Skip to content
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Your Preferences
    • Editorials
    • Gastronomy
    • Health & Medicine
    • Interviews
    • Community
    • News Updates
    • Opinion
    • Podcasts & Videos
    • Politics
    • Show Biz
    • Sport
  • Contact Us
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup

Ontario’s 2021 budget

Francesco Veronesi, March 23, 2021August 25, 2023

[GTranslate]TORONTO – A strong action against the Covid-19 health crisis and support for the future reboot of the provincial economy. All this taking into account that in just over a year we will go back to the polls. These will be the main guidelines of the 2021 provincial budget that will be presented today in Queens Park by Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy. A maneuver, this year’s, that will be essentially monothematic or almost. In fact, everything will revolve around the Covid-19 pandemic. The government led by Premier Doug Ford will present a long series of interventions in the health sector, some of which have already been anticipated in recent days. The executive plans to invest $1.2 billion in provincial hospitals, while new resources will be set aside to upgrade intensive care units and strengthen security measures to curb contagion.

It is almost certain that the government will continue to increase anti-covid appropriations. As early as the autumn, former Finance Minister Rod Phillips reiterated that the executive planned to move forward with a $45 billion comprehensive pandemic spending plan over the next few years. In the financial manoeuvre that will be presented today, we will find some details on the individual items of expenditure.

The same applies to long-stay nursing homes. During the first and second waves of the pandemic, LTCs across the province proved to be the true Achilles’ heel of the entire provincial health system. Now the government wants to turn the page, focusing on the creation of new beds and the professional training of support staff for these facilities.

On the other hand, the discourse on the school front is more uncertain. For this academic year, the provincial government has allocated record figures to ensure the safety of students, teachers and non-teaching staff, with questionable results. In recent weeks, public education minister Stephen Lecce has repeatedly made it clear that the funds made available to the ‘provveditorati’ (School Boards)  are set to fall gradually, with vaccines and the Canadian population likely to be immunized by September, when the new school year begins.

At the same time, Minister Bethlenfalvy will announce a series of spending plans to restart the economy, which has been put to the test by the pandemic. In particular, some sectors – catering, retailing, tourism – will necessarily have to benefit from government support to return to growth.

Finally, a further element will have to be taken into account, not a secondary one. In just over a year’s time – June 2, 2022 – Ontario will go back to the polls, so it’s easy to predict that there will be some electoral measures in the 2021 budget. Long-term plans, therefore, promises of spending on a three-year or five-year basis, medium- to long-term development projects.

We will have to wait for the official document this afternoon, but it is clear that the countdown has also started today in view of next year’s provincial vote.

English Politics 2021budgetenglishontario’spolitics

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Canada

CORRIERE CANADESE / L’Annual Lunch del Toronto Region Board of Trade con il sindaco Olivia Chow

June 13, 2025

…

Read More
Canada

Cogner sur le clou pour régler la crise du logement: Recommandations du Sénat

December 22, 2023December 22, 2023

…

Read More
Canada

CORRIERE CANADESE / Dazi Usa, ora Carney valuta la linea morbida

August 7, 2025

…

Read More

Latest Articles

  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Cusma, tariffe ed export: il Canada davanti a un bivio May 11, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Community and Police united for a safer region May 11, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Comunità e Polizia unite per un territorio più sicuro May 11, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / “Senza Volto”, The Hollywood Pivot May 8, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / “Senza Volto”, il film che può aprire le porte di Hollywood May 8, 2026

Search Articles by Date

May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

Our Sponsors

Lido Construction Pascale_Di_Poce
©2026 Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes