60,000安大略家庭负担不起电费被断电!

保守党的高级黑,多少原本保守党的忠实拥趸看到这种极端分子绕着走啊。一天到晚难民,腐败blahblan,好像保守党是处女党似的。这世界有好人政客吗?哪个党上台不是税税税。
btw,保守党比ndp还是要强不少的。
lz看来是保守党黑,真正的ndp党员。你们这帮富人就是以后他要革命的对象。
让神保佑加拿大吧,千万不要ndp上台。lol
阿门[emoji120] [emoji89]
 
保守党的高级黑,多少原本保守党的忠实拥趸看到这种极端分子绕着走啊。一天到晚难民,腐败blahblan,好像保守党是处女党似的。这世界有好人政客吗?哪个党上台不是税税税。
btw,保守党比ndp还是要强不少的。
lz看来是保守党黑,真正的ndp党员。你们这帮富人就是以后他要革命的对象。
让神保佑加拿大吧,千万不要ndp上台。lol
咪哥说的不对,哈勃的保守党减税了!只有自由党才是连蒙带骗的加税!实在是下作!
 
咪哥说的不对,哈勃的保守党减税了!只有自由党才是连蒙带骗的加税!实在是下作!
高福利国家会减税?骗傻子的吧。这里减了,那里就加了。
减税好啊,福利也减,那这6万户连一个月几十加币电费都付不起的直接跳楼算了。愿主保佑他们。
 
高福利国家会减税?骗傻子的吧。这里减了,那里就加了。
减税好啊,福利也减,那这6万户连一个月几十加币电费都付不起的直接跳楼算了。愿主保佑他们。
别睁着眼睛说瞎话!哈勃减了2个点的GST,什么上加税了?自由党在安省执政十余载,搞得6万户连电都用不起!自由党的粉丝直接让这些人去跳楼,自由党真是藏虫卧鼠啊!:evil:
 
别睁着眼睛说瞎话!哈勃减了2个点的GST,什么上加税了?自由党在安省执政十余载,搞得6万户连电都用不起!自由党的粉丝直接让这些人去跳楼,自由党真是藏虫卧鼠啊!:evil:
你可别扯了,那是以前100美金油价时候的事。现在还给你减税,做梦吧。人中东在石油高价时候,都是直接发钱的。
现在阿省都穷的叮当响了。
几十加币电费付不出,有手有脚不去干活,活着干啥。
等石油党上台给发福利啊。
点背不要怨政府,多想想自己。
懒人在自由党那里活的肯定比石油党要好的多。
希望石油党上台,给我减税,然后让那帮懒人可以直接去麦当劳打工。
 
安省1500万人口,平均3口之家,500万家庭,6万算1percent吧。想想自己为啥处于这倒数1percent先,穷到几十加币一个月的电费都交不起,死了算了。
有几条出路
1.祈求上帝,他会给你电的,只要你足够虔诚
2.下次选举选ndp,记着一定要选ndp,把有钱人共产了,你就有钱了
3.去麦当劳打工吧,做一天,估计一个月电费就来了。
4.实在懒得话,直接死了算了。
郊区电更贵,不是几十是好几百,老房子大房子冬天用电取暖的话很多人都会付不起。
 
保守党的高级黑,多少原本保守党的忠实拥趸看到这种极端分子绕着走啊。一天到晚难民,腐败blahblan,好像保守党是处女党似的。这世界有好人政客吗?哪个党上台不是税税税。
btw,保守党比ndp还是要强不少的。
lz看来是保守党黑,真正的ndp党员。你们这帮富人就是以后他要革命的对象。
让神保佑加拿大吧,千万不要ndp上台。lol
你说的对。

自由党腐败、无能、独裁专断还罔顾民生。保守党虽然差劲,其各级政府和自由党比却是负责、廉洁、高效、关注民众福祉、并且民主宽容的政府
 
郊区电更贵,不是几十是好几百,老房子大房子冬天用电取暖的话很多人都会付不起。
早就该换用煤气取暖了。
 
你说的对。

自由党腐败、无能、独裁专断还罔顾民生。保守党虽然差劲,其各级政府和自由党比却是负责、廉洁、高效、关注民众福祉、并且民主宽容的政府
嗯,说的很好,就是人民不买账。
安省在自由党治理下不好吗,那可以去阿省。
安省的经济是加拿大number one。无论你信还是不信。
点背不要怨政府,多想想自己。
 
你说的对。

自由党腐败、无能、独裁专断还罔顾民生。保守党虽然差劲,其各级政府和自由党比却是负责、廉洁、高效、关注民众福祉、并且民主宽容的政府

少写了很重要的一项:与自由党相比,保守党诚实,可以信任。
 
Ontario promises electricity bill rebates in throne speech
Provincial government also promises to create 100,000 child-care spaces

The Ontario Liberal government promised in a throne speech on Monday that it will provide rebates to urban and rural residents and small businesses to help offset high electricity rates.

Lt.-Gov. Elizabeth Dowdeswell, who delivered the throne speech at the Ontario Legislature, outlined the government's priorities before the next election, expected in spring 2018. Under the plan, the government will remove the provincial portion of the harmonized sales tax from hydro bills.

"Whether in Kenora, Sudbury, Belleville, London or Barrie, your government has listened to and has heard your concerns. It recognizes that the cost of electricity is now stretching family budgets," she said.

"It will therefore act on an idea it has heard from many individuals and groups."

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Ontario Lt.-Gov. Elizabeth Dowdeswell delivers the speech from the throne, opening the second session of the 41st Parliament of Ontario, in Toronto on Monday. (Peter Power/Canadian Press)

Dowdeswell said the government will introduce legislation to provide the rebates directly on consumers' electricity bills. The measure will be available to all consumers who are eligible for the regulated price plan, as defined by the Ontario Energy Board. About five million families, farms and small businesses will get the rebate.



Ontario residents who are eligible will receive a rebate on electricity bills that is equal to the provincial portion of harmonized sales tax (HST), which amounts to about $130 a year for a typical household.

Rural residents who are eligible will receive a larger rebate, about $45 a month or $540 a year.

The rebate would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2017.

"In recognition of the unique and special circumstances associated with the electricity cost-of-service for rural ratepayers, the existing rural support program would be significantly enhanced to provide even more on-bill savings for Ontario's eligible rural customers," she said.

The Ontario government also wants to help larger businesses, the throne speech said.

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The Ontario government says it will bring in a balanced budget, create new child-care spaces, invest in skills training for young people, strengthen health care and continue its focus on education. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

"Your government also intends to implement new measures to ensure that Ontario commercial and industrial ratepayers can also benefit from lower electricity costs," she said.

Dowdeswell said the Ontario government also plans to bring in a balanced budget for 2017-18 and to create 100,000 new child-care spaces for kids up to age four, over five years, starting in 2017, to ensure families have access to quality daycare.

As well, the government promises to put a new emphasis on math skills after half of all Grade 6 students failed to meet the provincial math standard this year, continuing a steady decline in test scores over the past five years.



Other government priorities include investing in skills training for young people, and strengthening health care, with 18 more hospitals completing renovations or rebuilds over the next five years.

It promises to reduce wait times to see a specialist.

The Ontario Legislature was prorogued last week and Premier Kathleen Wynne had indicated the throne speech would address electricity rates.

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Progressive Conservative Leader Patrick Brown says, 'Let's be clear, hydro rates are not going down.' (Peter Power/Canadian Press)

Progressive Conservative Leader Patrick Brown said the government is bringing in the rebate because it lost the recent byelection in Scarborough Rouge-River, an indication it can no longer ignore the effect of high hydro bills on Ontario residents.

Brown said the throne speech is "too little, too late" and it shows that the government is out of touch with voters. He said the rebate will not stop hydro rates from climbing.

"Let's be clear, hydro rates are not going down," he said. "This is merely a Band-Aid solution. If the Liberals were serious about tackling the energy crisis, the government would have committed to stop signing contracts we do not need and immediately halt further sales of Hydro One.

"This is a small step. What Ontario families want is they want policies to change. People are struggling," he said.

Brown said he is not convinced the government will be able to bring in a balanced budget because he believes the numbers do not add up.

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Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath says the Liberal government should act immediately to reduce hydro bills instead of waiting until Jan. 1. (CBC)

Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said the Liberal government should permanently remove the HST from hydro bills and that the rebate should start immediately.

"Just take the HST off of hydro already," she said. "The only reason that we have the HST on our hydro bills is because the Liberals put it there. People will have to wait four months — people need real relief now."

Horwath said the government should also stop any further sell-off of Hydro One, the transmission utility.

"We need to have an electricity system that is public and that acts in the public interest."

Horwath said there are unanswered questions about the promise of more child-care spaces.

"The question is: will parents be able to afford to put their children into those child-care spaces?"

She said the government should focus on creating good jobs in Ontario, which she defined as having competitive salaries, predictable schedules and benefits.

kathleen-wynne-queen-s-park-cabinet-shuffle.jpg

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne prorogued the legislature on Thursday. She acknowledged last week that high electricity rates are a concern right the province. (Eduardo Lima/Canadian Press)

Christine Van Geyn, Ontario director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said she is disappointed with the promise of rebates because she said rebates do not stop electricity rates from climbing.

"They have done nothing to tackle the long-term problem. This is not a long-term solution," she said.

Van Geyn said the rebate will provide the government with "political relief" instead of actually helping Ontario residents.

"The government announced a plan to remove provincial HST from hydro bills. But with hydro rates rising an average eight per cent per year, what is their long-term solution? They can't cut the HST again next year," she said.
 
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