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[CUPE healthcare list] NS Tories considering P3 hospitals
- To: <healthcare@members.cupe.ca>, <brad@duplisea.ca>
- Subject: [CUPE healthcare list] NS Tories considering P3 hospitals
- From: "Irene Jansen" <ijansen@cupe.ca>
- Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2007 13:03:27 -0500
- Thread-index: AcgwVdbsbSEaCGD3R2W2mKmkSPzkMAAALlTw
- Thread-topic: A document from FPinfomart.ca
The Daily News (Halifax)
Fri 23 Nov 2007
Page: 8
Section: News
Byline: Flinn, Brian
The Tory government will partner with private companies
to build new roads and public buildings, perhaps including hospitals.
The government's throne speech, read yesterday by Lt.-Gov. Mayann Francis,
says the province needs public-private partnerships to overcome an $8 billion
infrastructure deficit. It cited the Cobequid Pass and the East Coast Forensic
Hospital as examples of how that can work.
The Conservatives promised to end P3 contracts when they were first elected
eight years ago.
"Nova Scotia has learned from the mistakes of the P3 schools of the 1990s,"
Francis read. "Instead, our government will build responsibly, with a
transparent financial process, the infrastructure needed for communities and
people."
Transportation Minister Murray Scott said that does not mean more toll roads,
at least not under the kind of arrangement that built the toll section of
Highway 104.
"I think the toll highway in this province was not acceptable to Nova
Scotians. That message was sent loud and clear," he said. "If there's another
way to do a partnership that's more acceptable to Nova Scotians, then I want to
look at all those."
He said P3 deals that built schools in the 1990s did not give communities
enough access to the new buildings.
The private sector could also play a greater role in health care. The
government will "allow publicly funded, private facilities to play a clearly
defined role in providing access to certain and proscribed health services."
Premier Rodney MacDonald said he's committed to upholding the Canada Health Act. The province already works with private companies
such as Emergency Health Services, without compromising universal access.
"Could it mean a new hospital at some point in time? Certainly," he said.
"That is a potential for a strategic infrastructure partnership."
NDP Leader Darrell Dexter said he's concerned government will compromise
universal health care. He said past P3 projects have cost taxpayers a
lot more money, with dubious results.
The throne speech promised to twin highways from Yarmouth to Sydney by 2020.
Dexter said it's ridiculous for the government to make that kind of promise.
"These guys aren't going to be around in 2020," Dexter said. "They'll be
lucky to be around in 2008."
The speech spells out five government priorities, the same number Prime
Minister Stephen Harper announced this fall.
"Everything this premier has done has been mirroring Stephen Harper," Liberal
Leader Stephen McNeil said. "This is the Mini Me, I guess, of Stephen Harper,
here in Nova Scotia."
The speech briefly mentioned the government's bill to eliminate health- care strikes.
Both the NDP and Liberals plan to vote against it.
McNeil and Dexter said they will have to defeat the government if the throne
speech comes to a vote. But the premier said he doesn't plan to ask the
legislature to approve his plans.
bflinn@hfxnews.ca
© 2007 Transcontinental Media G.P. All rights reserved.
Illustration:
• Lt.-Gov. Mayann Francis reads the
throne speech yesterday at Province House.
Idnumber: 200711230011
Length: 463 words
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