Flaherty says skills training plan open to negotiation
Federal finance minister speaks to Vancouver Board of Trade
CBC News
Posted: Mar 22, 2013 12:53 PM ET
Last Updated: Mar 22, 2013 6:24 PM ET
Related
Budget 2013
- Highlights: Federal budget 2013 at a glance
- Feds to target sick leave in public service negotiations
- Federal budget folds CIDA into Foreign Affairs
- First Nations youth get $241M 'workfare' program
- Budget offers little new on the environmental front
- Heritage to take over Canada Day, Winterlude from NCC
- Read the full 2013 federal budget
- A snapshot of provincial and federal fiscal health
- Canada's deficits and surpluses, 1963-2011
- Peeved Harper aims at 'remaking Canadian labour force'
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says a new federal plan for grants to promote job skills training is not a take-it-or-leave-it situation for the provinces, as Quebec signalled it wanted nothing to do with the program.
"Not at all, I think there's an opportunity to negotiate and work it out. Situations aren't identical all across the country, we've worked well with the provinces on this issue since 2007, we just think we can do better, and that's based on what we were told by employers," Flaherty told reporters at a Friday press conference in Vancouver.
"We listened across the country as we did our pre-budget consultations and the number 1 issue in the entire country was a mismatch of persons to jobs," Flaherty said. "We feel at the federal level that we need to address that, it's vital for economic growth, jobs and prosperity.
"This is federal money, federal tax money, that is being used for skills training. [Existing] agreements expire in 2014, so we look forward to negotiating with the provinces to make sure this works well."
Federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty began sell his latest budget Friday at the Board of Trade in Vancouver. He travels to Hong Kong over the weekend to tout his economic plan. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)Flaherty was in Vancouver to speak to the board of trade, as he and other cabinet ministers were fanning out across Canada to sell the merits of the government's 2013 budget, tabled Thursday.
From there, he's heading even farther away from the House of Commons next week, landing in Hong Kong on Monday to speak to the Asia Society as part of a week-long trade and investment-boosting tour of the region.
"Because the emerging economies [of Asia] are where the growth is in the world economy," Flaherty said. "The other reason is that Hong Kong is a financial hub for the world and it is important that we continue to build on the strength of our financial institutions and on the reputation of our country as being a country with very sound fiscal and economic fundamentals.
Closer to their respective home ridings, 22 different cabinet ministers were out making speeches and holding other media-availability sessions throughout the day on Friday, from Revenue Minister Gail Shea in Charlottetown to Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq in Iqaluit to Heritage Minister James Moore in Burnaby, B.C.
As a result, there were plenty of empty seats in the Commons front rows on the government side for the early hours of budget debate, as well as Friday's question period.
Details coming later
While the broad strokes of Thursday's budget are up for debate now, the finer details will wait for the introduction of the government's budget implementation bill later this spring.
Government House Leader Peter Van Loan told reporters Friday that MPs will vote on the budget motion next Wednesday, with the implementation bill expected to be introduced shortly after Parliament's two-week Easter recess, in mid-April.
Exactly how government programs and services will be affected by continuing belt-tightening is also not clear. Direct program expenses — which exclude major transfers to other levels of government — are projected to plunge almost $4 billion this year and another $2.5 billion in 2014-15.
Opposition MPs were expressing concern over a particular line in the budget document that says the government "will introduce legislation as needed to consolidate operations and eliminate redundant organizations."
What's more, some of the proposals in this year's budget require negotiations with the provinces, including a "Canada Job Grant" skills training program.
Ottawa, the provinces and employers would equally share the costs of a $15,000 to help train workers for specific jobs. The federal government's spending on training will stay the same, but provinces will be on the hook for new money.
The Bloc Québécois characterized Thursday's budget as a "frontal attack on Quebec and its workers," panning the changes to skills training as interference in provincial jurisdiction.
Quebec wants out
The Quebec government has formally requested to be excluded from the new federal skills-training program.
The province's Parti Québécois government is particularly livid about the budget, and has held two news conferences 18 hours apart in order to blast it.
It stresses that labour training was transferred to the provinces after a hard-won battle in the wake of the 1995 Quebec independence vote.
And it says its program works.
"We're asking for Quebec to be excused from this federal program," Labour Minister Agnes Maltais said Friday.
"We refuse to go 15 years backward."
Perhaps even more than the labour-training change, the Parti Quebecois government is furious about the end of a tax credit for union venture-capital funds, which hits Quebec almost exclusively.
The provincial government links the disappearance of that credit to a new economic development fund for Ontario worth nearly $1 billion.
"While Ontario is getting $900 million for its manufacturing industry," said federal-provincial minister Alexandre Cloutier, "Quebec is getting peanuts from Ottawa."
Blame the PQ government?
On Thursday night, Quebec's finance minister, Nicolas Marceau, called the federal budget an act of "economic sabotage" against Quebec and an attack on the province, which gave the federal Conservatives few seats in the last election.
The opposition parties in Quebec are also upset about the budget, but they're trying to pin their disappointment on the provincial government. They say the PQ is more determined to pick fights with Ottawa than work with it and, as a result, has no leverage whatsoever.
Cloutier says other provinces don't have sovereigntist governments, and the program was imposed on them anyway, and he also notes that the last Quebec government had plenty of policies forced on it by the Harper Tories.
Quebec's main business lobby, the Conseil du patronat, was more favourable toward the budget. However, it urged caution in revamping the skills-training system.
with files from The Canadian PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- Gunmen in Pakistan have killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- The rescue attempt for two missing fishermen has been called off in New Brunswick, hours after one body was found. more »
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- About 50 to 60 people were injured after a driver described by witnesses as an elderly man drove his car into a group of hikers marching in a parade in a small Virginia mountain town. more »
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
Must Watch
Latest Business Headlines
- 1 year later, Facebook stock remains below IPO price
- A year after Facebook's high profile IPO, investors are still skeptical about its prospects and the stock price is wallowing. more »
- IRS's integrity at stake in scandal over screening of conservative groups
- Unloved in the best of times, the Internal Revenue Service will have to scramble to convince U.S. lawmakers and the public that its intentions were pure, not partisan, when it subjected groups affiliated with the Tea Party movement and other conservative causes to special scrutiny. more »
- GM shares close above IPO price for 1st time in 2 years
- Shares of General Motors reached an important milestone on Friday, closing above their initial public offering price of $33 US for the first time in more than two years. The day wasn't bad for GM's rivals either, with Ford shares closing above $15 for the first time since May 2011 and Toyota, Honda and Nissan all hitting 52-week intraday highs. more »
- AECL to cost $236M more than expected this year
- A new report from the parliamentary budget officer shows Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. continues to be a drain on the public purse and will cost an additional $236 million this year. more »
Lang & O'Leary Exchange
Markets
| Index | Last Trade | Change |
|---|---|---|
| TSX COMPOSITE | 12613.05 | 105.45 |
| DOW | 15354.40 | 121.18 |
| NASDAQ | 3498.97 | 33.73 |
| SP 500 | 1667.47 | 17.00 |
| TSX-VENTURE | 934.68 | 1.82 |
The data on this site is informational only and may be delayed; it is not intended as trading or investment advice and you should not rely on it as such.
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford cancels weekly radio show
- Rescue attempt over for New Brunswick fishermen
- Winning ticket sold in Florida for $590M Powerball jackpot
- Email is proof Senate greenlit expenses, Brazeau says
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield adjusts to 'earthling' life
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- 1 person hurt after trains collide near Medicine Hat

