Premier rules out deal for NewPage pensioners
Port Hawkesbury Mayor calling for help after agreement struck for Bowater-Mersey retirees
CBC News
Posted: Dec 12, 2012 8:44 AM AT
Last Updated: Dec 12, 2012 10:59 AM AT
Premier Darrell Dexter says you can't compare the situations between the two regions. (CBC)
Related
Premier Darrell Dexter says comparing the NewPage pension problems with that of former Bowater-Mersey employees is "fundamentally unfair" and there's no way he'll consider a deal to help shrinking Newpage pensions.
Monday, the Nova Scotia government announced it spent $100 million to buy employee pension liabilities. The investment means pensions for former mill employees will be 100 per cent covered.
Meanwhile, former workers at the NewPage plant in Port Hawkesbury saw their pensions sliced by more than 30 per cent this summer. Some retirees are also being told they've been overpaid and may have to pay back some of the money.
The Mayor of Port Hawesbury, Billy Joe MacLean, said the Bowater deal gave his community hope. He appealed to Dexter for help.
"You've looked after one pensioner group from the same union, with the same jobs, with the same situation," he said. "The pensioners had the same impact in Port Hawkesbury as they did in Liverpool."
No assets
MacLean asked publicly if Cabinet would be making a pension announcement in his community anytime soon.
Dexter wasted no time to squash any hope for aid.
"There is nothing to revisit," Dexter said. "These are fundamentally different plans."
The Premier said Bowater came with an asset base while NewPage does not.
"In the end of the day, they worked for a company that went bankrupt, that had no assets. We worked with Billy Joe, with all the municipal officials down there, to make sure that we could give that plan the opportunity to operate."
Dexter said the government worked just as hard on Port Hawkesbury as it did on the deal on the South Shore.
In October, the mill in Port Hawkesbury opened with Pacific West at the helm. The reopening followed several months of uncertainty that saw the deal called off, and then back on in a matter of hours.
"We worked very hard to make sure that that was not the end of the forestry sector in the Strait area," said Dexter.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Trevor Zinck resigns
- Embattled Independent MLA Trevor Zinck tendered his resignation Wednesday afternoon. more »
- Speaker of the House speaks about Zinck's resignation
- Speaker of the House Gordie Gosse talks to CBC News about former MLA Trevor Zinck's resignation. more »
- Missing woman's relationship was ending, say friends
- Friends of a woman who disappeared three months ago say Reita Jordan's relationship with her live-in partner, the man charged with second-degree murder in her disappearance, was coming to an end. more »
- Rash of Dartmouth break-ins terrifies neighbourhood
- A young Dartmouth mother had a terrifying encounter Tuesday night in her home after surprising a brazen thief in her kitchen. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Top court to reveal if it will hear Rob Ford conflict appeal
- The Supreme Court of Canada will reveal today if it will hear an appeal in a conflict of interest challenge that previously threatened to oust Toronto Mayor Rob Ford from office. more »
- Secret tax-haven files lift veil on $32M Ontario fraud
- Bulletproof cars, Caribbean intrigue, financial finagling — the tale of swindler Peter Sabourin has it all. And finally, the full story can be told, thanks to the recent massive leak of offshore records. more »
- A Pope with a plan? Francis's first 100 days
- In his first 100 days in office, Pope Francis has largely kept his powder dry and focused on being more of a pastoral pontiff, David Perlich writes. But some recent casual comments make it clear he's holding a fuse for Vatican reform. more »
- Brian Stewart: Forget the cynics, why the Taliban might just want peace
- One big reason, Brian Stewart writes, is the growing strength of the Afghan army. Without the U.S. and its media around to report on the fighting, the next phase in this conflict could get a whole lot bloodier. more »
- Missing woman's relationship was ending, say friends
- Trevor Zinck resigns
- Rash of Dartmouth break-ins terrifies neighbourhood
- Imperial Oil refinery in Dartmouth to close
- Man, 21, dies in northern Cape Breton crash
- Trevor Zinck held on to MLA seat until bitter end
- Speaker of the House speaks about Zinck's resignation
- Digby man blames race for police assault
- MP defends decision to vote for Sable Island national park

