of settings? Yes."
     
    For those concerned about the minimum-wage hike, Notley said a small business tax cut and various grants should help ease some of the burden.
     
    "We're trying to strike a balance between supporting innovators and business owners while at the same time getting rid of what is also an economy-killing level of inequality that existed in our provinces, where people who worked full time had to stop at the food bank on the way home because they could not possibly feed their families based on a full-time salary that we pay here in Alberta."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    $1300 A Person For Food, Drink On PM's Plane Is 'Outrageous': Tory MP

    $1300 A Person For Food, Drink On PM's Plane Is 'Outrageous': Tory MP
    OTTAWA — Passengers who accompanied Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on his first two international trips were apparently well fed.

    $1300 A Person For Food, Drink On PM's Plane Is 'Outrageous': Tory MP

    Concert For Fort Mac Raises Almost $188k; Organizers Seek $200K By Thanksgiving

    Concert For Fort Mac Raises Almost $188k; Organizers Seek $200K By Thanksgiving
      And they're challenging Canadians to continue giving so that the $200,000 mark can be reached by Thanksgiving

    Concert For Fort Mac Raises Almost $188k; Organizers Seek $200K By Thanksgiving

    Festivals, Museums And Scenery On Tap For Prince William And Kate In Yukon

    Festivals, Museums And Scenery On Tap For Prince William And Kate In Yukon
    WHITEHORSE — Prince William and Kate will spend the fifth day of their Canadian tour taking in the wild beauty of Yukon.

    Festivals, Museums And Scenery On Tap For Prince William And Kate In Yukon

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings
    OTTAWA — The Senate could come to the rescue of Canadians who are being stripped of their citizenship without a hearing.

    Senate Could Fix Practice Of Citizenship Revocations Without Hearings

    Trudeau praises late former Israeli PM Shimon Peres as 'real friend to Canada'

      The prime minister says Peres, who died early Wednesday at the age of 93, was an internationally respected statesman.

    Trudeau praises late former Israeli PM Shimon Peres as 'real friend to Canada'

    Ottawa Gives Conditional Approval To Giant Lng Project For B.C. Coast

    RICHMOND, B.C. — The federal government gave conditional approval Tuesday to the massive Pacific NorthWest LNG project planned for British Columbia's northwest coast.

    Ottawa Gives Conditional Approval To Giant Lng Project For B.C. Coast

    PrevNext