Budget 2006 - 07

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bulletMCFD Budget Details
bulletHighlights:
bullet

Community Living BC - More people with more serious needs are accessing residential and day support services. An additional $67 million will expand community living services to cover almost 2,000 more individuals and deliver new or enhanced supports to 5,300 British Columbians with developmental disabilities.
 

bulletFamily Independence Fund - A $30 million grant for a Family Independence Fund will help families cover the cost of specialized equipment or home renovations that are needed to keep their children or adults with developmental disabilities in their own homes.
 
bulletFrom CKNW's coverage of the budget:
No big surprises and no cut to the provincial sales tax, but more money for children and families and skills training.

Those are the highlights of the liberal government's provincial budget.

Despite rumours, Finance Minister Carole Taylor has not cut the PST, announcing instead a package of tax cuts worth 733 million dollars over four years.
They include raising the luxury tax threshold on vehicles to 55-thousand dollars, eliminating the PST on computer maintenance, and raising the homeowners grant by 100 dollars.

But the focus of the budget is children, there's 421 million dollars over four years including 72 million to add more social workers and front line staff.

More money for mental health services for children and youth and to reduce waitlists for services to kids with special needs, as well the Ministry of Children and Families will see a budget hike of 200 million in the coming year, with another 100 million over three years set aside for additional services including the government's response to reviews of the child care system.
There is also more money for the coroners’ service to deal with child death reviews.

The budget also includes 400 million over four years to increase training and skills development.

An extra 112 million in increased funding for education over three years, and 301 million in new funding for health care over the same period.

The government expects to finish the current fiscal year with a surplus of about 1.5 billion plus a 300 million dollar forecast allowance.
Surpluses will decline over the next three years, with economic growth is pegged at 3.3 per-cent next year declining to 3.1 percent in the outlying years.

Overall spending will rise by nearly ten percent over the next three years, much of that covering the six billion dollars set aside for public sector contracts.

Total debt will rise by about three percent a year, much of that for capital spending on schools, hospitals and roads.
 

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Last updated: 07/25/08