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New Brunswick

After record surpluses, N.B. finance minister cites travel nurse contracts for projected deficit

The Department of Health is expected to be $164-million over budget $97 million of which the province is attributingto those contracts.

Contracts represent nearly 60 per cent of projected $164M overrun in Department of Health

Minister blames cost of travel nurse contracts for deficit projection

21 days ago
Duration 1:46
Finance Minister Ernie Steeves is projecting a small deficit for the upcoming year, but opposition members are not convinced that forecast is accurate.

New Brunswick is projecting a deficit for the upcoming year,with government officials pointing to costly travel nurse contracts as the main driver.

That projected$27.6 million deficitfor fiscal 2024-25comes after the province recordedfour major budget surplusesand had projected asurplus for the year of $40.9 million.

But an update Thursday showedthefirst quartersurpluswas $150.4 million,belowgovernment'sbudgeted$269.8 million surplus for the quarter.

Finance Minister Ernie Steeves saidhealth expenses are largely behind the projection.

The Department of Health is expected to land $164-million over budget $97 million of which the province is attributingto thosecontracts.

Vitalit Health Network's travel nurse contracts represent the bulk of that number.

The province has been aware of the cost implications of those contracts since early 2023, deputy minister Eric Beaulieu told a legislative committee this summer.

A man with short brown hair and glasses, wearing a suit, seated at a table, speaking into a microphone.
Deputy health minister, Eric Beaulieu, told a legislative committee the cost of travel nurse contracts were made clear to the department in March 2023. (Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick)

"The impact that travel nurses contracts arehaving on our bottom line is really no surprise," Steeves told reporters on Thursday.

But he appeared to backtrackwhen asked why the budget wasn't altered if the cost wasn't a surprise.

"You're always surprised atthe amount of money and surprised by how it happened I guess," he said.

"And then looking at how we can...come up with a solution and solve the problem. That's ultimately where we are now,and where we're moving forward to is, how do we solve this problem? This $97-millionproblem?"

An unsmiling woman with long, wavy hair and glasses.
Dr. France Desrosiers, president and CEO of Vitalit, says the health network plans to phase out the use of travel staff by 2026. (Bader Ben Amara/Radio-Canada)

France Desrosiers, the president and CEO of Vitalit, did not respond to questions Thursday abouttheregional health authority's projected cost for travel nurses in the coming year.

"Our financial results and projections are shared with the Department of Health on a monthly basis, following the usual process," she said by email.

"As we stated before the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, agency staff have helped maintain essential services, ensure a safe threshold of nursing care hours per patient per day, and most importantly, save lives," Desrosiers said.

She notedVitalit'splan is to phase out the use of travel staff by 2026.

Steeves said other personnel expenses, such as overtime and training new staff, along with supply costs, account for the rest of theoverage estimate.

He said the projected deficit is 0.2 per cent of the budget and that quarterly dataandfederal estimates to come could change the outlook for the year.

A man in glasses wearing a green shirt looks to the side.
Green Leader David Coon says he doesn't trust the province's latest fiscal projections. (Pat Richard/CBC)

Opposition partieswere skeptical of the figures.

"We've done this song and dance for the last four years now," said Liberal finance criticRen Legacy.

"One quarter we're projecting very low surplusesand then we end up with just humungous surpluses because the revenues are under-projected."

Green Party Leader David Coon expressed similar doubts.

"The premier and his finance minister have been off by a country mile on surpluses and projections in the last number of years, and so I don't trust the projections," Coon said.

Steeves said the last time the province recorded a deficit was in 2017, while the last deficit forecast was made in the third quarter of fiscal 2020-21.

Despite the prediction, Steeves saidthe Progressive Conservatives plan to forge ahead with an election promise to reduce theHSTto 13 per centa move that would cost the province $450 million in revenue.

"We're still continuing to grow as a population, we're still continuing to grow with employment, and that leads to more income tax. So the revenue will go up naturally," he said.