Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Mar, 2016 11:44 AM
    EDMONTON — Alberta's NDP launches a new session of the legislature Tuesday in the long shadow of a looming $10-billion budget deficit.
     
    Finance Minister Joe Ceci has already announced that with no end in sight to bargain basement oil prices, the budget he unveils in early April will be about double the original deficit estimate of $5.4 billion.
     
    But the plan, he says, is to expand efforts to diversify the economy beyond initiatives already announced such as an extra $1.5 billion for ATB Financial to loan out to small and medium-sized businesses.
     
    "We're going to bring more information forward for Budget 2016 on these types of programs," said Ceci in an interview.
     
    The NDP, he adds, plans to stick with its road map of borrowing to erase the infrastructure deficit and help prime the provincial economy while avoiding deep cuts to critical jobs or programs.
     
    The government announced in the last budget it would hike health spending by three per cent this year to go with similar incremental spending hikes in education, post-secondary education and social services.
     
    "Those four areas … are maintaining services Albertans rely on," said Ceci.
     
    The government had hoped that oil prices — which have plunged from over $100 US a barrel into the $30-range since 2014 — would rebound slightly.
     
    Alberta has been taking on debt to pay for the capital projects, but starting this year it will also borrow just to pay for day-to-day program expenses.
     
    The current estimate is for almost $48 billion in debt by 2020.
     
    The Opposition Wildrose party says the government is going down the wrong path by boosting corporate and some personal income taxes, which it did last year, and by introducing a $3-billion-a-year broad-based carbon tax beginning in 2017.
     
    "It's very clear that the policies the NDP have brought in are making a bad economic situation much worse," said party leader Brian Jean in an interview.
     
    "They've brought uncertainty into the marketplace. There's no more investment in Alberta notwithstanding right next door in Saskatchewan they're getting oil and gas investment."
     
    Premier Rachel Notley has admitted the government is picking from a "menu of bad options."
     
    Political scientist Duane Bratt says it appears the NDP will hope, like past Alberta governments, that the swing in oil will come around.
     
    "I think they're going to wait it out," said Bratt, with Mount Royal University in Calgary.
     
    "The problem with waiting it out is if they're running large deficits in 2018-19 I think that's the end of the NDP government (in the election).
     
    "If they're tracking in the right direction (toward balance or balanced) then I think that gives them a chance."
     
    Also this session, Notley's government will bring in legislation allowing government workers the right to strike while also designating some of them as essential workers forbidden from taking job action.
     
    The government will bring in a revised Municipal Government Act with updated rules on how local government entities govern themselves, levy assessments, and co-ordinate planning and development.
     
    Municipal Affairs Minister Danielle Larivee has said the legislation will be introduced to spur further discussion, but will not pass in the spring.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana
    A Federal Court judge has ruled that medical marijuana patients have the right to grow their own cannabis.

    Judge Strikes Down Law Barring Patients From Growing Medical Marijuana

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber
    The Vancouver Coastal Health Authority says the first such study in North America will involve patients lying in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber for 40 treatments, each lasting about two hours.

    Vancouver Study Of Stroke Survivors Between 19 And 85 To Use Hyperbaric Chamber

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency
    The declaration — essentially a desperate plea for help — calls for urgent action from the federal and provincial governments to address a crisis they said has resulted in needless suffering and deaths.

    'We Are In A State Of Shock:' First Nations Declare Health Emergency

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp
    The western toad migration near the Village of Nakusp attracts tourists every summer to the Toad Festival at Summit Lake, where people fill buckets with the toads and carry them safely across Highway 6 to forest habitat.

    Tiny Western Toads Put Economic, Environmental Squeeze On Village Of Nakusp

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car
    Girolamo Del Balso faces a number of felony charges including possession of narcotics for sale and transporting narcotics for sale

    Quebec Man Facing Charges In Arizona After 62 Kilograms Of Cocaine Found In Car

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands

    Thibault, 76, was sentenced last fall to 18 months in jail for fraud and breach of trust.

    Quebec's Top Court Rejects Lise Thibault Appeal; 18-Month Prison Term Stands