Oakville Beaver, 15 Sep 2011, p. 12

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Gliding Shelf Solutions Inc. Convert your existing cabinets with custom gliding shelves Full accessibility Double your space Better organization For a free consultation call your local Oakville Dealer at 905-815-9795 or 1-877-895-9766 www.glidingshelf.ca Made in Canada w w w .i n si d eH A LT O N .c o m O A K V IL LE B EA V ER Th ur sd ay , S ep te m be r 15 , 2 01 1 1 2 cut funding. Under the Liberals, she said people have access to doctors, nurses arent leaving the province, Ontario has the lowest surgical wait times in the country and more. Chudleigh disputed her claim of hospital clos- ings, saying he asked the Liberals to name the closed hospitals. Ill tell you how they came up with the 28 hospitals that were closed, he told the crowd. In Halton there are three hospitals under Halton Healthcare Services Georgetown, Milton and Oakville. In 1995, when we came into office, there were three hospitals there. When we left office there was one hospital, Halton Healthcare Services. The Liberals count that as two hospitals closed . . . Thats the way they count it and that I think is immoral and unfair. The candidates were also asked what they and their parties would do to stimulate the provinces most important economic sectors. Spohr said his party would reward good cor- porate citizens, such as those employers who create strong, long-term jobs in the province, not transient, part-time work. The New Democrats are lowering small busi- ness taxes, he said. We want to create local jobs with those tax breaks. He added tax breaks would end to corpora- tions who shift jobs away and tax breaks would be awarded to job creators instead. Van Den Burg said manufacturing jobs must be attracted back to Ontario from overseas. She said high costs of labour and running a business in Ontario are deterring companies from enter- ing the market. She said government is not supposed to create wealth, but it can destroy jobs with its decision- making. It can remedy this by lowering taxes, eliminating monopolies and discontinuing spe- cial advantages to some businesses over others. Naidoo-Harris said Ontario is seen as the ris- ing economic star in North America. She said nearly 300,000 jobs have been created since 2009, returning 124 per cent of the jobs lost to the recession. She said the Samsung deal is creating 16,000 jobs in Ontario in the green energy sector. She said small businesses are the economic engine of Ontario and small business taxes have been cut down to 4.5 per cent and the Liberals would cut it down to 4 per cent. Furthermore, the Liberals have created a program that helps small business develop and move ahead. The issue of transportation was raised. Chudleigh said the province needs to expand existing highways, not build a new one that would cut right through the greenbelt on the Niagara Escarpment Naidoo-Harris said the Liberals have spent record money on road infrastructure and will not build a highway through the escarpment. Instead, the Liberals are proposing all-day train service, over the current rush-hour services, which would take a total of 71 million car trips off the road. Spohr said more money must be put towards increasing and improving mass transit and by lowering fares. He added cyclists need to know they will not be struck on the road. The sentiment was echoed by Van Den Burg, adding Ontario is falling behind in terms of public transportation. The all-candidates debate will be broadcast by Cogeco at a later date. Ontario behind on transit Phil Buck Continued from page 11

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