Highlights of the Ontario government's 2023 budget - Action News
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Highlights of the Ontario government's 2023 budget

The Ontario government tabled abudgetThursday that forecasts provincial surpluses after a year, with heavy investments in health care. Here are the highlights.

$204.7B budget forecasts provincial surplus of $200M by 2024-25

Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks after touring the Oakville Stamping and Bending Limited facility in Oakville, Ont., on Wednesday, March 22, 2023.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford's government tabled a budget Thursday that forecasts a provincial surplus of $200 million by 2024-25. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

The Ontario government tabled abudgetThursday that forecasts provincial surpluses after a year, with heavy investments in health care. Here are thehighlights:

A path to balanceand then some

Ontario expects to run a $1.3-billion deficit starting in the fiscal year beginning next month, before posting a small surplus of $200 million in 2024-25. The next fiscal year is forecast to have a $4.4-billion surplus.

Finance officials say the trajectory is, in part, due to increasing revenues based on higher-than-expected levels of inflation and economic recovery.

Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy says the plan shows it's possible to balance thebudgetwhile still investing in key areas like health care and housing.

Ontario Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy speaks after touring the Oakville Stamping and Bending Limited facility in Oakville, Ont., on Wednesday, March 22, 2023.
It's possible to balance the budget while still investing in areas like health care and housing, says Ontario Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

This year'sbudgetcontinues its heavy investments in infrastructure plans, with more than $20 billion in highway, hospital and transit projects, and includes boosts to home care and the health-care workforce.

Growing the health-care workforce

The government is addressing health-care staffing shortages by investing $200 million in supports to grow the workforce.

The money will go toward offering up to 6,000 health-care students training opportunities and supporting up to 3,150 internationally educated nurses to become accredited in Ontario.

The province is also investing a total of $80 million over three years to expand nursing education in universities and colleges, a move it says will add 8,000 additional nurses by 2028.

Three nurses, masked and wearing blue scrubs, walk in different directions through a hospital corridor.
The budget includes $200 million in supports to grow the health-care workforce. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The province is also adding 100 medical school spots and 154 spots for medical school graduates to train as residents.

Additionally, thebudgetincludes $22 million to hire up to 200 hospital preceptors, who supervise learners, $15 million to keep 100 mid-to-late career nurses in the workforce and $4.3 million to get at least 50 internationally trained physicians licensed in Ontario.

Millions for mental health, homelessness

To address the more than one million Ontarians experiencing a mental health or addictions challenge every year, the government is pouring an additional $425 million into mental health services over three years.

The investments will provide a five per cent increase in base funding for community-based mental health and addiction services, such as supports for youth suffering from eating disorders.

Thebudgetsays the province will also put an additional $202 million each year toward homeless prevention and supportive housing programs, where people experiencing homelessness are connected with services like job training in addition to a roof over their heads.

Faster home care funding

The government also plans to accelerate the $1 billion it pledged over three years for home care.

Home Care Ontario had been asking the province to release more of that money promised in 2022, saying only $120 million had been rolled out in the first year.

Thebudgetsays Ontario will send out $569 million in the 2023-24 fiscal year.

Some $300 million of that will be spent on "contract rate increases to stabilize the home and community care workforce."

More prescribing powers for pharmacists

Thebudgetis further expanding prescribing power for pharmacists.

That comes two months after Ontario's pharmacists were allowed to prescribe treatments for 13 common ailments.

Pharmacies will be able to prescribe medication for 13 common ailments to Ontarians for free in the new year.
The budget will allow pharmacists to prescribe medications for ailments that include acne, canker sores, yeast infections and nausea and vomiting in pregnancy. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The expansion will allow pharmacists to prescribe medications for ailments that include acne, canker sores, yeast infections and nausea and vomiting in pregnancy.

Supporting seniors

The government plans to expand the Guaranteed Annual Income System, which helps low-income seniors.

It says about 100,000 more seniors will become eligible for the program in July 2024 thanks to a higher private income threshold.

The province is also planning to adjust the benefit annually so it increases with inflation.

Thebudgetalso contains an additional $1-million investment over three years to expand the Seniors Safety Line, a provincewide helpline dedicated to elder abuse.

$22B for more schools and child care spaces

Thebudgetcontains $22 billion to build more schools and child care spaces.

The funding will go in part toward a new English elementary school in North Bay, a new English Catholic high school in Windsor and new additions to French elementary schools in Pickering and Oakville.

The feet of students under a table in a classroom are shown.
The budget has $22 billion earmarked to build more schools and child care spaces. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Ontario says it will also invest $5.4 billion in post-secondary education to help modernize classrooms, upgrade technology, carry out repairs and improve sustainability.

The province is also earmarking $25 million over two years for early reading enhancements, an additional $12.6 million over two years in targeted math supports and $6.2 million over three years for students with disabilities to pursue cooperative education opportunities.

Residential school searches

The government says it will spend an additional $25.1 million this year to support searches at residential school burial sites across the province.

The money will be used to identify, investigate and commemorate the burial sites, provide resources for researchers and community co-ordinators, engage with residential school survivors and interpret ground-scanning technologies.

In November 2021, the Progressive Conservative government doubled its initial $10 million investment for investigations into unmarked graves at former residential schools to $20 million.

Advancing critical mineral exploration

Ontario is investing an additional $3 million this year and $3 million next year into a program that helps junior mining companies finance mineral exploration and development.

The investments build on the government's critical minerals strategy, which aims to grow the sector and make Ontario a leading producer of critical minerals including those in the Ring of Fire in the province's north.

Thebudgetsays critical minerals are essential for products Ontarians rely on, like cell phones, electric vehicles and semiconductors in goods.