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Kinew, Trudeau announce $633M in health funding for Manitoba

Premier Wab Kinew speaks as provincial and federal officials, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau look on. Trudeau was in Winnipeg Thursday for the announcement of $633 million in health care funding for Manitoba. Talha Hashmani / Global News

The Manitoba government’s focus on health care — a key part of the NDP election campaign last fall — is getting some help from the feds, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Premier Wab Kinew announced in Winnipeg.

The two leaders signed a health-care agreement Thursday, after agreeing in principle on a plan last year.
Through the new agreement, the federal government will provide around $434 million to support Manitoba’s three-year action plan to improve health care, and to help achieve the government’s goal of hiring hundreds of doctors, nurses, paramedics, and homecare workers.

An additional $199 million is also coming to Manitoba to support the province’s five-year action plan to improve care for seniors.

“Canadians value universal public health care,” Trudeau said. “That’s why we’re signing agreements with provinces and territories to make health care work better for Canadians.

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“Today’s agreements with Manitoba will help hire more health workers, reduce wait times, support seniors, and make sure Canadians get the care they need, when they need it.”

The announcement marked the first in-person meeting between Trudeau and Kinew, and the premier said getting federal backing for health care is a positive step toward accomplishing those goals.

“I’m happy, because health care is our government’s top priority… and to have the federal government commit that we are going to walk on this path to ensure that there’s more doctors and nurses for you is good news for the province,” Kinew said.

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“Having more nurses, more allied health professionals, more physicians in the province… means that we’re going to be able to reduce wait times. It means that the crisis we see today, after years of PC closures in the emergency rooms, is going to start to turn a corner.”

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The province and Ottawa said they’re working together to remove barriers for doctors and health professionals from around the world to come to Manitoba.

Prior to Thursday’s announcement, Kinew told 680 CJOB’s The Start that Manitoba is focused on cutting down bureaucracy for internationally trained workers, as the province attempts to shore up staffing in the industry.

“There are people in Manitoba right now who are working — maybe as an aide — but could be working as a nurse if we move that along. So that’s one of the other priorities we’ll be focusing on with this,” he said.

“Every one of these cases has a unique and complex explanation, but at the end of the day, it’s just bureaucracy. We’re saying ‘let’s just cut through the excuses… let’s focus on solutions instead of excuses’.”

The agreement is similar to deals signed by other provinces. Ontario signed earlier this month for $3.1 billion in federal health-care funding over three years, with a focus on increasing access to family doctors, reducing backlogs and adding more health-care workers.

Manitoba is the seventh province or territory to formally sign on to the accord, following British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, Alberta, Nova Scotia, Ontario and the Northwest Territories.

Click to play video: '‘It starts with 20’: New practical nurse training centre opens in Neepawa, Man.'
‘It starts with 20’: New practical nurse training centre opens in Neepawa, Man.

With files from The Canadian Press

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