Now that New Brunswick has adopted a fixed date
election, with the next Provincial Election due on September 22, 2014, a
discussion about the future of our Province need not be confined to the 32 days
of the writ period (the time between the official call of the election and
voting day). Perhaps we need to act on Ms. Campbell’s conclusion and, rather
than waiting for the hurly-burly of the campaign to debate the future direction
of the Province, we should start having this discussion now. Not only does this
give us more time to deliberate on the issues facing our Province, this process
would likely inform the positions taken by the political parties in their
election planning.
So, if we are to focus on
the issues of gravest importance to our Province, what would those be?
First, let’s avoid the
“shopping list” approach where all the current grievances and controversies are
transformed into an overlong list of “immediate” electoral promises. Instead,
let’s take a deeper view into the problems we have and the solutions that are
at hand. To me, there are four issues that need the focussed attention of
citizens in order to prod action from our risk-adverse political machinery.
A Balanced Budget
The most critical policy,
the one upon which all other policies are based, is with regard to the
Provincial Budget. Right now, New
Brunswick is caught in a vicious cycle of increasing
deficits and rising debt. Even though provincial tax rates are increasing,
provincial revenues are stagnant or declining. This means increased pain and
little gain for the Province and its people.
But we need to reject the
short-term “hack and slash” approach to fiscal matters. Yes, sometimes these
measures do achieve a “balanced” budget – for a year or two. In the midst of
controversial wage freezes, layoffs and service cuts, the underlying problems
of public administration are ignored and the cost pressures continue to build.
Retooling Government
If we reject the “hack and
slash” approach to budget-making, we also need to reject this approach when it
comes to reforming the Provincial Public Service. We will not get the progress
we need by under-valuing public servants and diminishing the work that they do.
Trends in public
administration show us that changes to government spending solely driven by
reducing costs invariably fail. Not only do the fiscal gains prove to be
transitory, service cuts tend to be done in a haphazard manner that alienates
the population.
The approaches that do
succeed are those focussed on improving service to citizens. A
service-orientation that provides more timely services to citizens saves money
because it is more efficient. Using business process design, government
activities are de-layered, de-cluttered and streamlined for service.
Innovation, rather than risk-avoidance, becomes the key word for Government. t.
By being smart and strategic, we can retool the Government of New Brunswick and
both citizens and the economy will be the beneficiaries.
Improving Literacy
As recent headlines
indicate, approximately one-half of New Brunswickers do not possess the
literacy skills that we would expect from high school graduates. This is not a
new problem. The fact that we continue to let this high level of illiteracy
persist is as much of a problem as the lack of literacy itself. We are so used
to this problem that we have “tuned it out” as an issue or believe that a
solution is beyond our grasp
However, if we look at the other
troubled policy areas in New
Brunswick , we find that a lack of literacy is a major
barrier to our success. You cannot have a modern labour force if one-half of
potential employees cannot read at a high school level. You cannot support
preventative health measures, or reduce the number of emergency
hospitalizations, if patients cannot understand prescriptions or follow
treatment plans. Investors will continue to be reluctant and economic growth
will be hindered.
Like the tide that raises
all boats, increasing literacy would have wide-spread benefits socially and
economically.
Population Growth
The lack of population
growth is a major underlying factor for many of the public policy challenges we
face in New Brunswick .
We are not only losing our best-educated and most talented young people on a
daily basis; we also do not get the appropriate share of immigrants to help
sustain our population levels. This decline in population has many negative
attributes, from decreasing the amount of federal funding for cost-shared
programs (like health and post-secondary education) to a decreasing work force
and a general decline in economic strength.
The preference of New
Brunswickers is to patriate those who have left seeking economic opportunities
elsewhere. However, unless we can restore a sense of economic opportunity here,
we are unlikely to make a difference on this front. Further, an immigration
strategy that recruits new families to New
Brunswick but does little to settle or integrate
these new arrivals has proven to be unsuccessful.
The New Brunswick we Want
Rather than postponing the
discussion of our future to next September, we should seize the present
opportunity to begun the conversation about our public policy priorities. We
can have the New Brunswick
we want – but only if we get to work on the underlying issues that are often
hidden by today’s controversies.
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Chris Baker is President of Continuum Research, a
public opinion research firm specializing in public policy and public affairs.
He served as the Deputy Minister, Policy and Priorities in the Government of New Brunswick from
October 2006 to October 2008.
This article was originally published in the November 8, 2013 edition of The Telegraph-Journal
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