Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau to present new health offer to premiers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2023 12:15 PM
  • Trudeau to present new health offer to premiers

OTTAWA - Provincial and territorial premiers say they're open to what Prime Minister Justin Trudeau puts on the table as they prepare to sit down to work on a new health funding deal, despite their long-standing and very specific requests for a substantial increase to the Canada Health Transfer.

The provinces budgeted about $204 billion for health care in this fiscal year and the Canada Health Transfer was set at $45 billion, or about 22 per cent of that. The premiers want the federal share to increase to 35 per cent.

Ahead of Tuesday's meeting, Manitoba Premier Heather Stefanson said provincial and territorial leaders are "open-minded," as long as the prime minister's offer includes more baseline funding for health care.

"I think one of the things that we've been very consistent on all the way through this is to ensure that we have predictable and stable long-term funding put into the baseline of the Canada Health Transfer," said Stefanson, who chairs the premiers' group known as the Council of the Federation.

Trudeau plans to show Ottawa's offer to the premiers when he sits down with them Tuesday afternoon.

A senior federal official with knowledge of Ottawa's offer said there will be both a bigger increase to the transfer and offers of more money for one-on-one deals to address the individual needs of provinces as well as federal priorities.

Quebec Premier François Legault said he will be looking for flexibility as part of those one-on-one deals.

Premiers have staunchly resisted federally dictated conditions on new health-care funding for years, but that stance has softened over the last few weeks.

Legault said he wants the money to finance the province's existing health-care plans but some of Ottawa's priorities overlap with Quebec's, such as the need for more family doctors and improvements to long-term care.

It's important that provinces to be able to "use the money the way we want to use it," he said at a press conference with Stefanson Tuesday morning.

The provincial and federal governments are unlikely to come to an agreement Tuesday, and have characterized the meeting as a first step in the negotiations.

Canada needs immediate health-care support, as well as a more modern system that will respond to the challenges of the future, Trudeau said on his way into the meeting with the premiers.

Those challenges include an aging population with more chronic diseases and a large number of health workers reaching retirement age, Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said. "We need to prepare for the future in addition to repairing the damage caused by COVID-19."

Earlier in the day, Trudeau said Canada's health-care system is not working as well as it should and that has to change.

On his way into a morning cabinet meeting, he said the federal government will be "investing significantly" to upgrade the system.

Canadians are proud of the public health-care system in this country, Trudeau said, but it needs work.

"We all have to recognize it hasn't been delivering at the level that Canadians would expect," he said.

"We will be stepping up with even more funding."

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said the federal government must ink a condition to address health-care staff shortages into the agreement with provinces. As the premiers arrived at the meeting with the prime minister, Singh addressed a crowd of health-worker unions and associations on Parliament Hill. He told them it was time to send a message to the Liberal government and Conservative premiers to spend more money on their health systems.

Arriving for Tuesday's talks, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey told reporters he's anxious to see a deal, and suggested he and his provincial colleagues are entering the meeting with a sense of practicality.

"Whenever you're discussing from a negotiating perspective there's riverbanks, and there has to be a some diplomacy," he said.

"There has to be a healthy dose of pragmatism."

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, a frequent critic of the federal Liberals, said she and others felt "upbeat" about the impending offer and expressed openness to striking a one-off deal with Ottawa.

"The prime minister has given us some really positive indication he wants to work collaboratively with the premiers," she said.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford added the deal must support health care "not for five years, not for 10 years, but for decades to come."

Trudeau cited getting more family doctors, shorter waiting lists, support to recruit and retrain workers and improving mental health care as some of those possible areas.

The federal government is also insisting the provinces agree to overhaul their health system data collection so patients' medical records are more complete and accessible across provinces and to multiple health professionals, and so governments can better see where problems exist.

The premiers have been in Ottawa since Monday, meeting on their own at a downtown hotel, and aim to have a unified front when they sit down with Trudeau. They said they are going into the talks with an open mind, no red line and a willingness to sign one-on-one agreements with Ottawa.

British Columbia Premier David Eby says bilateral agreements will be a big part of the negotiations, but the core goal is to get Canadians the health care they deserve.

The Canada Health Transfer is currently set to rise to $49.4 billion in 2023-24, a nine-per-cent increase over this year, which is twice the average annual increase over the last six years.

MORE National ARTICLES

Family reacts as Mounties face Manslaughter charge

Family reacts as Mounties face Manslaughter charge
The civil liberties association statement says although the independent review in 2019 found "reasonable grounds" to believe two officers may have committed offences related to use of force, and three others may have obstructed justice, the Crown was not handed a final report until 2020, and charge approval took nearly three more years.

Family reacts as Mounties face Manslaughter charge

Manslaughter charge against two B.C. RCMP officers

Manslaughter charge against two B.C. RCMP officers
Sgt. Jon Eusebio Cruz, and constables Arthur Dalman and Clarence MacDonald are accused of attempting to obstruct justice. RCMP said at the time of the arrest that 35-year-old Arthur Dale Culver appeared to have trouble breathing before he died in while in police custody.

Manslaughter charge against two B.C. RCMP officers

B.C. family doctor payment model takes effect

B.C. family doctor payment model takes effect
Adrian Dix says that number reflects doctors who signed up in advance or within hours of its launch, and he expects it to grow "dramatically." He says the model, developed by the province and Doctors of BC, aims to attract doctors to family practice and keep them there by addressing challenges that arise in the existing fee-for-service system.

B.C. family doctor payment model takes effect

Komagata Maru memorial in Canada vandalised for third time

Komagata Maru memorial in Canada vandalised for third time
The memorial honours 376 Indians, including Sikhs, Muslims and Hindus, who sailed to Canada from India in 1914, but were turned away by the country, which left them stuck on the ship for two months with dire conditions.

Komagata Maru memorial in Canada vandalised for third time

Canada's new anti-Islamophobia rep says sorry

Canada's new anti-Islamophobia rep says sorry
The column, co-written with former Canadian Jewish Congress CEO Bernie Farber, cited polling data to say that "a majority of Quebecers" who supported Bill 21 also held anti-Muslim views. Farber and Elghawaby, a journalist and human-rights activist, were board members with the Canadian Anti-Hate Network at the time.

Canada's new anti-Islamophobia rep says sorry

Alberta's former top doctor hired by B.C.

Alberta's former top doctor hired by B.C.
A statement from the Ministry of Health says Dr. Andrew Larder, who previously served as a medical health officer at both Fraser and Interior Health, joins Hinshaw, and will also be on temporary assignment over the next several months.

Alberta's former top doctor hired by B.C.