Manitoba government finds $123M in savings, will use that money to pay for NDP commitments - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba government finds $123M in savings, will use that money to pay for NDP commitments

The Manitoba government expectsto find $123 million in savings this fiscal yearthat it will redirect toward its own commitmentsrather than offsetting a deficit forecast coming in at$1.6 billion.

Premier Kinew says his government will 'hold the line' on deficit, won't pay it down this fiscal year

A man and two women walk through a stone hallway
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew walks to the legislative assembly before the throne speech in November. His government has found savings and is using them to pay for election promises, a provincial fiscal update says. (Aaron Vincent Elkaim/The Canadian Press)

Manitoba's NDP government expectsto find $123 million in savings this fiscal yearthat it will redirect toward its party's commitmentsrather than offsetting a deficit forecast coming in at$1.6 billion.

Premier Wab Kinewand finance minister Adrien Sala said the government would "hold the line" on the province's finances to prevent the deficit forecast from gettingworse.

"Whenever you find yourself in this deep of a financial hole, the first thing you have to do is to stop digging," Kinew said.

Since the party's election in October, it says it hasfoundvarious savings, including$15 million by disbanding the surgical task force, $25 million by cancelling a government fund to support the ideas of civil servants and $32 million because the government'sCOVID command centre is no longer running.

The province is also reducing$14 million in spending by eliminatingduplicative work within health-care administration. No jobs will be lost as a result, the premier said.

"These are things that were set out in the budget that we don't have a staff position or an initiative where we have to spend this money now, so we're just returning that, in this case $14 million, to government," Kinew said.

The province is also realizing $16.3million in savings by scaling backon a planned stockpiling of personal protective equipmentsupplies and $5.8 million in reduced expenses becauseonly a small number of thehealth-care workers recruited through a recent international trip to the Philippines have arrived so far.

Redirect savings to new promises

The government will redirect themoneytoward new commitments, all within the current fiscal year: an estimated $82million will cover the loss of the provincial gas tax for the first three months of 2024, $10 million will go toward additional health-care costs, such as more hospital beds, and $31 million on temporary accommodations for people who are homeless and new arrivals on temporary visas.

Meanwhile, the province will undertake afinancial review of the organizations under its purview that are overspending their budgets, particularly in health care.The province will examine capital projects and operational expenses.

They'llalso review spending in all governmentdepartments. Sala said the finance department has saved $2.6 million by cancelling conference trips and audit fees.

"I would say that we have an expectation that if you've missed your budget by hundreds of millions of dollars, then senior executives will be very judicious with their spending," Kinew said.

Looking up at the top of the legislative building, including the Golden Boy on top.
Premier Wab Kinew said his government remains committed to its election promises, including balancing the budget in four years. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

None of thesavings, however, will be directed toward reducing the deficit, which isthe highest shortfall in the province's history outside of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The $1.6-billion deficit is more than quadruple the estimated number in the spring.

The Progressive Conservatives are continuing to allege the NDP is inflating the deficit number to make them, as the former government, look bad.

"If the deficitwas what they claim it to be, why not apply that $125 million dollars [in savings]to the deficit?" PC finance critic Obby Khan said.

He also said the NDPis setting the stage to eventually hiketaxes and cutservices.

Kinew said his government hadn't made any changes to its election promises. It is still committed to keepingtax cuts from the previous PC government and balancing the budget within four years in office.

"I think it's important that, as part of a balanced approach where we invest in health care, we're balanced with the books, that we're also offering predictability," Kinew said.

"Because you have households who have made their financial decisions for the coming year, and we can't pull the rug out from underneath you."

The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, along with some unions, issued an open letter Wednesday urging the premier to backtrack on his planned tax cuts.

"Any realistic path forward that honours your election commitments entails exploring means of shoring up revenue. It also means extending your timeline to return the budget to balance given the shockingly high deficit and deep cuts inflicted on public services in Manitoba," the letter said.

With files from The Canadian Press