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2010-03-07 at 15:57

Rafferty discusses budget

By Jeff Labine, tbnewswatch.com
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A federal member of Parliament said he is disappointed the federal budget didn’t include pension protection.

NDP MP John Rafferty (Thunder Bay – Rainy River) held a town hall meeting at Confederation College on Sunday. Rafferty held similar town hall meetings in Fort Frances and in Atikokan. The meetings are informal and open to any topic but were primarily dominated by the issues of pensions, the federal budget and the harmonized sales tax. Less than eight people attended the meeting.

Rafferty said Canada is in the dark ages when it came to pension protection. He said he expected some kind of pension support in the new budget.

"We were given those subtle signals from the government that there would be something in the budget," Rafferty said. "It is a budget that I’m very disappointed with. I guess you could call it a Bay Street budget."

The budget announced on Thursday focused on tax cuts for corporations and a continuation of stimulus spending to the tune of $19 billion. Rafferty said the tax breaks would help banks and oil companies but not seniors and pensioners.

Rafferty said the government should spend money on seniors who are struggling financially and estimated it would cost $700 million dollars to get seniors out of poverty.

"Where do seniors spend their money? They spend it in the community," he said. "They give birthday presents to their grandchildren, pay their rent and pay for all the other things that seniors are struggling with. If you want to talk about a stimulus package, that is $700 million dollars directly back into communities across Canada."

Last November, Rafferty said he would move heaven and earth to help pensioners get a meeting with the federal government. He said he made a package for the budget with pensions as a major concern. At the time, he said he hoped the government would have agreed with the idea.

Rafferty said there is a chance to amend the budget when it goes through the debate process next week. Rafferty added he is working on a new piece of legislation to protect pensions and would introduce the bill sometime in April. Click here to submit a letter to the editor.

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Tbnewswatch.com(6)

Comments

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Gusto says:
Wow! Good turnout. Hardly a seat left in the house. Obviously, people have heard enough of the same old manure that the NDP keep droning on and on about yet offer nothing of substance to fix the problem.
3/7/2010 4:16:28 PM
thebard says:
Hey John. Hold Town Halls on Monday or Tuesday at 7 p.m. Not on a sunny Sunday with warm weather. Sunday is still family day in this town.
3/7/2010 4:46:37 PM
cool_canadian says:
A good first step that the government should take is to address the priorities of pensions in the event of a Companys failure. IMHO ... the assets of a company in bankruptcy should be applied in the following order:

1. Wages Owed
2. Vacation Pay Owed
3. Severance Owed
4. Pensions
5. Creditors

Seems pretty simple to me ... but didn't a private members bill to put these in order die, when Hapless Harper and his band of thieves prorogued parliament ?
3/8/2010 1:02:34 PM
tsb says:
You know in some countries, people die while fighting for democracy. In Canada, we make excuses to avoid it!
3/8/2010 11:12:33 PM
psmith says:
Its a shame that nothing was done in this latest budget about the pension crisis. this is something the feds could (and should) be working on right away, before more people lose the money theyve paid into pension plans for years. if we don't want to eat dog food in our retirement, getting the government moving on this should be pensioners objective next election campaign.
3/9/2010 12:53:45 PM
tudor says:
while I understand why cool canadian suggested his priority for how money should be paid, it neglects the reality that no bank would lend this money to any company if they were fifth on the list to be paid back. business needs bank support, that is why they are at the top. Maybe a better idea is some type of insurance, private or public, that both company, worker pay for, supported by gov't to assist in these types of cases.
3/13/2010 7:43:05 AM
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