Will cut $6 billion from public services every year that will guarantee significant service cuts

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Transcription:

Issue ONDP PC (limited information provided on plans to achieve goals) Liberal Jobs and Economy Will increase investment in public services by $8.5 billion over five years Will increase minimum vacation time from two to three weeks of paid vacation Will cut $6 billion from public services every year that will guarantee significant service cuts Will cut 40,000-50,000 public sector jobs from the economy Adjusting for inflation, average wages are lower now than they were when the Liberals came into power Health Care Will increase hospital funding immediately by 5.3% with a new $916 million additional investment Will ensure every hospital s annual funding will increase to keep up with inflation and population growth Will create 2,000 new hospital beds right now Will create 40,000 more long-term care beds, including 15,000 new beds over the next five years Will legislate a minimum care standard of four hours of hands-on care per day for seniors in long-term care Will create 30,000 new hospital bed over ten years with an average 3,000 per year (almost impossible to do with promised cuts of $6 billion a year) Are opposed to planned safe-injection sites Ontario Hospital Association states the system is on the brink of crisis Lack of funding has created 'hallway medicine' Premier Wynne has acknowledge recent injection of funds will not be enough to end 'hallway medicine' Will create 5,000 new hospital beds by 2022 and an additional 25,000 after 2022.

Will fix the education funding formula Will hire more teachers and educational assistants Will cap kindergarten classroom sizes at 26 students Closed over 100 community schools Education Will end standardized testing Will stop closing community schools Will repeal the sex-ed curriculum Legislated unconstitutional Bill 155 that violated workers collective bargaining rights and imposed nonnegotiated contracts Every student who qualifies for OSAP will get a nonrepayable grant instead of a loan Highest tuition rates in Canada Will wipe out any student loan interest owed or paid to the province by any student or past student who still holds a provincial loan Childcare Will bring in free childcare for children under 4 for families earning less than $40,000 per year and an affordable program for everyone else with an average cost of $12 a day Will create 202,000 new licensed spaces for children under 4 by 2021 - all spaces will be in public and nonprofit centers Will bring in a tax rebate of up to 75% of child care costs to a maximum of $6750 - parents will still be required to pay the same rates up front (Could be used in for-profit centres and unlicensed operators) Families most in need pay little in income tax so wouldn't be ineligible for the tax credit No funding for new childcare spaces Will bring in free child care for children from age two and a half until junior kindergarten Will create 100,000 new licensed spaces for children younger than 4 by 2021

Homecare Community Care Will immediately increase home care funding by $300 million and eliminate the home care wait list Will increase OW and ODSP rates and ensure that future increases will be set by an independent panel and based on income adequacy Haphazard freezes/increases of OW and ODSP rates not tied to any rationale Will cover 50% of the operating costs for municipal transit Transit Will begin work on Hamilton light rail transit project immediately Plans to build a regional transportation system but hasn't given specifics Built only one extension of Rapid Transit network in over ten years with final cost more than double original budget Will begin work on the Toronto downtown relief line quickly Hydro Will cut hydro bills by 30% Will bring Hydro One back into public hands Will cut rural electricity rates by an additional 15% Will end time of use billing Will cut hydro bills by 22% Wants to fire the CEO of Hydro One (But Hydro One is no longer publicly controlled so this is not something the government can do) Hydro One Privatized Cut hydro bills by 25% by shifting costs to the future and leaving customers to have to pay off $21 billion more in the long run Pharmacare and Dental Care Will bring in universal drug coverage for everyone Will bring in universal dental care for everyone Will expand OHIP+ that provides drug coverage for youth and will begin to include seniors Will implement drug and dental coverage for people without workplace benefits to cover 80% of cost up to $700 a year for a family of 4, $400 for an individual and $600 for a couple

Minimum Wage Will expand $15 minimum wage so it applies to all workers Will freeze the current $14 minimum wage, costing fulltime minimum wage workers $1899 in annual lost wages Will introduce a tax credit for those earning less that $28,000 a year that would equal up to $817 The net loss for low income workers would come to $1082 Will maintain scheduled increase to $15 minimum wage in January 2019, for some workers Will maintain lower min wage for students, liquor servers, etc. Will ensure schools teach inclusive history, including Indigenous history and the history of Black Ontarians Will establish a true government-to-government relationship with Ontario s First Nations Indigenous Will work with First Nations leaders to sign a cooperative, government-to-government accord Will implement the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission agreement on resource revenue sharing No Will implement a revenue sharing agreement Will double Ontario s investment in the First Nations Health Action Plan Race Will ensure schools teach inclusive history, including Indigenous history and the history of Black Ontarians Will create a new four-year $20 million Ontario Anti- Racism Fund Will end the police practice of carding Will expanding carding by bringing back TAVIS that was a special police unit that targeted the black community in the guise of cracking down of gun violence Will continue to allow the police practice of carding

Climate Change Will use 25% of cap-and-trade revenues to support lower-income, rural, and northern households, and trade-exposed industries Will create a new $50 million no-interest home retrofit program to help people consume less power at home Will repeal carbon tax (But the federal government will collect on the provinces behalf if there is no provincial plan) No clear plan to meet 2030 climate goals according to Ontario's Environmental commissioner Will build 65,000 new affordable homes Housing Will crack down on housing speculators, including domestic speculators Will allow seniors to defer property taxes until they sell their home Considering abolishing foreign homebuyers tax that would risk accelerating housing bubble Delayed action has caused housing affordability crisis in Toronto Introduced foreign homebuyers tax Will fund the province s one-third share of repairing social housing Auto Insurance Will bring insurance premiums down by 15% Will end neighbourhood discrimination in auto insurance Will establish a Serious Fraud Office to combat fraud (Current broken system has allowed for $5 billion in excessive corporate profits from insurance payers) Revenue Will raise the corporate tax rate from 11.5% to 13% raising almost $2 billion in revenue annually Will raise income tax on earnings over $220,000 by 1% and on earnings over $300,000 by 2% Will implement a tax surcharge for vehicles that cost more than $90,000 Will reduce corporate tax rate from 11.5% to 10.5% that will cost $1.3 billion in lost revenue annually Will reduce personal income tax rate for middle income earner that will cost $2.3 billion in lost revenue annually In 2010, cut corporate tax from 14% to 11.5%, costing $3.2 billion in lost annual revenue Will maintain current income tax rates

Labour Will introduce card-based union certification, and firstcontract arbitration but Tories have historically cut Labour Standards every time they are elected Overhauled Labour and Employment legislation but did not expand card check to make it simpler for workers to freely exercise their constitutional right to join a union Senior political aide guilty of wiping government computers following the cancellation of two gas-fired power plants. Sentenced to four months in jail. Government Will establish an electoral reform commission with a lens towards a proportional representation system Will hire an outside auditor to examine ministry finances line-by-line Financial Accountability Office states that the Liberal government has "reduced the transparency and reliability of Ontario s fiscal plan" Removed Hydro One oversight by Ontario s independent, non-partisan watchdog Lowest per capita program spending compare to any other government across Canada