Provincial budget to be tabled April 11 - Action News
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Manitoba

Provincial budget to be tabled April 11

The Progressive Conservatives say they will be delivering a budget on April 11.

Spending plan to include 'difficult but necessary' decisions, government says

Finance Minister Cameron Friesen announced Manitoba's 2017 budget will be tabled April 11. (THE CANADIAN PRESS)

The Progressive Conservatives say they will delivera budget on April 11.

Expected to include cost-controlmeasures, the spending plan willreflect "difficult but necessary" decisions, anews release stated.

"Our government ran on a commitment toManitobansas you know that we would take the steps necessary to return our province to balance. That we would create stability," Finance MinisterCameronFriesensaid Thursday.

Manitoba's 2017 budget was developed with help from an advisory panel, the minister said, chaired byJanice MacKinnon, former Saskatchewan finance minister, and Dave Angus, former Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce president and CEO.

"This panel ... includes representatives with experience in the civil service, agriculture, public and private sectors, health care and charitable organizations ... [it] is reviewing the volumes of work and will be providing to us recommendationsof initiatives our government can pursue,"Friesensaid.

"In order to better protect the frontline services, provide better job security for workers in our system and ensure lower taxes."

Friesen saidmaintenance of core infrastructure, like hospitals and roads, was deferred year afteryear by the previous NDP government, while spending in other areas soared.

'An austerity agenda'

The Tories inherited an $846-million deficit from the former NDP government. Manitoba's deficit would have nearly doubled, Friesensaid, to almost $1.7 billion by 2019-20, if spending went unchecked.

"The NDP spent beyond its means for 17 years leaving Manitobans with an inherited deficit of $900 million," Friesen said.

Manitoba has also seen its credit downgraded, he said, making debt more expensive for the province.

James Allum, finance critic with the NDP, calledFriesen's characterization of Manitoba's finances a scare tactic.

"We know our debt-to-GDP ratio is stable," said Allum. "And that's the critical feature that governments use to determine whether or not their debt is manageable."

Allum said the 2017 budget amounts to an austerity agenda that will leave Manitoban families in the lurch. Investing in services will only help improve the province's economy, he said, not hurt it.

"The worst thing you can do is cut the programs and services Manitobans rely on."

With files from The Canadian Press and Sean Kavanagh