Health, affordability cornerstones of Manitoba throne speech
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/11/2024 (352 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
The Manitoba government has signalled it’s sticking to its plan to tackle problems in health care, including long wait times for surgeries, and will try to keep life affordable, as it devises a plan to pay for its agenda by boosting the economy.
“We’ve been listening loud and clear, hearing about the cost-of-living pressures and inflation crisis and interest rates that have been weighing on everybody,” Premier Wab Kinew told reporters Tuesday as the NDP unveiled its second throne speech since taking office last year. “We’ve also heard from you there’s much more to do, that you’re still feeling the pinch.”
Critics said the challenge will be to find the money and staff to achieve those targets.
The government promised to freeze hydroelectric rates in 2025, a fulfillment of one of its election promises; introduce legislation to address anticompetitive contracts that make groceries more expensive; increase access to MRIs and hip and knee surgeries; and release a long-awaited economic development strategy.
Lt.-Gov. Anita Neville read the aspirational document in the legislature, where the gallery was packed with business and union leaders as well as representatives from the health and education sectors.
The throne speech outlined plans for a strategy to reduce emergency-room waits and to perform an additional 800 hip and knee surgeries at Selkirk Regional Health Centre, thanks to the recruitment of two surgeons from outside Manitoba, as well as an anesthesiologist.
Only half of the hip and knee replacements in Manitoba were completed within the recommended guideline of 26 weeks, as per the latest the Canadian Institute for Health Information report.
Doctors Manitoba president-elect Dr. Nichelle Desilets said Selkirk is well-equipped and a good choice to perform 800 hip and knee surgeries.
“Selkirk has a beautiful operating room,” said the Neepawa family doctor who attended the speech. “I’m always excited about providing patients care close to home.”
The Tories countered that they deserve credit.
“That’s a great initiative that started under our government,” said Wayne Ewasko, interim leader of the Progressive Conservatives, who announced a new operating room in Selkirk when Heather Stefanson was premier.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Premier Wab Kinew said his government has been hearing loud and clear about cost-of-living pressures.
The doctor applauded the promise for a mobile MRI in the north to lower wait times and allow those in need of a scan to receive one closer to home.
“It’s better for safety, better for accessibility and it’s better for the economy. Those people are taking less time off of work and we have huge wait times for CTs and MRIs. We need the staff to support it,” Desilets said.
Manitoba Association of Health Care Professionals president Jason Linklater said an MRI technologist who was lined up for the northern mobile MRI was hired away by Saskatchewan.
“When you don’t have enough people to fill those positions, what it means is spreading people more thin than they already are,” he said.
His union is in contract negotiations as the province tries to staff up the entire health-care sector, with 870 new positions created towards a goal of 1,000.
In addition, the government said a new plastic health card featuring the northern lights will be rolled out in December. It proved to be the most popular design as per public feedback.
As for affordability, the NDP campaigned on a promise to freeze electricity rates, and the premier told reporters he expects that to happen, but the Public Utilities Board will have the final say.
Keeping hydro rates affordable is Manitoba Hydro’s top priority and “Hydro’s telling us we can freeze rates,” Kinew said about the new board and leadership put in place after the NDP formed government. It passed omnibus legislation on Nov. 7, allowing it to adjust fuel taxes and hydro rates at the cabinet table.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
A long-awaited economic development strategy is one of the promises included in the throne speech from Premier Wab Kinew’s government.
“I think it’s a little bit of double-speak right now,” Ewasko said, referring to the promise to freeze rates while respecting the authority of the PUB to oversee rates.
A coalition that represents the Manitoba branch of the Consumers Association of Canada, Harvest Manitoba and the Aboriginal Council of Winnipeg said it is “deeply concerned” about a rate freeze after Manitoba Hydro told the PUB in 2023 that rate increases would be required to meet the province’s energy and capacity needs over the next decade.
“Today’s commitment creates a significant risk of higher-than-necessary rate increases in future years,” the coalition said in an email.
The measure will delay Manitoba Hydro’s next rate application and a Public Utilities Board hearing needed to ensure hydro is effectively controlling its costs and that rates are based on evidence and a best estimate of Manitoba Hydro’s costs rather than political considerations, the coalition said.
Kinew didn’t promise a third extension of the 14 cent per litre gas tax holiday in 2025, but said, “We’re looking at a mix of things.”
He referred to the plan, mentioned in the throne speech, to bring in legislation that would ban covenants that allow grocery chains to limit nearby competition.
“We’re making good on the attempt to make grocery prices more affordable,” he said.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Athena Swampy, 9, fist bumps the Premier. Grade 4 students from the Ojibway bilingual program at Riverbend Community School met with Premier Wab Kinew prior to the throne speech.
The premier wouldn’t provide details and couldn’t point to an example of another jurisdiction that has taken such measures.
Business leaders and the Tories said they couldn’t comment owing to insufficient information.
“We’re big fans in terms of competition and free enterprise,” Manitoba Chambers of Commerce president and CEO Chuck Davidson said, but “you have to look at it from both sides — from the perspective of the companies that run these grocery stores — before you provide comment on what we’re trying to achieve with this.”
The throne speech announced a new economic development strategy outlining the next phase of growth in Manitoba with a focus on productivity.
“We would’ve liked to see a little bit more in terms of how are we going to address some of these workforce challenges,” said Davidson, who said he’s pleased to hear about an economic development strategy guided by the premier’s business and jobs council.
“There’s a commitment we need to have that strategy, going together,” Davidson said.
In addition to health and affordability, the government made a gesture toward reconciliation.
It plans to erect a bison and calf monument at the front of the legislature facing Memorial Boulevard, where the statue of Queen Victoria stood before it was pulled down by angry protesters on Canada Day in 2021.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS
Premier Wab Kinew walks to a press conference to talk about the throne speech.
It will be a reminder of the “sacred bonds of family that were harmed by the residential school era.”
The government plans to create a new honour to be bestowed upon Manitoba veterans; details will be announced at a later date.
The legislature is scheduled to sit until Dec. 5 and break until March.
carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca
Weighing in on the NDP plan
The government’s throne speech — both its contents and what was left out — has business leaders, union heads and other Manitobans eager to find out more about what’s in store for the province.
“Hope lives here,” states an excerpt from the beginning of the 14-page speech, in which optimism was a key theme.
Attendees listened to the plan read aloud in the chamber Tuesday afternoon. Later, while some stakeholders expressed optimism about the future, others remained concerned about workforce shortages.
Here’s what they had to say:
Manitoba Federation of Labour
President Kevin Rebeck applauded the government’s commitment to strengthen the Workplace Safety and Health Act, which was last updated more than a decade ago.
“Manitoba has totally inadequate rules to protect workers when it comes to doing the hazardous work of asbestos removal and remediation,” Rebeck said in a news release.
“When it comes to rules for working with asbestos, it is truly the ‘wild west’ out there.”
Manitoba Chambers of Commerce
Chuck Davidson, president and chief executive officer, said he was intrigued about a line suggesting the province will tout homegrown business success stories, such as New Flyer Industries.
“What are we doing more to tell young Manitobans and people that might be considering Manitoba as to why to come here?” Davidson said, adding it sounds like there is a communication plan in the works to highlight the benefits of living here.
“I’d be interested in learning a little bit more in terms of what the government’s looking at, from that perspective.”
Doctors Manitoba
“We heard some comments and allusions to increase bed capacity in the hospitals. It’s really encouraging, but we need to stop talking about it and we need to do it now,” said Dr. Nichelle Desilets, a family physician from Neepawa who is president-elect of the provincial advocacy organization.
Asked about whether it’s doable to open 102 new fully staffed beds, a target number released Tuesday with the goal of reducing emergency-room wait times, Desilets said she is “hopeful and optimistic.”
The rural doctor added she is eager for the province to unveil a new ER wait-times strategy.
Manitoba Government and General Employees’ Union
The throne speech contained a number of new and expanded government initiatives, but questions remain about who will support and deliver them, said Kyle Ross, president of the MGEU.
The union’s latest statistics suggest there are at least 2,000 fewer civil servants in 2024 than there were seven years ago.
There continues to be a backlog to processing birth certificates, marriage certificates and paper health cards, Ross said.
“There’s going to be challenges, I think, in getting these ideas off the ground. I think they’re good ideas, but I think we really have to put some focus on getting workers to build these programs,” he added.
Association of Manitoba Municipalities
“We are disappointed that (a new funding model) wasn’t mentioned. We’re looking for a predictable funding model with a built-in escalator for municipalities for their operating budgets,” said Kathy Valentino, interim president of the association.
At the same time, Valentino said members are pleased with the province’s new public-safety strategy to address the recent increase in rural crime.
Manitoba Teachers’ Society
“They talked about 630 new teachers and I would have to say, that isn’t enough,” said Nathan Martindale, president of the union representing 16,600 public school teachers.
“There needs to be more certified teachers in front of classrooms and for the students of Manitoba so that’s something we’ll continue to advocate (for).”
The government also needs to hire more clinicians and other professionals to support students with increasingly complex needs, he said.
Canadian Union of Public Employees
CUPE is celebrating the province’s firm stance on doing away with a public-private partnership, or P3 model, and keeping schools locally owned.
President Gina McKay also applauded the province’s goal to create 3,500 additional child-care spaces. “While there have been major improvements to the cost of child care, there are simply not enough spaces,” McKay said, adding these additions must be met with a strong staff recruitment and retention plan.
Manitoba School Boards Association
School trustee Sandy Nemeth said ensuring all on-reserve residents can vote in every election that affects them is “long overdue.”
Nemeth, president of the school boards association, said she was surprised to learn that not all First Nations people were eligible to vote in the recent Mountain View School Division byelection in Dauphin.
“The idea that the government is going to take steps to right what I would consider a very big wrong is to ensure everybody in the province has the right to vote and is able to vote — that’s representation and that’s democracy,” she said.
— Maggie Macintosh
Carol Sanders
Legislature reporter
Carol Sanders is a reporter at the Free Press legislature bureau. The former general assignment reporter and copy editor joined the paper in 1997. Read more about Carol.
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History
Updated on Tuesday, November 19, 2024 6:29 PM CST: Adds details
Updated on Tuesday, November 19, 2024 6:54 PM CST: Minor edits