CBC - Newfoundland and Labrador Budget 2005 - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 08:41 PM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
CBC - Newfoundland and Labrador Budget 2005
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Newfoundland and Labrador Budget 2005

Media
Audio
March 22, 2005:
Jeff Gilhooly, host of the St. John's Morning Show, speaks with Finance Minister Loyola Sullivan about his priorities in the 2005 provincial budget.(runs 9:02) Click to Listen to the RealMedia file

Suzanne Woolridge reports on the boost to the province's arts and cultural industries in the 2005 provincial budget.(runs 4:35) Click to Listen to the RealMedia file

 

Video
March 21, 2005:
Doug Letto reports on highlights of the 2005 provincial budget, which spreads out new spending across most sectors.(runs 4:35) Click to Watch to the RealVideo file

March 21, 2005:
Debbie Cooper interviews Finance Minister Loyola Sullivan about the choices government made for the 2005 budget. (runs 5:20) Click to Watch to the RealVideo file
Overview: Oil cash drives down deficit
CBC News Online | March 21, 2005

Soaring oil prices, a new Atlantic Accord and a boost in federal spending have helped dramatically improve Newfoundland and Labrador's ledger, although the province's finance minister warns there is still far too much red ink in this year's budget.

Minister of Finance Loyola Sullivan
Minister Finance
Loyola Sullivan

The province will still be running a heady deficit, but significantly less than had been feared only a year earlier, Loyola Sullivan said Monday as he brought down a $4.39-billion budget that he admits is markedly softer than his debut last year.

While gently loosening purse strings, Sullivan's second budget aims to cut waiting times for diagnostic procedures, improve school-bus safety, tackle addiction treatments and spur economic development.

Fiscal circumstances have improved well enough for the province to leave all but one of its taxes alone. The exception is a targeted tax increase on tobacco that aims to cut smoking rates.

"We think we've struck a very strong balance," Sullivan told reporters Monday.

The deficit for 2004-05 is now pegged at $492 million, well below the $759 million projected in the hard-hitting 2004 budget.

Sullivan says the province is now on track to balance its books before its target of 2007.

"We have an obligation to spend as little as we can on debt servicing and as much as we can on [programs]," Sullivan says.

"You can't have both."

Where the Money Comes From
Graph of the summary of current account expenditures
Where the Money Goes
Graph of the summary of current accounts expenditures

Staffing levels

The 2004 budget laid out a frank – if not drastic – reduction in the public service.

The government had been planning to eliminate about 4,000 positions through a mixture of attrition and layoffs.

This year's budget indicates a more relaxed approach, although the budget documents do not indicate how many job cuts will be spared.

As well, Sullivan refused to even speculate on how many positions will now not have to be eliminated as scheduled.

"It's safe to say we'll be taking a more moderate look," Sullivan told reporters Monday morning.

Sullivan said a review of government programs is still underway, which will involve a review of staffing levels.

Among the jobs that will be spared are about 75 teaching positions.

The government has indicated it wants a greater emphasis on music, arts and culture in the schools, echoing one of the themes of the budget.

Most taxes, fees frozen

Sullivan said the province's improved circumstances mean no new taxes will be created, and almost all tax rates will remain frozen.

The exception is a hike in tobacco taxes, which Sullivan says is due to health concerns, not a new for new revenue.

After midnight Monday, cigarettes will cost an extra penny per cigarette. For fine-cut tobacco, prices will jump five cents per gram.

Other targets

As always, the budget covers a wide variety of issues and objectives. Among them:

  • A plan to reduce the number of video lottery terminals (VLTs) by 15 per cent, over the next six years. Bars will be limited to only five per establishment, instead of up to 20 as is currently allowed now.
  • Bars will get a break as the province phases out a mandatory licensee levy, charged over and above the cost of beer and spirits. The decision will cost the treasury $675,000 per year.
  • A third magnetic resonance imaging unit will be opened, in St. John's. Other diagnostic purchases include two upgraded CT scanners.
  • The government will spend $4.3 million on plans for long-term care facilities for Corner Brook, Clarenville and Happy Valley-Goose Bay.
  • Following on last week's speech from the throne, spending on culture was bumped with increases to the provincial Arts Council and a variety of cultural groups.

An unspoken part of the provincial budget is the government's precise plans on how to spend cash from its new Atlantic Accord deal with Ottawa on offshore royalties.

The package, which has yet to be ratified by the House of Commons, will see the province receive a $2 billion advance on its offshore royalties.

Sullivan would not specify how the government plans to spend annual interest from that advance, although he pointed out that several years of deficits will clear the $2-billion mark.

Interest will be generated from that advance. Sullivan would not specify how the government plans to spend it.

View budget highlights
- Summary of Gross Capital Account Expenditures (36 kb PDF) PDF document

View the budget speech (323 kb PDF) PDF document

View budget estimates 2005-06 (1.53mb PDF) PDF document

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites. Links will open in new window. (Acrobat Reader required - download free Acrobat Reader)


to top