McGuinty government going in wrong direction; it must
drive economy forward, not stand still - CUPE
TORONTO, Oct. 22 / The
provincial Liberal government must be
taken
to task for retrenching rather than driving the economy forward during the
current economic crisis, says the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)
Ontario. Union president Sid Ryan says that the McGuinty government is
going in the wrong direction with today's announcement that it will delay
and slow down new spending, and provide no increase in transfer payments
to municipalities, school boards, universities and hospitals. Given a two
per cent inflation rate, that will effectively mean a cut in funding for
these institutions.
"This is no time for the
government to pull back. It is wrong for
McGuinty
to stall spending as this will move the province closer to a
'rust-bucket'
economy," said Ryan. "Already factories have closed, jobs and
production have moved to other countries and key sectors like forestry,
manufacturing and auto production are languishing".
"McGuinty is picking off
the low hanging fruit - slowing down the hiring
of
new nurses and cutting back on public sector investments that were
previously
promised. The reality is that McGuinty has a responsibility to
stimulate
the Ontario economy by using the public sector as the driver until his
government can develop a long-term plan to replace the
250,000
manufacturing jobs that have been lost in the province."
"It's been proven that
government investment is the only sure way to
kick-start
an economy when industries and financial institutions are failing,"
added Ryan, who represents 225,000 workers in the public sector.
"Government investments in programs keep people working and keep tax
revenues flowing into the provincial coffers."
Another policy that sorely needs
to be revisited is the use of
public-private
partnerships (P3s) to build hospitals and other infrastructure.
"Brampton
and North Bay hospitals have together run $633 million over in
capital
costs, and at least 30 more similar projects are planned. McGuinty
ought
to know that we can't afford these gifts to the bankers, brokers and
developers
building these projects."
"Had these two hospitals
been built by the public sector, the combined
savings
alone arising from the private sector overruns would have negated the $500
million deficit that McGuinty is now projecting," said Ryan.
Ryan says that the public
sector-from hospitals, to schools,
universities,
municipal and social services-has traditionally boosted local
economies
in lean times. "Less money will shrink these economic drivers,
particularly
in towns that have lost forestry and manufacturing jobs. That is
why
it is equally irresponsible for the John Tory Conservatives to say that
public
sector hiring and wages must be frozen." He added that, in the longer
term, the provincial government needs to develop new manufacturing
strategies based on the creation of green jobs and 'Made in Ontario'
strategies.
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