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Toronto

Wynne commits to hiring 3,500 nurses as she argues PC plan means health care cuts

A Liberal government will hire 3,500 more nurses in Ontario, Kathleen Wynne said Thursday, as she took aim at the PCs promises to cut the corporate tax rate and reduce government spending.

Announcement is welcome, Ontario Health Coalition says, but 'it's not the end of the story and it can't be'

Liberal Leader Kathleen Wynne says the PCs proposed tax cuts will have an impact on services in the province. (Aaron Vincent Elkaim/Canadian Press)

A Liberal government will hire 3,500 more nurses in Ontario, Kathleen Wynne said Thursday, as she took aim at the Progressive Conservatives' promises to cut the corporate tax rate and reduce government spending by billions of dollars.

"Registerednursesare on the front lines of a more caring Ontario," said Wynne as she made the announcement at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. She stood at a podium emblazoned with the slogan "Care over cuts," which has become her rallying cry in the face of polls that put her party firmly behind the Tories.

According to a news release, the hiring processwill focus on registered nurses and will include 2,500 nurses to work in hospital settings.

While Wynne did not specify where the money to do so would come from, the Liberals' 2018 budget increasedhospital funding this year by 4.6 per cent, or $822 million. It also included a pledge to hire one registered nurse for each of Ontario's627 long-term care facilities.

Natalie Mehra, executive director of the Ontario Health Coalition, was cautiously optimistic about Wynne's promise.

"A little infusion of cash for one year for an election is a good start, but it's not the end of the story and it can't be," she told CBC Toronto.

"It truly is a crisis in the hospitals now;the level of overcrowding is unheard of. People are lying on stretchers in bathrooms and storage closets," she added.

During her address, Wynneturned her attention to PC Leader Doug Ford, who has promised to reduce the corporate tax rate, cut taxes forthe province's middle class earners and reduce government spending by at least $6 billion while offering few details on how he would do it.

"There is no way that you can find between $6 billion and $10 billion in services that are delivered by the government of Ontario without cutting health care," Wynne said.

She added that Ford's proposal to cut the corporate tax rate from 11.5 to 10.5 per cent would costs the province's treasury some $1.3 billion annually. Those losses would inevitably have an impact on health care, she said, and would be equivalent to firing 12,000 nurses.

During a campaign stop of his own, Ford said a PC government would not reduce the health care budget.

"We believe we're going to keep it the same but we're going to find efficiencies," he told reporters.

Ford has said he has a plan to reduce hospital wait times, and also committed to create 15,000 long-term care beds within five years to ease the burden on the hospital system.

For its part, the NDP has said it will invest $19 billion over 10 years inOntario's hospitals, including adding 2,000 more hospital beds and 15,000 long-term care beds by 2023.