There is a hole in your budget dear Stephen, dear Tony.Analysts across the country have accepted Gilles Duceppe's analysis of the May second federal budget: It's the next one that counts. Northerners should be glad, because the current budget has a big hole in it where Northern Ontario Northern Ontario is the part of the province of Ontario which lies north of Lake Huron (including Georgian Bay), the French River and Lake Nipissing. Northern Ontario has a land area of 802,000 km² (310,000 mi²) and constitutes 87% of the land area of Ontario, although it should be. Northern Ontario wasn't at the table, and it shows. Unless we mount a very aggressive campaign, Northern Ontario won't be represented in the next budget either. The Minister for Northern Ontario, Tony Clement Anthony Peter "Tony" Clement, PC, BA, LL.B., MP (born January 27, 1961 in Manchester, England) is a Canadian politician, federal Minister of Health, Minister for the Federal Economic Initiative for Northern Ontario (FedNor) and member of the Conservative Party of Canada. , is also the Health Minister--he will be a very busy boy. He is Minister for the North because all the genuine Northern MPs are Liberal or NDP NDP New Democratic Party (Canada) NDP National Development Plan (Republic of Ireland) NDP National Development Plan NDP National Democratic Party (Barbados) . As the parachute candidate A parachute candidate, also known as a “carpetbagger” in the United States, is a pejorative term for an election candidate who does not live in and has little connection to the area he or she is running to represent. for the resort riding of Parry Sound-Muskoka, Tony is as close as the Conservatives can come to a local boy. Who cares that he ran in Brampton in 2004? So far the Tony hasn't been a big success as minister for the North. He didn't get a single item for Northern Ontario onto the cabinet table this time. In fact, he may have helped take money off the table. On November 24 of last year, John McCallum
John McCallum, PC, MP, MA, Ph.D (born April 9, 1950) is a Canadian politician, economist and university professor. , who was then Minister of Natural Resources, announced that the federal government would spend $1.5 billion on the forestry sector over the next five years. At least a quarter of that should have gone to Northern Ontario. McCallum's Forest Industry Competitiveness Strategy included "$581 million to support forest-dependent communities, market diversification and incentives for innovation in the forest industry, including incentives for bioenergy production." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] McCallum's shift to a community-based diversification strategy made sense. McCallum wasn't making it up as he went along. He earned his doctorate in Economics from McGill in 1977. The topic was actually relevant: Agriculture and economic development in Quebec and Ontario to 1870. He taught economics for years in Manitoba, BC and Quebec before retiring to serve as senior vice-president and chief economist The Chief Economist is a single position job class having primary responsibility for the development, coordination, and production of economic and financial analysis. It is distinguished from the other economist positions by the broader scope of responsibility encompassing the of the Royal Bank of Canada Bank of Canada Canada's central bank, established under the Bank of Canada Act (1934). It was founded during the Great Depression to regulate credit and currency. The Bank acts as the Canadian government's fiscal agent and has the sole right to issue paper money. . His strategy for the forestry sector was almost certainly worked out with the help of the prominent and newly Conservative economist, David Emerson David Lee Emerson, PC, Ph.D, MA, MP (born September 17 1945, in Montreal, Quebec) is a Canadian politician, who was previously a businessman and a civil servant. Emerson is Minister of International Trade and Minister for the Pacific Gateway and the Vancouver-Whistler Olympics in . In any case, the new conservative budget provides only $400 million over two years "to combat the pine beetle infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths. , strengthen the long-term competitiveness of the forestry sector and support worker adjustment." The mountain pine beetle The mountain pine beetle, Dendroctonus ponderosae, is a species of bark beetle native to the forests of western North America from Mexico to central British Columbia. deserves at least as much attention as Northern Ontario in a Conservative budget, if only because it has more representatives in parliament. This western insect has been threatening to move east as a result of global warming global warming, the gradual increase of the temperature of the earth's lower atmosphere as a result of the increase in greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. . An estimated $4.5 billion worth of timber is affected in BC alone. The word that disappeared from the budget discussion between November and May is "communities." The communities that have dropped out of the budget are the ones in northwestern Ontario Northwestern Ontario is the region within the Canadian province of Ontario which lies north and west of Lake Superior, and west of Hudson Bay and James Bay. It includes most of subarctic Ontario. where, according to Statistics Canada, a population of 73,200 outside of Thunder Bay lost 7,500 jobs last year. Northern Ontario's mining-based economy also got short shrift in the budget. We desperately need a major federal contribution to the Centre for Excellence in Mining Innovation. We need the federal government to recognize Northern Ontario's well-established international position in mining and mining supply and we need a federal strategy to build on our strength. To be fair, the new government is still learning the ropes, and by the time the next budget rolls around the Minister for Northern Ontario may have gotten his mind around our region's issues. Or he may not. We can be sure that every other part of the country will be angling for a piece of the coming election budget. Duceppe has already started. We know that a great deal of the government's energy will go to policies that can attract Quebec voters. Those policies could be paid for with Ontario taxes, and in the battle over the fiscal imbalance, McGuinty will be too busy to fight for Northern Ontario. The solution is a Northern Ontario budget process led by Northern Ontario organizations. We need a budget convention organized by the Federation of Northern Ontario Municipalities, the Northern Ontario Large Urban Mayors, the Northeastern and Northwestern Ontario Chamber of Commerce, Chiefs, the new Northern Table, Chambers of Commerce and the universities. Not only would it make sure the North is considered in the next federal budget, it would take us one step closer to effective government for Northern Ontario. Dave Robinson is a professor of economics at Laurentian University. He can be reached at drobinson@laurentian.ca. |
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