Alberta unveils budget in face of declining revenues
CBC News
Posted: Mar 7, 2013 3:23 AM MT
Last Updated: Mar 7, 2013 4:01 PM MT
Funding cuts are expected Thursday when Alberta’s Progressive Conservative government unveils a budget in the face of declining resource revenues.
The budget is expected to be the toughest in years as Premier Alison Redford's government grapples with an estimated $6-billion shortfall.
While the specifics won’t be released until Finance Minister Doug Horner delivers his budget speech Thursday afternoon, both he and Redford have warned that cuts are coming. They have said the cuts won't be as drastic as those taken by former premier Ralph Klein in the 1990s.
"I can promise you that this budget will be different from those that we've brought forward in the past," Redford said on Wednesday. She added that "tough choices" had to be made.
Redford said the budget will include a moderate spending increase, but at a level far below the four per cent hike required to maintain programs at current levels.
She said that investments will continue in projects like schools and roads.
“We're going to have a capital plan, we’re going to have an operating plan, and we’re going to have a savings plan, and we started to see that reflected already in the projects like Highway 63,” she said.
“We're going to continue to build because that's the way that we're able to welcome 100,000 people a year to the province.”
Some measures have already been revealed over the past month:
- The province is reducing the number of public service managers by 10 per cent. The ones who remain face a three-year salary freeze, effective April 1.
- The province continues to take a hard line in negotiations with teachers and doctors.
- The Summer Temporary Employment Program (STEP) has been put on hold, putting funding for 3,000 student jobs in jeopardy.
- 41 staff members were laid off after the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Edmonton closed its transition unit.
- The WestView Health Centre in Stony Plain has learned $450,000 will be cut from its funding this year.
- 19 nurses at the Good Samaritan Gerald Zetter Centre in Edmonton will lose their jobs at the end of March.
Even though many experts say a provincial sales tax could easily solve Alberta’s financial woes, Redford has been adamant that the budget will contain no new taxes.
This raises questions about how the province plans to make up such a huge shortfall, which the premier said was caused by the so-called bitumen bubble, the price difference between West Texas Intermediate and Alberta oil.
The province has relied heavily on money stashed in the sustainability fund to make up for deficits in past budgets, but there won’t be enough to cover the gap this year.
The province announced last fall that it was borrowing to complete the twinning of Highway 63 to Fort McMurray. It’s widely believed that more infrastructure projects will be financed that way.
Wildrose Leader Danielle Smith thinks the government will borrow billions of dollars.
"And so she's going to plunge us back into debt and make our kids and grandkids pay for the spending promises of today," Smith said. "I don't think that's right and I don't think Albertans will think that's right."
The larger question for many observers is how Alberta's financial situation can be so bad, when the economy is doing so well.
The Wildrose Party accuses the government of having a spending problem, not a problem with revenue. The NDP and Liberal parties say the province needs to stop relying so much on resource royalties to fund its budget.
NDP Leader Brian Mason believes there will be service cuts.
"I'm expecting that we're going to see cuts to basic services including health and education," he said. "I think we're going to see layoffs of employees at a time when the province is growing and demands for those services are increasing."
Liberal Party Leader Raj Sherman believes Alberta needs to abandon its 10 per cent flat tax and implement a progressive taxation regime that takes people's incomes into account.
The budget speech will start at some point after 3 p.m. MT and will be streamed live on cbc.ca/calgary and cbc.ca/edmonton.
Share Tools
Latest Calgary News Headlines
- Real estate registry eyed for Calgary city council members
- Members of Calgary's city council may soon have to disclose more personal information in a real estate registry. more »
- Alberta's Wildrose Party fined $90K for robocalls
- The Wildrose Party has been fined $90,000 by the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission for violating automated phone call regulations. more »
- Teen's death sparks call for social services information
- The Alberta government wants to see changes on how provinces share information about children under the protection of social services. more »
- Southern Alberta braces for heavy rainfall, snow
- With Calgary and many parts of southern Alberta expecting a lot of rain over the next few days, officials are telling people to take some precautions. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Rob Ford allies set to take over if mayor steps down
- Members of Rob Ford's executive committee say they are prepared to take over the day-to-day running of the city of the Toronto mayor is no longer able to perform his duties, amid a scandal involving allegations he was caught on video smoking crack cocaine.
more »
- Greg Weston: Senate scandal may be Harper's worst hour
- The widening Senate scandal that the prime minister flippantly tried to dismiss as a 'distraction' just days ago has instead become arguably Stephen Harper's worst hour. more »
- Man is ‘lucky to be alive’ after Washington bridge collapse
- A Washington state bridge over a river collapsed last night, dumping two vehicles into the water and sparking a rescue effort by boats and divers who searched the chilly waterway north of Seattle. more »
- 3D printers give rise to 'desktop manufacturing'
- Customizable objects from plastic dollhouse furniture to medical prosthetics can now be designed and printed out by almost anyone at the press of a button, and is going to lead to an 'explosion of new stuff,' predicts author Chris Anderson. more »
- Rob Ford fired chief of staff for telling mayor to 'get help'
- CBC News has learned the details of what precipitated the firing of Mark Towhey as Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's chief of staff — and it was advice from Towhey that Ford needs to 'get help.' more »
- Southern Alberta braces for heavy rainfall, snow
- Alberta's Wildrose Party fined $90K for robocalls
- S.E. Calgary man missing since February
- Calgary school board staff's $15K New Zealand trip questioned
- Teen's death sparks call for social services information
- Alberta's pest list includes 60 critters
- Rain, snow in K-Country prompts rescue of school campers
- Calgary man charged with murder in 2012 killing
- Calgary teen found dead had been in provincial care

