Health care's the big ticket so far. Here's what else happened in P.E.I. election's 1st week - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 05:52 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEIAnalysis

Health care's the big ticket so far. Here's what else happened in P.E.I. election's 1st week

The four main parties all made health-care announcements. But there's other news you may have missed.

There's been health care announcements by the truck load. But there's other news you may have missed.

A hallway of nurses walk away as another nurse prepares medicine.
All parties have health care as a top priority this election. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Week 1 of the P.E.I. provincial election is in the books and parties already havea barrelful ofpromises to sell Islanders on.

The issues that will take the most hold during this campaign are pretty clear. They include health care and doctor shortages; housing; the economy, inflation and the cost of living; environment and climate change; education and child care; and social programs.

All of thesetopics has been brought up sofar, with mentions either sprinkled inor poured oncampaign announcements.

But without question, the big talk of the week was health care. Just take a look atWednesday morning, when the four main parties each made a health-care policy announcement.

Here's some of thecampaign promises related to health care from this week:

  • The PCs said they'd reduce the patient registry to zero (from more than 28,000) and pledged to go on a hiring spree for public and at-home care, adding morephysician assistants, nurse practitioners andcare providers as well as buying and staffing more ambulances.
  • The Greens said they'd open more public health clinics, increase mental health services, "remove political interference" in the health-care systemand cut red tapeto allowphysician assistants to work on P.E.I.
  • The Liberals said they'd offer much bigger incentives for Islanders studying medicine in other provinces to return home and work, and double the number of residency seats. They'd also have the premier be health care minister for two years and have a dedicated minister for mental health and addictions.
  • The NDPsaid they'd bring down prescription costs by fighting for a national pharmacare program, while also focusing on cutting ambulance wait times and stopping hospital ER closures. They'd also create more long-term beds and improve senior care at home.

For the list of promises made in announcements and each party's platform as they roll out, hopover to the 2023 promise tracker page.

Surprisingly, though, there was little to nomention of COVID-19in any announcement. The closest thing to it was the Greens' pledge to open more cough and fever clinics.

Another Week 1 talking pointwas the NDPbecoming thefirst partyto drop their full platform. It's not costed, but the 40-page document covers affordability, the housing crisis, job creation, education, climate change and electoral reform.

We're only a week in, so there's much more campaigning to do and only so much partiescanfit into their agendas.

Moving the supervised injection site 'the big surprise'

An unexpected story was talk of moving location ofthe yet-to-be-openedsupervised injection site from Belmont Street in Charlottetown.

At a public meeting on the issue Wednesday evening, all fourcandidates running in District 12: Charlottetown-Victoria Parkagreed the proposed site was the wrong location.

View of 33 Belmont Street.
An unexpected story this week was talk of moving location of the yet-to-be-opened supervised injection site from Belmont Street in Charlottetown. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

PC Leader Dennis King confirmed Thursday thatif re-elected, he would change it.

"It's been heard loud and clear from everybody that I think Belmont is not the proper place for this," he said."And we would agree with that."

UPEI political scientist Peter McKenna said the "backtracking" on the supervised injection site was a shock to him.

"It's pretty clear, obviously, that they were concerned about potential political fallout and how that would impact them in terms of the April election and decided to dramatically change course," he said.

"That's the big surprise."

There was also news this week about candidates who are no longer with their parties.

On Monday night, at the same time King announced the election, the Greens held a nomination meeting for District 13: Charlottetown-Brighton.

Incumbent GreenOle Hammarlund was challenged and lostthe nomination a "very rare" event atthe least,UPEI political scientist Don Desserud said. McKenna agreed.

Another political candidate, Jessica Simmonds, isno longer running for the Liberals in Charlottetown after questions were raised about her Indigenous heritage.

In an emailed statement to CBC News, Simmonds said "Let me be clear:I am a woman of Indigenous heritage. Both my maternal great-great-grandparents were of Indigenous descent."

What will the coming weeks bring?

When it comes to elections, provincial or otherwise, there's usually some sort of wedge issue basically a topic divisive enough to cause political candidates to verbally brawlover.

There isn't one so far, but McKenna said the UPEI medical school has the potential to turn into alarger issue, with many details aboutthe $120-million-plus project still needing somefiguring out.

The Greens and Liberals both questioned the project this week, and both said they'd put the brakes on it if elected so they could study it even further.

McKenna is also waiting to see if land protection and ownership become important talking points in the coming days, especially following Fiona and the rock wall inPoint Deroche that caused public outrage and questions around how to better protect P.E.I.'s eroding shoreline.

"That could be a potential issue that's going to grab peoples' attention.Islanders are very sensitive about land and ownership, and control," he said.

"People weren't very happy about the way that unfolded, and the regulatory decisions and cabinet intervention and approval of that project rubbed Islanders the wrong way."