Sask. to join Newfoundland and Labrador in court challenge over equalization formula - Action News
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Sask. to join Newfoundland and Labrador in court challenge over equalization formula

Saskatchewan'sattorney general says the province will joinNewfoundland and Labrador in itschallengeof the federal government'sequalization formula.

'Increasing sense that there is a great deal of injustice inherent in the equalization formula': Sask. AG

a large tower.
Bronwyn Eyre, Saskatchewan's minister of justice and attorney general, said the province will act as an intervener and supporter in Newfoundland and Labrador's court action against the federal Liberal government over equalization payments. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Saskatchewan'sattorney general says the province will joinNewfoundland and Labrador in itschallengeof the federal government'sequalization formula.

On Thursday, two Newfoundland and Labrador cabinet ministers saidtheir province will take the federal government to court to try to push a changein the equalizationformula, arguing the province is being cut out of potentially billions of dollars in the long term.

The suit is to be filed in coming weeks in an Newfoundland and Labradorcourt.

Saskatchewan has not received paymentsfor the past 17 years under equalization the federal program that provides some provinces with cash to allow for a fair level of services across the country.

In a Thursday post on X, formerly Twitter, Premier Scott Moe said he's askedBronwyn Eyre, Saskatchewan's minister of justice and attorney general, to contact Newfoundland and Labrador's attorney general to"discuss our province's legal intervention to support their case."

Were prepared to fight feds in court over equalization payments, says N.L. finance minister

5 months ago
Duration 1:32
Newfoundland and Labrador is missing out on billions of dollars in equalization payments, say cabinet ministers John Hogan and Siobhan Coady, and the government is prepared to go to court to change that. The federal government has extended the current equalization formula to 2029, despite the N.L. governments requests for change.

Moe has long criticized the equalization formula. He has, in the past,called theformula "flawed" and suggested in 2018 thefederal government split the money given toso-called "have-not" provinces among all provinces, based on population.

He's not the first Saskatchewan premier to criticize the payments. In 2007, theNDPgovernment under then premierLorne Calvert filed a court challenge of the equalization program. It was dropped the following year,after the Saskatchewan Party came to power under Brad Wall.

Eyre said Moe's2018 proposal to change equalization payments was "inexplicably rejected out of hand."

"We've been here before, we have sought solutions. They have been discounted and discredited and disregarded," she told CBC on Friday.

Eyre said she has told Newfoundland and Labrador Justice Minister John Hogan that Saskatchewan will "formally" support the province's challenge.

"We are joining we are intervening. We're proud to do so It's important to highlight that this is obviously a cross-partisan effort between two provinces," and between her Saskatchewan Party government and the Liberal government ofNewfoundland and Labrador.

Eyre said the province believes it's important to "stand in solidarity with their case," and the time is right for a challenge of the equalization system.

"A lot has changed over the years and there has been an eroding of the relationship with the federal government. There's an increasing sense that there is a great deal of injustice inherent in the equalization formula" and "an enormous undermining of cooperative federalism," she said.

A woman with shoulder-lengthy dark hair speaks into microphones.
'There has been an eroding of the relationship with the federal government,' says Justice Minister Bronwyn Eyre. (Adam Bent/CBC)

Eyre said Saskatchewan will act as anintervener and supporter inNewfoundland and Labrador's court action against the federal Liberal government.

Eyresaid the equalization program does not factor in the diverse geographical layout and energy needs of the province.

The Moe government has repeatedly singled out Quebec as the single biggest beneficiary of equalization payments, saying the province receives billions while Saskatchewan gets nothing.

In 2018, Saskatchewancriticized the fact that in equalization calculations,hydroelectricity generated in other provinces wasn't counted as "natural resourcerevenue" while Saskatchewan's oil, gas, potash and uranium was.

"There are crucial fundamental exceptions in the [formula] for example, of Quebec's hydro, which is simply unfair," Eyre said.

Sask. Party has 'zero credibility' on equalization: NDP

NDP finance critic Trent Wotherspooncriticizedthe Sask. Party government for dropping the 2007lawsuit, which he said would havedelivered "fiscal fairness for Saskatchewan people 16 years ago" and improved the province's fiscal position.

"The Sask. Party just has zero credibility. It's been all hypocrisy, no delivery when it comes to equalization and a fair deal for Saskatchewan," he said.

A man in a blue suit and white shirt stands in front of a Saskatchewan flag.
Saskatchewan NDP finance critic Trent Wotherspoon says Saskatchewan should be leading its own challenge against the equalization formula. (Alexander Quon/CBC)

With a provincial election coming up this year, Wotherspoon said an NDP government would be preparedto launch a lawsuit.

"Saskatchewan people deserve more than just being a sidebar to someone else's case. We should be leaders, and we were leaders," he said.

With files from Dayne Patterson