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Nova Scotia

Opposition parties critical of PC government's end-of-fiscal-year spending spree

Nova Scotia's opposition parties are accusing the PC government of going on an end-of-fiscal-year spending spree and neither party is convinced that extra spending will have the desired impact.

Houston government has announced $152M in new spending this week alone

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston is seen wearing a navy blue suit and a green stripped tie on sitting at a mahogany desk. Behind him are four Nova Scotia flags.
In the last budget forecast updatein December, Finance Department officials reported that Premier Tim Houston's cabinet had already approved nearly $1 billionin additional appropriations this year. (Paul Palmeter/CBC)

The first full week in March has been an expensive one for Nova Scotia taxpayers who will be footing the bill for new PC government spending promises totalling $152 million.

Premier Tim Houston personally announced two of the biggest commitments $58.9 to help Cape Breton University establisha medical school at Cape Breton Universityin Sydney and $37.4 millionto set up a newInstitute for Innovation in Health at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish.

Minister of Advanced EducationBrian Wongannounced the province would spend $25 million to develop health-care data analytics and management programs at Saint Mary's University in Halifax.

Universities weren't the only ones promised money this week.

The Westville Miners Sports Centre, which is in Houston's district, got $2 millionfor renovations and rink upgrades. Woodlot owners were promised$5.7 million to help themcleanup damage frompost-tropical storm Fiona and to manage their lands. Fruit growers will be getting $15 millionin aid to help those who will suffer losses as a result of a cold snap last month.Transition homes, women's centres and associations have also been promised $8 millionmore in funding.

'Nova Scotians deserve better transparency'

The Finance Department has confirmed all of that spending will be accounted for in the current 2022-23 budget. Given Finance Minister Allan MacMasteris scheduled to tablea new budget in two weeks, it's likely much, if not all,of this new spending will be added to the long list of additional appropriations. That's cabinet-approved spendingover and above the budget approved by the legislature last spring.

That cabinet power has been criticized byNova Scotia's Auditor General Kim Adair as lackingtransparency and accountability.

"I think it's time,"Adair told reporters when she released her report last December. "Nova Scotians deserve better transparency."

Adair's report revealedthat during the past 10 years, successive provincial governments have used vague cabinet orders to approve $4.7 billion in over-budget spending.

A woman wearing glasses and a pinstriped suit seated at a table.
Nova Scotia Auditor General Kim Adair has said that people in the province deserve more transparency when it comes to cabinet-approved spending. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

In the last budget forecast updatein December, Finance Department officials reported that cabinet had already approved nearly $1 billionin additional appropriations this year. A final figure will be available when the Houston government introduces its next budget March 23.

For the opposition leaders, all this extra spending rings alarm bells.

"We're certainly seeing March madness, when it comes to spending from this government and the worst part is that we're not seeing things get any better," said Liberal Leader Zach Churchill. "We're seeing a lot of spending and certainly in health care we're seeing the situation get worse."

"That tells you money isn't the fix to everything in health care."

Liberal track record

When they were in power, the Liberals also spentover and above what the budget allowed, including just over $1 billionin additional appropriations in during the 2020-21 budget year.

During the 2017 budget debate, before becoming PC leader, Tim Houston ridiculed the McNeil government for this kind of end-of-year spending spree.

"Now isn't it ironic, Mr. Speaker, without a March madness spending spree, without spending all this money they probably wouldn't have even needed to go to Ottawa to get the money," Houston said, deriding the Liberals for not having the money to spend more on highway twinning.

A woman with dark curly hair on the left, and a man with short dark hair on the right.
Nova Scotia NDP Leader Claudia Chender, left, and Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, right, have criticized the recent spate of provincial spending announcements. (CBC)

During budget debate three years earlier he offered a similar negative view of additional appropriations.

"Mr. Speaker, this Liberal spending spree amounts to $400 million more even than departmental spending under the NDP," said Houston.

NDP Leader Claudia Chenderwas also critical of this year's extra spending.

"Tim Houston can spend all the money he wants but if it's not making a difference then at some point he's going to have to be responsible for the question of why?'" said Chender.

"We're about to go into a budget process where we're going to spend weeks and weeks and weeks talking about the government's budget, their priorities, whether it meets the moment and in the end they can do whatever they want and we have very little oversight."

"So the question is, is that spending working," she said. "And so far the people that I speak to say resoundingly, no."

Premier defends spending

Houston made no apologies for the money his government committed to health-related projects.

"I'll invest in health care today, I'll invest in health care tomorrow, I'll invest in health care every single day it matters," he told reporters after the St. FX announcement Thursday.

Houston said this week'sannouncements developed after asking department officials what potential projects universities in the province might be ready to move on.

"The investments in health care are long overdue," he said. "We're not waiting. We're not waiting for tomorrow, we're not waiting for next week."

"We are making those investments today and we'll book them accordingly. "

With files from Michael Gorman