Big spending will continue until 2012-13



Big spending will continue until 2012-13

Big spending will continue until 2012-13

Published on November 27th, 2009
Published on June 15th, 2010
Wayne Thibodeau RSS Feed

Capital Plan will provide investments of $136.7 million in infrastructure for health care over the next five years

Topics :
PROVINCE HOUSE , Capital Budget , Capital Plan , O'Leary , Elm Street

PROVINCE HOUSE -

The 2009 Capital Budget is a continuation of government's plan to stimulate the
Island economy - while simultaneously addressing the province's
infrastructure needs, says Provincial Treasurer Wes Sheridan.

At Province House this morning, Sheridan said he will continue stimulus budgeting until the 2012-13 fiscal year, the year after the next provincial election.

"We are focussing on our priority areas of health and education, while continuing with improvements to the transportation infrastructure."

The Capital Plan will provide investments of $136.7 million in infrastructure for the health care system over the next five years.

Major health care projects include:

_ Completion of Phase 1 of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital project;
_ Replacement of the Prince Edward Home; and Summerset, Colville
and Maplewood Manors;
Renovations to the Margaret Stewart Ellis Home in O'Leary will
be completed;
- Replacement of the Riverview Manor will begin.

Over the next five years, school construction and capital improvements will be completed at Three Oaks, Francois-Buote and Souris schools in addition to the Glen Stewart and Westwood renovations announced this year.

During 2010-11, construction will be completed at Elm Street, Montague High, Montague Intermediate and Ecole Saint-Augustin.

Highway infrastructure will cost $229 million over the next five years, which will be used to rebuild 700 kilometres of highway along with 35 bridges.

Other capital projects which are included in the Capital Budget include:

- A further investment of $12 million in the BioCommons Research
Park,
- $6.5 million allocated for a Provincial Emergency Radio System,
- $400,000 for modernizing provincial libraries,
- $12.3 million for new school buses.


"The Capital budget will allow for the creation of 1,625 jobs, new tax revenues of $11.4 million and an improvement to the Provincial GDP of $62 million in 2010-11," the minister said.

"These infrastructure initiatives are necessary to ensure government can continue to provide the services Islanders deserve. The improvements to our hospitals, manors,
education facilities and transportation system will serve Islanders far into the future."

... More to come

Comments

  • Username
    JD
    - June 21st, 2010 at 20:32:53

    Ghiz & Sheridan can spend all they want.

    Islanders are getting to smart to be bought off with their own tax dollars.

    Spending our money do4esn't help remove the stain of Corruption & Dishonesty that Ghiz & Sheridan has stuck to them from PNP.

    They spend like drunken sailors but islanders will not forget what they did with the PNP program.

    Come November 2011 islanders will speak up and say we don't support a Crooked Government.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    sounds good
    - June 21st, 2010 at 20:14:13

    Sounds good. Unfortunately that's about as far as I can go. Sounds good. If this government refuses to take step to ensure the Island has a healthy and educated population and our sick people can get the care they need then all the fancy footwork won't mean a thing other than more money and time wasted.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Fromthecountry
    - June 21st, 2010 at 20:00:00

    There must be an election around the bend......... Why else would the liberals be spending so much money outside Charlottetown.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    everyman
    - June 21st, 2010 at 19:57:57

    Yea the mustache is fabulous. Where do ghiz and his dummies get all that hair gel although baby ghiz is loosing his hair near as fast as he is destroying his family name. to bad

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Of course not
    - June 21st, 2010 at 19:40:33

    To sounds good, if we had an educated workforce they'd have to be paid industry standard wages. We can't be doing that. Island businesses can't afford to pay wages that actually reflect skills.

    Everyone has to be paid the minimum possible, and that can only be justified if they aren't properly educated.

    Submit a Comment

  • Username
    Greg the Trainor
    - June 21st, 2010 at 19:36:35

    Dear Mr. Sherida:

    Your darned if you do, and darned if you don't.

    PS. Who does your mustache? It's fabulous.

    Submit a Comment

Submit a Comment

Submit a Comment

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