All this talk of austerity, gutting the public service….
Then you look at the salary costs, from the provincial budget.
There’s something that just doesn’t add up.
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The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
All this talk of austerity, gutting the public service….
Then you look at the salary costs, from the provincial budget.
There’s something that just doesn’t add up.
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The annual budget is probably the most political document of any government in a Westminster style parliament like ours.
At its simplest and most obvious level the budget is the formal statement of a government’s priorities. Once approved by 1the legislature, it gives government the legal authority to spend money.
The budget is, in that sense, the most obvious display of what political scientist David Easton defined as politics: the authoritative allocation of values.
There’s more politics to the budget than just that, however.
Maybe someone can point to this information somewhere please. Maybe your humble e-scribbler missed it.
But in the past couple of days, there’s been a simple number missing from the discussion of long-term care beds in Newfoundland and Labrador.
How many do we need?
Seems like a fairly obvious question.
Both Premier Paul Davis and health minister Steve Kent pointed to the current problem with chronic care patients taking up acute care beds. That’s been happening for decades. They used a number of 237 as the number of beds being occupied in acute care facilities by patients needing long-term care.
But that isn’t all the demand. That’s just the stuff that they actually have right at the moment.
So how many long-term beds do we need?
Yet another academic paper emerged on Tuesday that pointed out that the provincial government has a big financial problem caused by following the flawed policy of spending all the money it takes in, plus more besides.
Don’t take that as a dismissal of the paper by University of Calgary professor Ron Kneebone. To the contrary, Kneebone’s paper adds yet more weight to the argument offered by a few people in this province since about 2006 or so.
Taken together with the recent report by the Conference Board of Canada on the province’s economic competitiveness and you have a pretty strong indictment of the Conservative/Lockean policy the provincial government has been following since 2003.
Starting last Friday, the ironically-named Conservatives currently running the place started holding a series of “pre-budget” announcements.
They started with news that to deal with the massive financial crisis they would be dumping 77 and a half teaching positions in the provincial school system. About twice that many would retire, so the school boards in the province would only hire enough teachers to fill half the empty slots. To make that fit with the declining student enrolment, the school boards would adjust the allowed class sizes by one student per teacher for grades 4 to 6 and by two students per teacher for grades 7 to 9.
Other than that, no change in staffing.
On Monday, the finance minister announced that the massive financial problem the government is facing led the government to cut the public service by zero real people.
The response to the proposed boundaries for districts in the House of Assembly has been…what’s the word for it? … oh yes, totally off-the-wall, batshit crazy.
On the Burin peninsula you have a bunch of people who claim that having two members represent Marystown instead of the current one member is an unprecedented tragedy of biblical proportions, The town will be split in two, they claim.
Presumably families will be separated, unable to speak to one another across the giant zone of barbed wire and land mines that the northern district will erect between the southern district. Berlin. North and South Korea. Right here.
From Tuesday’s throne speech, here’s another little passage buried away, that could prove to be one of the most significant parts of any throne speech in a long time:
Our government is developing Newfoundland and Labrador's first Open Government Action Plan, reflecting the best 'open government' practices in the world. The plan will nurture a culture of openness within the government by promoting access to information and data and enhanced dialogue and collaboration on initiatives. Under this plan, Newfoundland and Labrador will become, by 2020, one of the most open and accessible jurisdictions anywhere in the world.
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Throne Speech 2015 was the kind of document you’d expect from a group of politicians who are out of new ideas.
People are making a big deal out of the review of the provincial curriculum for K-12 schools. That’s what the folks in the education department do for a living. It’s nothing new.
The promise that the review will produce a 21st century curriculum is such a cliche that it is laughable, given that we are in the second decade of the new century.
Not very impressive, is it?
This excerpt from Tuesday’s federal budget speech seems aimed at province's like Newfoundland and Labrador where the government promised the same day that they’d be piling up more debt on top of their current record debt levels until at least 2021:
Maintaining Fiscal Balance in the Federation
There is no fiscal imbalance between the federal government and the provinces. A fiscal imbalance could be created when federal transfers to provinces and territories are significantly cut and the federal tax burden is increased at the same time. The federal government has adopted the exact opposite approach. Since 2006, the Government has pursued a low-tax plan to support job creation and economic growth. As part of this plan, the Government has increased major transfers to provinces and territories, reduced taxes on individuals, families and businesses, and balanced the budget. Budgetary pressures faced by provinces and territories are due to their own spending plans.
Federal, provincial and territorial governments in Canada each have access to all of the tools necessary to deliver the public services under their respective areas of responsibility and manage their public finances responsibly. Each level of government is accountable to their residents for taxing and spending decisions.
All levels of government must be responsible stewards of taxpayer dollars and control public spending to achieve balanced budgets. Provincial and territorial governments have access to virtually all of the same sources of revenue as the federal government. In addition, provincial and territorial governments have other significant revenue streams such as royalties from natural resources and profits from lotteries and gaming that, with limited exceptions, do not generally benefit the federal government.
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Dwight Ball is the latest Liberal to emerge from the candidate protection program. He popped up on NTV on Monday evening to tell us all two things:
First, he thinks there should be an inquiry into the Dunphy shooting. He made up some nonsense about the need for an imaginary process that supposedly had to play out before he revealed the real Liberal position. After telling us about Step One: the Dunphy family grieving, and then Step Two the two investigations that aren’t finished, he could now announce Step Three, namely that he will appoint an inquiry when he is premier.
Not gonna call on the Conservatives to do it now. Nope. Gonna wait until he is on the 8th. If that happens. And, allowing that he might not get to be Premier until October 2016, that could be a long wait for an inquiry that could begin soon and be finished by this fall.
Then, of course, you have to recall that on Friday, the official Liberal position was that anyone calling for an inquiry now is just playing politics with this tragedy.
You can see a few pretty obvious problems with the latest Liberal position on the Dunphy inquiry. But at least the Liberals are finally accepting the need for an inquiry. They are going to be the butt of more than a few Conservative and New Democrat jokes but at least they are finally in the right spot.
This editorial by Craig Westcott originally appeared in The Pearl newspaper and is re-produced here with permission.
Almost a week after we all got a peek at the new provincial electoral boundaries, things have settled down in some areas and the insanity has exploded in others.
Over on the political side, things have largely settled down. The Liberals, for example have a raft of nominations to re-run but there’s no sign of any significant problems. Sure, there are pissed off people, but in the long run things should work out.
On the west coast, every incumbent or nominated candidate should be able to find a home. Your humble e-scribbler made a mistake on Monday: there are actually enough seats in the new configuration for Gerry Byrne, Stelman Flynn, and Ed Joyce to find a spot.
Jim Bennett is doing the smart thing and looking for a seat without a Liberal incumbent where there’s a good chance he could win. He’s looking at Terra Nova, according to media reports, and the current Conservative incumbent - Sandy Collins - is eyeing Gander. Ditto Jeff Marshall, who has decided to run in Ferryland district now that the old Kilbride district is gone.
One of the police officers responsible for the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary’s Twitter presence did an interview with CBC’s Anthony Germain last Friday.
The online CBC story that came out of the interview had an interesting set of comments in it. Constable Geoffrey Higdon said:
“People think Facebook or Twitter is different in how we traditionally police. It's actually very much the same. In a sense, it's no different than someone writing a threat to someone, or to an organization, on a wall in a bathroom or a public place. And we would investigate that and treat that seriously, until we determine that there is no threat."
Writing something on Twitter is like writing something on a bathroom wall.
Got that?
Last October, Premier Paul Davis appointed Lynn Moore to his new advisory council on crime. Moore is in private practice these days but, as the little profile Davis’ office appended to their announcement of her appointment shows, Moore spent five years as the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary’s in-house lawyer.
She’s also been known to write the odd letter or two to the editor of the local papers.
Last October, for example, Moore felt compelled to write to the editor of theindependent.ca to explain why she thought that the province wouldn’t turn into a police state now that a former police constable was the Premier. Such thinking was the result of bias and elitism, according to Moore.
Last weekend, Moore sent another letter to the gang at the Indy. This time, she tried to tie the death of Don Dunphy to what Moore called “boneheaded” decisions like the Liberal one 20 years ago that put one cop in a car instead of two.
You gotta feel for police chief Bill Janes and the rest of the men and women of the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary.
All this happened between Sunday, April 5, 2015 and Thursday April 9, 2015:
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