Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Premier Wall, cabinet ministers freeze wages to face 'challenges'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 10:26 AM

    REGINA — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says he and his cabinet ministers have agreed to take a wage freeze to help address "revenue challenges."

    Wall says the wage freeze also applies to senior government officials and other non-unionized executives, such as Crown corporation and health region employees.

    He says the move is for one year and is expected to save $15 million.

    Wall is also asking the board that governs the salaries of legislature members to implement a wage freeze.

    The government will also be writing to school divisions and post-secondary institutions to ask that they apply the same policy.

    Wall said earlier this week that the world oil price slump means Saskatchewan will face a budget shortfall of between $600 million and $800 million this year.

    "With the revenue challenges we are facing, our government is committed to controlling operating spending," Wall said in a release Friday. "I believe those measures have to start at the top and that's the intent of this wage freeze."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound
    VANCOUVER — A Christian university in British Columbia is taking the debate between religious freedoms and same-sex equality rights into the province's courts.

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers
    VANCOUVER — The federal government has announced new details about its plans to auction off wireless spectrum as it attempts to entice new mobile carriers to enter the market and bring down prices for cellular phone users.

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area city is asking the National Energy Board to hand Kinder Morgan a bill that could be worth more than $2 million for policing and cleanup costs after pipeline work was targeted by protesters last month.

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades
    VICTORIA — Residents of Metro Vancouver will be asked to agree to pay an extra 0.5 per cent sales tax after the province approved a plebiscite on funding major upgrades to the regional transportation network.

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates
    VICTORIA — British Columbia needs to appoint a crime-fighting boss who can cut through provincial, municipal and social bureaucracies to build unified crime-prevention teams, say government reports released Thursday.

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's chief inspector of mines is allowing the owner of the Mount Polley mine to start repairs on the tailings pond that breached, sending a surge of mine waste and water into nearby lakes and rivers.

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach