Three leadership candidates for the United Conservative Party say wholesale sacking of civil servants is not the answer to Alberta’s red ink woes, but they say something has to be done.
Labour relations is on the agenda Thursday night when the candidates arrive in the Alberta capital to hold their second debate.
READ MORE: United Conservatives would win majority if Alberta election were held today: poll
Get weekly money news
Former Wildrose leader Brian Jean says Alberta’s public service is over-managed and needs to use attrition and move people around to deliver the best value for the tax dollar.
Former Progressive Conservative leader Jason Kenney says some public sector attrition is necessary to get Alberta back to a competitive footing to grow the economy.
Candidate Doug Schweitzer said Alberta’s civil servants need to accept pay cuts that will reduce Alberta’s crushing debt load but still make them among the highest paid in Canada.
- IBC estimates $230M in insured damage claimed from Edmonton storms
- Alberta First Nation sues Ottawa over $5 treaty annuity, argues amount stuck in 1899
- Jobs hang in the balance as Ekati diamond mine in N.W.T. closing early
- WestJet flight attendants hold information pickets as strike vote takes place
READ MORE: Rachel Notley attacks Jason Kenney’s position on GSAs, says UCP will hurt working families
Premier Rachel Notley has refused to balance the books using deep cuts in public services, saying that would make a bad situation worse.
The province is running a $10.5-billion deficit this year and will be $43.3 billion in debt by next spring.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.