Minister Morneau’s First Budget Restores Hope for the Middle Class – Budget 2016

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March 22, 2016 – Ottawa, Ontario – Department of Finance

The Minister of Finance, Bill Morneau, today tabled the new Government of Canada’s first federal budget, Growing the Middle Class, a plan that takes important steps to revitalize the Canadian economy, and delivers real change for the middle class and those working hard to join it.

A strong economy starts with a strong middle class. That is why building an economy that works for Canadians and their families is the top priority of this government.

Budget 2016 offers immediate help to those who need it most, and lays the groundwork for long-term economic growth. Most importantly, it focuses squarely on people and the things that matter most to them—things like strengthening the middle class, creating jobs, and growing the economy.

As of January 1st, the government’s Middle Class Tax Cut ensures roughly 9 million Canadians receive a bigger paycheque every payday.

Today, Minister Morneau builds on this progress with the introduction of the new Canada Child Benefit—a simpler, tax-free, more generous, targeted benefit that helps those who need it most: the middle class. Starting in July of 2016, nine out of ten families will receive more money than they did under the previous government.

Budget 2016 signals a new approach that will create jobs and improve the quality of life for Canadians, today and in the future. This includes historic new investments in infrastructure that total more than $120 billion over the next decade.

As an immediate first step, the government will invest $11.9 billion in modern and reliable public transit, water and wastewater systems, affordable housing, and in retrofits and repairs to protect existing projects from the effects of climate change.

Additional longer-term investments will help Canada become a low carbon economy, and create more vibrant cities, digitally connected rural areas, and safe, healthy, thriving communities.

Budget 2016 also provides significant new investments to support both students and post-secondary institutions, so that the next generation of Canadians is well-equipped to tackle the challenges of the future. In addition, the government will promote research, accelerate business growth, and support clean technology to better position Canada in the rapidly shifting global economy.

Recognizing that protecting the environment and growing the economy go hand in hand, the government will invest in clean technologies that address climate change, air quality, clean water, and clean soil. Budget 2016 also reiterates the government’s intention to establish a $2 billion Low Carbon Economy Fund.

To ensure that this growth is shared by all Canadians, Budget 2016 takes renewed steps to give all Canadians the same opportunities to succeed, no matter who they are, or where they come from. This includes unprecedented investments in First Nations, Inuit Peoples, and the Métis Nation—totalling $8.4 billion over five years—in areas that include education, infrastructure, and skills training. The government will ensure access to clean drinking water for every child, including those who live on reserves.

Investments in a more inclusive and fair Canada include efforts to: provide federal leadership in health care; help seniors realize the promise of a dignified and secure retirement; renew a commitment to enhance the Canada Pension Plan; and fulfill our sacred obligation to Canada’s veterans.

Budget 2016 also takes action to renew Canada’s place on the world stage. The government will provide international assistance for the most vulnerable, and welcome as many as 300,000 permanent residents in 2016 to foster sustainable growth and grow the middle class.

Growing the Middle Class comes at a time when the Government of Canada has both the capacity and the willingness to act. Budget 2016 takes action to revitalize the economy and create opportunity for all Canadians, by focusing on the middle class and those working hard to join it.

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“Our plan will recapture the hope and optimism for the future that existed in previous generations, and put it to work for the next. Real change is not just about today or tomorrow. It is about revitalizing the economy in the years and decades to come, so that it works for the middle class and helps those working hard to join it.”

Bill Morneau, Minister of Finance

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Source: Budget 2016

Canada to announce plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will announce Tuesday his plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees and he says all 10 of Canada’s provincial premiers support bringing that many in.

Trudeau hasn’t backed down from a pledge to bring 25,000 Syrian refugees to Canada by Dec. 31 despite pushback by some following the deadly attacks in Paris.

Details of how the refugees will be brought over and where they will be housed are expected to be announced Tuesday.

“Everyone agrees that Canada must do more and must welcome 25,000 refugees,” Trudeau said after meeting with provincial leaders late Monday.

Tuesday’s announcement is sure to raise alarm in the U.S. where many Republican governors have said they don’t want any Syrian refugees.

Trudeau said robust security screening continues to be a high priority.

Quebec Premier Phillipe Couillard said accepting refugees and immigrants is part of Canadian tradition.

“There was no one sitting at the table that is not interested in seeing refugees come,” Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said.

Immigration Minister John McCallum said he spoke to Canada’s big city mayors about how they can help resettle the refugees.

Canada has long prided itself on opening its doors wider than any nation to asylum seekers. In times of crisis in decades past, Canada resettled refugees quickly and in large numbers. It airlifted more than 5,000 people from Kosovo in the late 1990s, more than 5,000 from Uganda in 1972 and resettled 60,000 Vietnamese in 1979-80. More than 1.2 million refugees have arrived in Canada since World War II.

Former Conservative Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who lost the Oct. 19 election to Trudeau, had declined to resettle more Syrian refugees, despite the image of a drowned 3-year-old boy washed up on a Turkish beach focusing global attention on the refugee crisis stemming from the civil war. The boy had relatives in Canada and the refugee crisis became a major campaign issue.

Brad Wall, the Conservative premier of Saskatchewan province, said he has problems with the deadline of Dec. 31 for security reasons, but believes Canada should welcome the refugees.

More than 4 million Syrians have fled their country since the conflict began in 2011.

Source: Canada to announce plan to resettle 25,000 Syrian refugees | Fox News

Estimate of financial support provided to disabled Veterans under the New Veterans Charter

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Estimate of financial support provided to disabled Veterans under the New Veterans Charter

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Estimate of financial support provided to disabled Veterans under the New Veterans Charter.pdf

Changes to the New Veterans Charter

The House of Commons approved a number of enhancements to benefits provided to Veterans under the New Veterans Charter (NVC), as part of the Economic Action Plan 2015 Act, No. 1 (Bill C-59). PBO estimates the new post-65 Retirement Income Security Benefit (RISB) and the higher Earnings Loss Benefit (ELB) income threshold for part-time reservists will increase VAC’s program expenditures by $231.6 million over 10 years.  That means the total cost of providing financial benefits for disabled Veterans, including these two enhancements, is estimated at nearly $3.3 billion over the next 10 years.

Continuing cost of the mission in Afghanistan

Afghanistan Veterans make-up 18 per cent of disabled Veterans receiving NVC benefits. For the period between 2015 and 2025, PBO estimates the cost of providing financial support to Veterans who served in Afghanistan at $157.0 million.

Afghanistan Veterans are three times more likely to have a mental health diagnosis. This group is 20 years younger than those without Afghanistan service (with an average age of 41 v. 61) and will continue to collect benefits while pension earnings will offset the cost of the benefits paid to the non-Afghanistan group. Consequently, benefits paid to Veterans with mental health conditions will exceed those of Veterans with musculoskeletal conditions by 2017.

Cost of future combat missions

PBO developed a methodology for estimating the cost of providing financial benefits to Veterans of future conflicts. The estimated cost of Veterans disability benefits as a result of a single year  of military operations similar to those experienced in Afghanistan in 2007, would be $145.2 million over the period of 2017 to 2025.

Source: Estimate of financial support provided to disabled Veterans under the New Veterans Charter