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Opinions on budget run hot and cold

War on taxpayers The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) condemns the McGuinty government's budget as a complete breach of trust with the taxpayers of Ontario. "They have totally broken faith with the voters of this province.
War on taxpayers

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) condemns the McGuinty government's budget as a complete breach of trust with the taxpayers of Ontario.

"They have totally broken faith with the voters of this province. The Liberals campaigned on a platform of fiscal responsibility, balanced budgets, and no tax hikes," said Tasha Kheiriddin, CTF Ontario director. "At no time did they talk of health taxes or any other multi-billion dollar tax increases.

"They promised a balanced budget, yet they won't deliver one for another three years. Ontario has returned to the days of rampant tax-and-spend liberalism."

Kheiridden added, "The McGuinty promise not to raise taxes was a lie. Their deficit numbers were a lie. Their pledge to eliminate waste was a lie. This government is completely unworthy of the people's trust.

"This budget can be summed up in three words: less for more. Taxpayers will get the same services (such as vehicle licences) or fewer services (such as delisted health-care services) while paying higher fees and taxes."



Environmentalists pleased

Earthroots applauds the Ontario government's decision to invest $53 million in the Ministry of the Environment, beginning the rebuilding process of this
ministry after several years of neglect and ruin. Between 1991 and 2001, the ministry's budget was slashed from $824 million to $231 million.

"Ontarians want Queen's Park to protect clean air and water, and green spaces and forests", said Earthroots campaign director Josh Matlow.

"The environment has been left out in the wilderness for too many years. In this budget, the government has begun the process of reinvesting into Ontario's future."



Mayor hears good news

The budget was good news to the ears of Greater Sudbury Mayor David Courtemanche. "The Northern Prosperity Plan, the Northern Ontario Grow
Bonds Program and the GO North Investor Program hold the promise of tremendous potential," he said.

"Providing municipalities with a two cent share of the provincial gas tax for public transit over three years is a positive first step," said Courtemanche.

"We look forward to seeing the details of the gas tax funding formula and we certainly hope that the impact will be significant."

In addition, the budget provides funding for public infrastructure priorities, including tools to secure affordable financing. "The infrastructure needs in
Greater Sudbury, like all municipalities in Ontario, are immense," said Courtemanche.



Greens see grey

It's not a bad budget. It's not a good budget either, said Green Party of Ontario leader Frank de Jong.

"It's a grey budget that fails to address the root causes of many of Ontario's ills, including the root causes of ill health, climate change, post-secondary student debt, and projected energy shortages."

While the Ontario government plans to transfer pennies per litre in gas taxes to municipalities for transportation infrastructure, they should have given municipalities the right to introduce their own transportation taxes, added de Jong.

"They should have given taxation autonomy to allow municipalities to levy their own taxes. Instead, they are still giving them crumbs," said de Jong.

The Green Party criticizes the Liberals for adding the new health premium. They say this new tax takes the province in the wrong direction because it fails to address the root cause of health care costs. The GPO would reduce the health budget through disease prevention, addressing the root causes of ill heath (stress, unemployment, addiction, poverty, lifestyle factors).




Health promotion needed

The Ontario Public Health Association (OPHA) applauds the commitment made by the Minister of Finance in the budget to "shift the focus to healthy living, illness prevention and health promotion."

The government's commitment to enhance the public health system's capacity for infectious disease control, increase provincial coverage of public health costs to 75 per cent, and improve home care, mental health and community health services is a step in the right direction.

However, the association cautions that greater emphasis on health promotion is needed.

"Keeping Ontario healthy includes not only infectious disease control, but strong health promotion programming in nutrition, school health, physical activity and other areas. This is necessary to address critical problems such as rising rates of obesity and other chronic diseases," says Larry Stinson, OPHA board member.




Important first step

Ontario's Catholic school trustees view the budget as an important step toward providing the funding needed to improve student learning opportunities and outcomes.

"We welcome the increased focus on education in this tough economic climate," said Paul Whitehead, president of the Ontario Catholic School Trustees' Association (OCSTA). "Adequacy of education funding, however, remains an issue. School boards must apply the funding increase to many competing local needs as well as to the government's new priorities. "

The government's plan for achieving smaller class sizes requires adequate funding for success. Ontario's Catholic school trustees believe school board involvement in the planning of this initiative is also vital, as is flexibility in implementation. The OCSTA says it look forward to the opportunity to
provide information and perspective on this issue to the government.