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In the News
June 12, 2007
PROGRESS REPORT
Carbon dioxide (C02) is now classified as Toxic. This means the feds can put a Carbon Tax on every barrel of oil that comes out of the ground anytime they need more money to buy votes in Central and Eastern Canada.
So what’s happening under Stephen Harpers watch?
- Gun Control – Talk with little action.
- Senate Reform – Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick strongly contend the Harper government cannot unilaterally tinker with the make-up of the Senate. They don’t want change, and why would they? Any one of the proposed changes would only weaken their dominance over the Senate.
And Quebec is going further: Premier Jean Charest wants Ottawa to withdraw Bill C-43 aimed at creating a process for electing Senators. He also wants Bill S-4 suspended, which would put an eight year limit on terms, until it gets provincial consent.
Harper is an expert on the Canadian Constitution. He knows it takes 7 provinces to agree on any change to the Constitution and a vote by all Canadians with a vote of 50 percent plus 1 to make any change at all. Therefore, the fact is he’s just playing politics with Western Canada and unfortunately he, like those before him, is getting away with it. There will never be any Senate reform unless Alberta positions itself within Confederation to force the issue on Ottawa and those provinces that oppose a Triple E Senate.
- Income Trusts – Jim Flaherty hasn’t been able to wipe the grin off his face since he crapped on (mainly) the oil and gas trusts. And the more John Dielwart huffs and puffs the more often Flaherty has the opportunity to make his favorite statement, “why should the average working person have to pay taxes while the Income Trusts don’t have to pay any?” He knows the truth is twisted but the spin he puts on it wins votes, especially, in Central Canada.
- NEP II – It’s not a matter of how anymore, it’s simply a matter of when. A short time ago the ARL discovered that Carbon dioxide and Methane were listed on the Environment Canada “Updated Schedule 1 – Toxic Substance List” published on December 27, 2006. Nice timing!
Toxic substances are fully under the jurisdiction and control of the federal government, as this is now the case with Carbon dioxide and Methane.
What does this mean to Alberta’s Oil and Gas Industry? It means that whenever the feds need to buy votes in Quebec, which is always, they will do it mainly through a Carbon Tax.
- Kyoto/Global Warming – How do the fanatical people of the Suzuki Foundation, Siarra Club and others explain why Mars and Jupiter are also getting slightly warmer and at a faster rate than Earth. Since they believe Global Warming is man-made due to our activities. Then they must believe that there are little Martians driving their big ol’ SUV’s around Mars. What about Jupiter?
Kyoto is not about saving the planet. It is only about money and politics and in Canada, Alberta is the target.
- CPP versus an APP – In Finance Minister Jim Flaherty’s 2006 budget he tried to slip in a plan to dump in some of Canada’s annual budgetary surpluses into the CPP and into Quebec’s QPP. He said the idea was to help eliminate the huge unfunded liabilities, this was a lie. His sole purpose was to win votes in Quebec. As you may know Quebec does not contribute to the CPP as it has its own Pension Plan. On the other hand Alberta contributes over $4 billion a year into the CPP and gets little more than $2 billion back for our needs. Quebec has over $100 billion in its QPP while Alberta’s share of the CPP is approximately $15 billion.
Also, Albertans paid an extra $14 billion in taxes to Ottawa in 2006. In fact since 1961 to 2002 Albertans paid $244 billion in extra taxation. While at the same time Quebec received an extra $217 billion in so called Transfer and Equalization payments.
Now Flaherty says he’ll roll out Plan B later this year. His argument is that the present Plans, CPP and the QPP are unfair to the younger generation. That’s probably true but why the hell should Albertans be paying into a Quebec Pension Plan. Especially when the CPP’s unfunded liability is around $500 to $600 billion. Think of it this way, Quebec’s Plan is presently worth around $15,000 per capita, while the CPP is worth only around $3000 per capita. Quebec has a huge capital Pension Fund worth well over $130 billion while Alberta does not have any large capital fund at all.
Think about it, Alberta, the richest province in Canada and the driving force of Canada’s economy does not have anywhere near the capital funds situated in Ontario and Quebec.
We owe it to our children and especially our grandchildren and the future residents of Alberta to put a stop to this nonsense.
And there is only one sure way to do it.
Its time to “Strengthen Alberta’s Place within Confederation.”
Its time Alberta moved forward with the Alberta Agenda;
- There are already 500 Sheriffs operating as our Provincial Police Force and the Provincial Police College being built in Fort MacLeod is not for the RCMP. (We have won this one)
- Now we must move forward in creating our own Alberta Pension Plan (APP)
(see: www.app.ca).
All Alberta has to do is give a written three year notice to Ottawa that Alberta intends to opt out of the CPP and create its own APP.
Once this is done Alberta can immediately start putting money into a Pension Fund. Along with the Alberta Heritage Fund our Alberta government has another $7 billion or so stashed away that it is trying to hide from Ottawa and Quebec.
Following the three years time when Alberta is allowed to operate its own APP there would be another approximately $17 to $18 billion paid into our own Alberta Pension Fund from our share of the CPP making a total start-up capital pension fund of well over $35 billion.
The next thing Alberta would do is start collecting its own personal provincial income tax as it already does Alberta business taxation. Why should Alberta allow Ottawa to collect over $5 billion a year of our personal provincial taxation, keep it for an average of around 5 months, and then send it back to the province? Think of the interest it makes on Alberta’s money while in their hands. Quebec collects its own personal provincial taxation why not Alberta?
All of the above, the Alberta Agenda can be done under the Constitution of Canada without the permission of Ottawa or any other province.
Alberta is a major province and its time we started to act like one.
Some of you and some of your friends and business associates have supported our cause in the past, now its time to do it again.
We believe all that’s needed is one more good push. Prior to 2003 only about 2 or 3% of Albertans knew anything about;
- Equalization/transfer payments and the media rarely ever wrote anything about it. Now our guess is that over 50% of Albertans know or have heard of it.
- Also, our guess is that over 50% of Albertans know that the CPP is a rip-off.
- Over 50% of Albertans and as high as 70% of rural Albertans know that a Provincial Police Force already exists under the name of Sheriffs and the vast majority welcome the idea. Much like Ontario and Quebec, the RCMP will remain to catch the really bad guys. They will remain to police federal statutes.
This is not about separation although it will inadvertently put Alberta in the position to be just a referendum away from separation.
But, if we don’t do this how else do we get Ottawa, Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces to agree to any type of Senate reform?
How do we get the federal government whether Conservative or Liberal to stop using our money to buy votes?
I don’t know about you but I personally am sick and tired of Alberta/Albertans being treated with so much disrespect. While the federal political parties, the Conservatives, the Liberals, the NDP and now the Green Party continue to suck-up to Quebec for federal votes.
Its time for Alberta/Albertans to state emphatically to Ottawa, Central Canada and the Atlantic provinces that Alberta will no longer be the milch cow for Ottawa to buy votes in other provinces while they crap on our economy through devious, un-ethical and outright rudeness towards Albertans.
Required Budget (June 1, 2007- May 31, 2008)
We will do the work we just need your help with the expenses.
All of us are volunteers except for one executive assistant.
| *Operating costs | $ 54,000 |
| **Media Advertising | $120,000
|
| Total | $174,000 |
*Executive Assistant, shared office rent, phones, office supplies and some travel expense.
** We intend to advertise on all the Alberta talk shows and have someone repeatedly on the shows while the Ads are running (one a month for 8 months before the election).
** We intend to advertise through paid and free publicity in the Chamber of Commerce Business Magazines, the Western Standard, the Western Wheel (rural publication of 72,000). Our rural members and Team Leaders will make sure we get continuous write-ups in the local papers and local radio.
** We have over 1200 hard-line supporters, many of whom will talk it up in bars, coffee shops etc, especially throughout rural Alberta. We are also organizing support throughout Alberta’s secondary school systems and political party youth groups.
The pressure put on MLA’s will be much too great for them to ignore.
But in order to be successful we need your financial help and we need it now.
Please see the brochure for more information and how you can help.
Yours sincerely,
Patrick (Pat) Beauchamp
Chair, Alberta Residents League (www.albertaresidentsleague.com)
Email: Patbeauchamp@shaw.ca
Phone: 403-818-7255
Sun, June 24, 2007
Global warming skeptics score a few points
By TED BYFIELD
In the rising hysteria over the global warming issue, a kind of race against time appears to be developing. The question is: What will happen first?
Will the "global warmists" be able to stop the oilsands projects, wrecking the economy of Alberta and much of Canada in the process?
Or will the growing chorus of skeptics about global warming be able to command enough attention to put the brakes on the warmists before they do the wrecking job?
In the last week, the skeptics scored two goals.
The first was scored by a Canadian. Timothy Patterson, director of the Ottawa-Carleton Geoscience Centre at Carleton University in Ottawa, published an article conclusively demonstrating climate change is a permanent condition, that the Earth's climate has never been stable.
Many times in the past the Earth's climate has been far higher than it is today and, occasionally, temperatures were colder. As recently as 6,000 years ago, it averaged two degrees warmer than it does now.
Ten thousand years ago, mean temperatures rose as much as four degrees in a decade. That's 100 times faster than the warming over the past century, which has so alarmed scientists who triggered the current hysteria.
What the sun does, rather than what man does with his carbon dioxide emissions, is what chiefly causes climate change, said Patterson.
He thereby ratified the theory of Russian scientists that global cooling and another ice age is a far greater threat than global warming.
Since carbon dioxide inhibits the escape of heat from the Earth, maybe the most environmentally friendly thing you could do would be to start each day by driving your SUV around the block four or five times to bolster carbon dioxide emissions and thus retard the Earth's heat loss.
The second goal was far more devastating. It came with a book just published by Henrik Svensmark, director of the Centre for Sun Climate Research at the National Space Centre in Copenhagen. He calls it The Chilling Stars: A New Theory on Climate Change.
Like Patterson and the Russians, Svensmark contends the sun is a major factor in climate change, but he has been working for eight years to back this up with experimental proof.
He has established a laboratory in which the sun's rays and Earth's atmosphere have been set up in model, and the cosmic effects on the Earth thereby observed.
The results, detailed in the current issue of Discovery, the highly respected magazine of science, are startling. They show solar activity affects cloud formations on Earth, which in turn determine the Earth's climate. Paradoxically, it seems meteorological conditions do not determine the cloud formations; rather, cloud formations determine meteorological conditions.
Since this gravely challenges the significance to the climate of man-made carbon dioxide, Svensmark found himself being assailed and deplored by his fellow-scientists, who accused him of being financed by "oil money."
Almost all his funding, Sevnsmark retorted, comes from Denmark's Carlsberg Foundation, which is funded by Carlsberg brewery, which sells beer, not oil.
If anything, Carlsberg would surely have a vested interest in global warming. It's on the hot days that we drink the most beer.
The chairman of the UN's Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, irate because Svensmark was upsetting the established scientific orthodoxy, condemned his book as "extremely naive and irresponsible."
But the IPCC was itself under attack by then, for not being sufficiently hysterical in depicting the hideous consequences of global warming.
It seems Greenpeace released a study by a German academic who said there will be 200 million climate refugees by 2040.
The IPCC had merely said: "Unless drastic action is taken, millions of poor people will suffer from hunger, thirst, floods and disease."
"And when everybody drowns," scoffed the skeptical Washington Times humorist Wesley Pruden, "it is of course women, minorities and the poor who suffer most."
One thing puzzles me.
If the skeptics should happen to win this race, what will Steve Harper do?
Having already turned one somersault converting his government from near-total skepticism on global warming to passionate belief in it, how will he perform the reverse somersault?
Will he bring Rona Ambrose back to the environment ministry and fire John Baird?
Stay tuned.
Sun of a gun
Guess what? That big yellow ball in the sky is warming our world
Fri, May 18, 2007 By LICIA CORBELLA
A few weeks ago in a column I wrote about David Suzuki's rudeness and hypocrisy I admitted that similar to that green guru, I too love this planet and try to have as small a negative environmental impact as possible but unlike him, I don't believe that human-made CO2 is the main driver of global warming.
I received hundreds of e-mails -- most recounting often hilarious stories of run-ins people had with Suzuki, finding out for themselves that his TV persona is a lot friendlier than his off-camera one.
But it was an e-mail from a fella named Gerald in the Niagara region, that indicates just how good a job the man-made global warming believers have been at selling their message.
"If humans are not the cause of global warming ... who is?" Gerald wrote.
My response was: "Gee, Gerald. Can you really not think of anything? Nothing at all?"
Then I suggested he find the nearest child and ask them what makes the earth warm.
The next day I got a reply. "Do you mean the sun?" he queried, in all sincerity.
"Yes, Gerald. That big, burning yellow ball up in the sky is, not surprisingly, the main driver of global warming."
Yesterday, world renowned paleoclimatologist and geology professor at Carleton University in Ottawa, Dr. Tim Patterson, was in Calgary to pass that basic message on. Though his message was rather technical. He brought reams of proof, scientific studies, graphs and the like to back up his claims.
SOLAR CYCLE
Indeed, one of the more interesting, if not alarming statements Patterson made before the Friends of Science luncheon is satellite data shows that by about the year 2020 the next solar cycle is going to be solar cycle 25 -- the weakest one since the Little Ice Age (that started in the 13th century and ended around 1860) a time when people living in London, England, used to walk on a frozen Thames River and food was scarcer.
"This should be a great strategic concern in Canada because nobody is farming north of us." In other words, Canada -- the great bread basket of the world -- just might not be able to grow grains in much of the prairies.
After the Little Ice Age, "things warmed up precipitously with no help from carbon dioxide," pointed out Patterson, in a telephone interview.
Indeed, the world warmed up until about 1940 and then the temperatures started to fall until the late 1970s when scientists started predicting another ice age.
"Post World War II, as the world started cooling, CO2 was going up like crazy. All the evidence shows that warming periods were all solar driven and that there is no correlation between CO2 and temperature."
But solar flaring on its own, says Patterson, does not account for most of the warming -- which is an increase of 0.8C since the end of the Little Ice Age. It's only when its coupled with evidence about galactic cosmic rays, do all the historic warming (and cooling) pieces fit together.
Cosmic rays -- caused by the explosion of supernovas -- constantly bombard the Earth.
The more cosmic rays, the more cloud cover and the cooler the earth. However, when the sun is flaring -- as it is now -- it essentially blows away the cosmic rays and the earth warms.
That, however, is expected to come to an end in 2020.
As the saying goes, by then all of the billions of dollars wasted battling CO2 emissions, rather than pollutants, for instance, will be money pumped down the CO2 sink hole.
In 2020 hindsight on the great global warming scare will be 20/20. It won't be a pretty picture.
Simple truth about warming
Wed, February 7, 2007
By LICIA CORBELLA
"I know that most men, including those at ease with problems
of the greatest complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest
and most obvious truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit
the falsity of conclusions which they delighted in explaining to
colleagues, which they have proudly taught to others, and which
they have woven, thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives."
-- Leo Tolstoy (1826-1910)
Clearly, Tolstoy -- the great Russian novelist -- wasn't writing
about man-made global warming, since he predated this relatively
recent hysteria. Nevertheless, the quote certainly applies to the
global warming debate -- or should I say the climate change consensus?
The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) summary
released last Friday inflates the language of doom even as it deflates
its predictions of temperature and sea level increases from previous
reports.
The IPCC Climate Change 2007 report predicts world temperatures
will possibly rise 1.8C to 4C (3.25 to 7.2F) from 1990 levels to
the year 2100 and that sea levels might rise 28 to 43 cm (11 to
17 inches).
Just six years ago, however, the picture looked much bleaker.
The 2001 IPCC report predicted that from 1990 to 2100 temperatures
would rise 1.4C to 5.8C causing sea levels to rise by .09 to .88
metres (3.5 to 34.6 inches or 9 to 88 cm).
In other words, in just six years, predictions about temperature
increases have plummeted by one-third and predictions about sea-level
increases at the high end have been cut in half!
At that rate, by my calculations, we'll just have to wait for two
more reports and the IPCC will be predicting no measurable increases
at all!
Incidentally, many climate scientists have been saying just that
-- wait until 2025, when it's expected the sun's output may wane,
leading to global cooling.
Another measurement has had to be slashed by one-third as well.
In 2001, the UN body said the global net effect of human activities
since 1750 has been one of warming with radiative forcing of 2.43
watts per square metre.
Oops. Now they're saying it's 1.6 watts per square metre.
Shouldn't someone at least be blushing? Shouldn't they apologize
for getting all of this so wrong?
If a large automobile executive got his predictions wrong by up
to 50%, he'd be fired. The IPCC, however, continues to fly around
at great cost to the UN and the environment and they stay on board
this great gig as long as they continue to tout the party line --
that Earth is going to hell, only it's going to be even hotter.
What's most troubling about all of this is the 21-page, much-hyped
summary is not referenced at all.
The science that supposedly backs all of these predictions is nowhere
to be found and won't be released until April and May.
This is problematic on many fronts, but as past IPCC reports have
shown, the summary is not written by the scientists whose names
appear on the cover, it's written by politicians and bureaucrats.
Indeed, some of those scientists after the fact have complained
their work has been grossly misrepresented.
In 2001, two scientists complained publicly their work was misrepresented
by those who wrote the summary, including MIT physicist Richard
Lindzen.
In June 1996, Dr. Frederick Seitz, past-president of the National
Academy of Sciences and president emeritus of Rockefeller University,
wrote with regard to the 1995 IPCC report: "I have never witnessed
a more disturbing corruption of the peer-review process than the
events that led to this IPCC report."
He continued: "This report is not what it appears to be --
it is not the version approved by the contributing scientists listed
on the title page."
In other words, past IPCC reports have proven to be fraudulent
and yet, to paraphrase Tolstoy, they have been woven into the public
policy fabric of our lives.
Tories face backlash in
shifting resource cash from haves to have-nots
Revenue-shearing plan
Calgary Sun January 21, 2007
Conservative Leader Stephen Harper promised during last year’s
federal election campaign provincial non-renewable natural resource
revenues would not be included in any new calculation of the federal
equalization hand-out program.
But now Prime Minister Harper and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty
are reported to be considering counting 50% of a province’s
natural resource revenue in a revamped program.
The apparent change of heart comes from a panel chaired by Al O’Brien,
a former deputy minister in our province.
Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland taxpayers would be soaked
under this formula — while taxpayers in other provinces, particularly
Quebec, would be clapping their hands in glee.
Indeed, it is reported Quebec would receive about $1.5 billion
more under the new formula.
Currently under the program, ‘have-not’ provinces receive
about $6,000 per person to provide public services comparable to
the ‘have’ provinces.
We say to Harper and Flaherty: Keep your promises and keep you
hands off our natural resources revenues.
If not, you’ll face a backlash reminiscent of Pierre Trudeau’s
and Marc Lalonde’s hated National Energy Program (NEP). B.C.
Premier Gordon Campbell calls the possible inclusion of resource
revenues a “National Energy Program by stealth.”
The Conservatives, who swept Alberta in the Jan. 23 election, might
even see a new Alberta First party arise and with it see the loss
of any chance of winning a majority government.
In June, then-premier Ralph Klein warned he would fight “tooth
and nail” any attempt to include natural resource revenues
in any new equalization formula.
Premier Ed Stelmach calls the reports of the 50% cash grab “really
troublesome” and Saskatchewan Premier Lorne Calvert’s
government charges Harper’s government may be willing to sacrifice
Western Canada’s oil and natural gas resources to win seats
in Quebec.
Alberta Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Guy Boutilier points
out our province’s taxpayers already send $31 billion a year
to Ottawa, but receive $17 billion back in services. We’re
a net contributor of $14 billion to the rest of the nation —
isn’t that enough?
Only Alberta and Ontario have traditionally been ‘have’
provinces that do not receive equalization payments, but are expected
to support the rest of the provinces to the tune of $14 billion
a year in transfer payments. That could rise to $15 billion under
the new formula.
Paradoxically, just as Saskatchewan is moving into the ‘have’
province lineup with its energy resources, and likely able to pay
its way, this swipe from Ottawa would undercut the move.
Newfoundland, too, could be headed for a similar status with its
energy reserves, but its growing resource wealth, too, may be undercut.
Why penalize success?
Campbell describes the rumoured move on revamping equalization
as “establishing equalization as an insatiable entitlement
program” in which provincial governments will be deterred
from attempting to get their house in order.
The madness in the recommendations was no better pointed out by
Newfoundland Premier Danny Williams, whose province will lose $100
million a year in revenues if the recommendations are acted on.
“In one year, we have turned a $5-billion deficit into a
surplus. The recommendations would reverse that progress.”
Aside from the unfairness in such a new formula, the proponents
have ignored how volatile resource prices are.
Oil has fallen to $52-a-barrel from $78-a-barrel in just a few
months, and natural gas is down 40%.
There is no magic long-term panacea for the equalization issue
with these kinds of rollercoaster rides.
Harper and Flaherty should also recall the wisdom of Abe Lincoln,
who declared you do not make the poor rich by making the rich poor.
Alberta 'bad
boys' to stir federal pot
Province
seeks same rights as Quebec
Jason Fekete
Calgary Herald
Saturday, January 06, 2007
Calling Alberta "the bad boy" of Confederation, Intergovernmental
Relations Minister Guy Boutilier says the province will fight for
its own rights as a nation, including control over immigration.
In an interview with the Herald, Boutilier also indicated the Alberta
government will stir things up on the national scene over the fiscal
imbalance, the interprovincial struggle for a new equalization formula
and whether revenues from oil and other non-renewable resources
should be factored into the equation.
Boutilier said Alberta is a "powerhouse" very much driving
the national economy, but won't brag about it.
Nonetheless, he said, it's not afraid to ruffle some feathers as
it fights for what it sees as a fair deal with the other provinces
and Ottawa.
"We're kind of the bad boys of Confederation," Boutilier
said, adding that Albertans are proud Canadians.
"What Albertans understand is this: they contribute immensely
to this country of ours, but also we want to be able to benefit
from it."
Boutilier said Alberta and other provinces and territories are
owed the same rights associated with the Quebec nation, a distinction
recently approved by the House of Commons.
"Each province is a nation within a nation," he said.
What exactly that title means is open for interpretation, he added.
However, for Alberta, it could be more immigration powers to lessen
the mounting labour crunch, and a federal solution to a fiscal imbalance
that provinces claim sees Ottawa collecting more tax revenue than
necessary, he said.
Boutilier's remarks follow new Premier Ed Stelmach's assertion
last month that Alberta is a distinct entity and will fight for
the same rights as Quebec.
But Paul Boothe, an economics professor at the University of Alberta
who recently helped oversee the equalization program for Ottawa,
said the province is already reaping the rewards of its place in
Canada.
Many of the workers who are driving the Alberta economy come from
other provinces and have had their educations partly funded by federal
equalization dollars paid to those provinces to fund social programs.
"Confederation is working well for Alberta," Boothe said
in an interview. "I'm not interested in Alberta being a bad
boy. I'm interested in Alberta being a leader."
Albertans send $29 billion a year to Ottawa in federal taxes but
receive back only $17 billion in programs and services, according
to the provincial government.
Provinces also are fighting amongst each other and with Ottawa
over the makeup of a new federal equalization formula. The program,
which is paid for through federal taxation collected across Canada,
allocates cash to "have-not" provinces so they can provide
comparable levels of services at similar levels of taxation.
A handful of reports have been published recently by the provinces
and a federal expert panel on how to calculate the equalization
formula. A major sticking point among premiers is whether non-renewable
resource revenues should be factored into the formula. Alberta and
Saskatchewan are fiercely against it.
With provinces unable to agree on a formula, Boothe said Prime
Minister Stephen Harper will likely unveil his own plan for the
fiscal imbalance in a federal budget that could be released as soon
as next month.
"If they can't reach consensus, what's the federal government
to do?," he asked. "They've got to move ahead."
Stelmach will fight for Alberta 'nation'
Tory leader promises to review oil royalties;
'Northern' premier won't exclude Calgary; Province will pursue same
rights as Quebec
Jason Fekete,
With a file from Michelle Lang, Calgary Herald
Published: Tuesday, December 05, 2006
Premier-designate Ed Stelmach served notice Monday
that Alberta will flex its political muscle on the national scene,
vowing to fight for the same rights as a Quebec nation and to defend
encroachments on the province's wealth.
In his first official press conference since a stunning
victory Sunday in the Progressive Conservative leadership race,
Stelmach was both emotional and assertive in a nearly 30-minute
appearance in front of journalists at the legislature.
The affable 55-year-old -- who will be sworn in
as Alberta's 13th premier Dec. 15 -- blinked back tears when he
discussed his dedicated volunteers. But he
delivered a firm message to Prime Minister Stephen
Harper, Quebec and Canada's other political leaders over Alberta's
place in the country.
Stelmach said he's concerned about a handful of
intergovernmental issues, including the debate about a new equalization
formula and the fiscal imbalance, as well as the notion of Quebec
as a nation within Canada.
"I'm going to fight for the same rights and
privileges that may be assigned to this nation within a nation,"
the usually low-key Stelmach told reporters, gesturing with his
hands to drive home his point.
"I'm going to be very careful. We're watching
this."
The unassuming northern Alberta farmer and MLA said
he had a "good, long chat" with Harper on Sunday and suggested
he'll have a very good working relationship with Ottawa and his
provincial colleagues. "I want to work with Stephen Harper
and Ottawa to make sure that we build even a stronger Canada,"
he said.
A meeting between the prime minister and Alberta's
next premier is planned for either later this month or early January,
Stelmach added.
A more immediate concern is choosing a cabinet --
one he said will be smaller than Premier Ralph Klein's -- which
will likely be unveiled next week prior to the swearing-in ceremony.
He's also called a caucus meeting for Wednesday in Edmonton.
With massive responsibilities now thrust onto his
shoulders, Stelmach and his wife Marie received a "special
blessing" Sunday, from a Ukrainian Catholic priest in his hometown
of Andrew, that he'll make "the best decisions for the province
of Alberta."
Political observers said the bold Stelmach, like
all new leaders, is trying to boost his profile, while creating
a sense of "action and energy" following his weekend win.
Stelmach also came out firing against new federal
Liberal Leader Stephane Dion, who said Sunday he wants to find ways
to achieve more sustainable development in the booming oilsands
by reviewing "the advantageous tax treatment" offered
to oil and gas companies. "I'm going to tell them right off
the bat that they have to be careful as to the kind of policies
they start articulating," Stelmach said. "Any damage to
Alberta's economy is going to severely hurt Ottawa and their treasury
as well."
When asked about the federal Grits possibly eyeing
Alberta's energy wealth, he tapped his chest and said: "They're
going to be dealing with me."
While Stelmach spent much of his time targeting
the federal Liberals, it's likely he will -- like Klein -- keep
some distance between his government and the Harper Tories as well,
said University of Lethbridge political scientist Peter McCormick.
"Stelmach has to show himself as his own guy
with his own set of ideas," he said.
The new Tory chief identified labour, housing and
infrastructure as key issues that need to be quickly addressed by
the new government.
He's also focusing his attention on three campaign
promises, including ensuring a more transparent government, strengthening
the PC party and discussing with caucus his desire for an Alberta
pension plan.
The forcefulness of Stelmach's comments caught the
attention of opposition MLAs and already appear to have quashed
any perception that his nice-guy image means he's a pushover. "Having
a look at Mr. Stelmach today and how he did in his news conference,
it just occurred to me that he's not a guy that I'm going to underestimate,"
said Alberta NDP Leader Brian Mason.
As Stelmach slowly takes the reins from Klein, speculation
builds as to who will be named to his cabinet. Flanking him at Monday's
news conference were Health Minister Iris Evans and Government Efficiency
Minister Luke Ouellette, both Stelmach loyalists.
Calgary-area MLA Ted Morton, Stelmach's other main
competitor in the race, said it would make sense if he were offered
a cabinet posting in an effort to embrace the tens of thousands
of party members who backed his campaign.
"I certainly hope I play a constructive role
in the Stelmach government," Morton said.
Morton, Quebec will influence PC party's future
By Margret Kopala
Calgary Herald
Wednesday, November 22, 2006
"Dunno," one Calgary blogger wrote. "If the
**** hits the fan with the Liberals and the Quebec thing, I'm
a Morton man."
In a province whose vast and expanding wealth presents an equally
vast array of issues, it is no small irony that Alberta's future
leadership could be determined in Montreal.
Few in Alberta are paying much attention, but that could change
when the Liberal leadership convention is held from Nov. 28
to Dec. 2.
On the same Saturday at the other end of the country, in a
one-member, one-vote flurry of membership sales that are permitted
even as second-ballot votes are cast, Alberta Tories could also
be selecting the leader that will replace Ralph Klein. (The
first-ballot vote is to be held Saturday. If no one wins 50
per cent plus one of the votes, the top three candidates will
be on a second ballot the following Saturday, Dec. 2, where
winner takes all).
The Liberal party hopes to keep a lid on a resolution calling
for constitutionalizing Quebec nationhood, but its timing couldn't
be less propitious. From Nov. 29, the day the resolution may
be debated, there are a full three days for the storm to gather
in Alberta, where the idea of special recognition for any province
cuts little ice and Quebec fatigue is now palpable.
"Go ahead," says Pat Beauchamp, chairman of the
Alberta Residents League (ARL), "if you are a nation within
a nation, just go ahead and leave. Leave completely."
"More Alberta, Less Ottawa" is the motto of the nonpartisan
group that also supports the Alberta Agenda. Though the ARL
hasn't endorsed anyone, its members -- now with team leaders
in 20 of Alberta's 83 constituencies and a full complement expected
for the next provincial election -- can hardly fail to support
the one-time senator-elect and political scientist Ted Morton,
an author of the original Alberta (firewall) agenda that calls
for provincial control of the police, Albertans' share of the
national pension plans and collection of personal income taxes.
Of course, it's possible the urbane Jim Dinning will win the
leadership on the first ballot. He's strong in Calgary, says
Beauchamp, but Morton is strong in rural Alberta.
Dinning, a former Alberta treasurer who's made a name for himself
in corporate circles, is leading among Alberta voters generally,
according to provincial polling. Whether this is true among
party members who decide the leadership is another question.
On a second ballot, for instance, the rural vote could prove
pivotal. It was on the second ballot that newcomer Klein rallied
the rural vote to upset the status quo candidate Nancy Betkowski
in 1992.
In 2006, the rural vote could galvanize around the Quebec nationhood
issue to catapult Morton -- a constitutional expert trained
at the University of Toronto -- into the leadership.
And in an uncharacteristically low-key leadership race with
eight candidates, Morton is also the candidate who best represents
change. As Preston Manning reminded Globe and Mail readers recently,
Alberta is all about "turning points."
The Alberta Liberals (1921), United Farmers (1935) and Social
Credit (1971) were turfed from office for their failure to anticipate
or address the big
issues of the day, and managing the next one is pivotal if
the Progressive Conservative party is to continue in government.
But Manning's argument that reconciling the environment and
a market-based economy is today's turning point could well prove
misplaced come Dec. 2.
"An Alberta strong and free is the foundation of a Canada
strong and free," Morton tells his audiences, warily avoiding
any references to nationhood. But as a member of the Calgary
School that has considered deeply a future where the pressures
of post-9/11 continentalism, shifting demographics and Quebec
separatism are veering Canada into new political territory,
he will not lack for resources for addressing the issue.
One way or another, Beauchamp concedes, Alberta will get the
change it needs.
"If Dinning is elected, it's the status quo, but the party
will split, whoever wins." In that case, the Alliance Party
could be the net beneficiary.
Federally, the Liberals could win power with Quebec nationhood
in their platform. In this case, "separation could go through
the roof," says Beauchamp. "And if Alberta goes, so
will B.C. and Saskatchewan."
Either way, expect Morton to be a major player and the "Quebec
thing" to be a major factor.
Margret Kopala writes for the Ottawa Citizen.
Capital idea for Albertans
Morton pension plan would pay dividends
By LICIA CORBELLA
Calgary Sun
Wed, November 15, 2006
A young man -- informed and well educated -- was despondent
on the phone.
One of this 22-year-old's many woes was everything he paid
into the ponzi scheme known as the Canada Pension Plan might
be consumed by that enormous demographic group, the baby boomers,
leaving him with nothing.
When he called, I was, coincidentally, reading a pamphlet I
picked up at a cocktail party called: The Proposal for an Alberta
Pension Plan (APP).
The pamphlet was created and given to me by Patrick Beauchamp,
chair of the Alberta Residents League, a group with a motto
of "More Alberta, Less Ottawa."
"Currently, Albertans pay about $4 billion annually into
the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) and get a little more than $2
billion back annually," said Beauchamp.
"Why are we paying an extra $2 billion annually into the
CPP that may not be there for anybody under 40 years old when
they retire?" he asked.
It's a good question.
Under Section 94(a) of the Canadian Constitution, any province
has the right to opt out of the CPP, so long as it operates
its own separate plan, just like Quebec chose to do in 1966,
when the CPP was formed.
The outcome?
Quebec's pension plan is far healthier than Canada's.
"The value of the Quebec pension plan is more than $102
billion while Alberta's share of the CPP is about $13.5 billion."
Considering Quebec's population is about three times larger
than Alberta's, even when you triple Alberta's share of the
CPP, that adds up to just $40.5 billion -- far short of Quebec's
plan.
Beauchamp, who hired an actuary to crunch the numbers, said
a 20-year-old starting out in the work force in 2011 and working
until 60, would possibly receive triple what they could get
from the CPP.
Besides a monthly cheque equivalent to, or greater to the CPP,
under an APP, a supplementary plan would be established that
would give contributors a lump sum of money when they retired
at age 65.
For instance, assuming someone in their 20s, who made $40,000
a year, contributed to the APP until age 65 and the fund earn-ed
interest at 6%, that worker would receive a lump sum of $453,656
upon retirement.
To find out what you might get, depending on your age or income,
log onto www. albertapensionplan.ca
Beauchamp admits he got the idea from Alberta MLA and PC party
leadership hopeful, Ted Morton.
Fellow-leadership hopeful Ed Stelmach has recently jumped on
the APP bandwagon but said he'd also still force Albertans to
pay into the CPP, which doesn't make any sense.
Of course, under Morton's plan, anyone who has already paid
into the CPP would still receive their benefits and anyone who
pays into the APP would receive their benefits regardless of
where they live upon retirement, but only Alberta residents
could pay into the plan.
Besides providing a better pension for young people, Morton
says the advantages for the province are vast.
"The APP would very quickly become one of the largest
pension funds in Canada and that will have two effects,"
says Morton.
"It will stimulate the banking and financial services
sectors in Alberta which will contribute to economic diversification
and also it will create a significant capital pool, not just
for Alberta but for all of Western Canada, which has historically
been something we've always lacked."
The depressed young man listened intently as I read from the
pamphlet.
He hung up the phone more cheery than before.
An APP is certainly something Albertans should demand be debated,
not just during the current leadership race, but afterwards
by whoever wins the Tory leadership.
Alberta pension plan could work
By LINK BYFIELD
Calgary Herald Editorial Page
Saturday, October 21, 2006
At a campaign rally in Edmonton last week, Conservative leadership
candidate Ed Stelmach promised to “fund a secure Alberta
pension plan”.
Stelmach joins his leadership competitor, Ted Morton, in committing
to an APP.
Of all the Tory promises wafting around Alberta, the APP could
do the most good. For young Albertans, a properly structured Alberta
pension plan could double the otherwise paltry $10,000 annual
payout the can expect from the CPP.
For businesses, the attraction of an APP would speed the arrival
of more workers and create a major Alberta-based investment fund.
It would also help staunch the annual net $15 billion hemorrhage
of Alberta revenues to Ottawa.
Anyone curious about how Alberta’s plan could work will
find only vague statements about it on Morton’s and Stelmach’s
websites. They’ll learn a lot more at www.AlbertaPensionPlan.ca.
The plan proposed on this website is the handiwork of Pat Beauchamp
and the Alberta Residents League, along with a committee of interested
Albertans (including me). The technical brains behind the APP
proposal is Calgarian Gordon Lang, who runs a national firm of
consulting actuaries.
Alberta would exercise its constitutional right to opt out of
CPP, as Quebec did when CPP started in 1965. Federal law allows
any province wishing to establish its own public alternative plan
to quit CPP after giving three years’ written notice to
the federal minister of Human Resources.
CPP (like QPP) charges contributors premiums of 10 per cent of
annual income between $3,500 and $42,000. The 10 per cent premium
is split evenly between employee and employer.
The rate of return young people can expect on this investment
of up to $4,000 per year when they retire is at best zero, and
may even be negative. In other words, they’ll be lucky to
get as much back in deflated dollars as they put in.
As for earning interest, forget it. CPP is largely unfunded,
meaning it lacks a capital base big enough to pay for the benefits
owing to pensioners, present and future. Today’s payouts
to seniors are furnished mainly by what is brought in by today’s
premiums. Although CPP is now 20 per cent covered by capital investments,
Ottawa plans to continue running it mainly as pay as you go.
Because Alberta has a younger workforce than other provinces,
a pension plan would need to charge only eight percent to return
the same basic benefits CPP provides by charging 10 per cent.
The Alberta plan would continue to charge 10 per cent of the
first $42,000 of income, but would consist of two parts. The first
would be the basic plan, yielding the same as CPP. This is required
by the federal Canada Pension Plan Act.
The remaining two per cent – augmented by a one per cent
contribution from the province – would be invested in a
supplementary account owned by the contributor and released when
he or she retires or leaves the province.
Lang calculates the supplementary account of a young Albertan
entering full-time workforce today would compound to $250,000
to $500,000 in extra savings by age 65, depending how much the
person earns and on future rates of interest.
And unlike the CPP-equivalent basic plan, the APP supplementary
plan would be the property of the contributor, not the government,
to spend or bequeath to heirs. True, the Alberta government added
to it, but only to make up for the fact that today’s seniors
are taking more from CPP than they put in, at great cost to the
young. Lang estimates the government’s share would be less
that $500 million a year.
I have heard only three objections to this idea, none of which
hold water.
Some say (leadership candidate Lyle Oberg) that it will somehow
increase the liability Albertans owe for CPP. It will reduce it.
For every CPP dollar that comes back to Alberta, Albertans now
pay $1.50. Unless Alberta opts out, this penalty will continue.
Some say Alberta’s smaller plan would be more expensive
to administer than CPP. Not so. Albertans are losing at least
$750 million to CPP every year. By comparison, the cost of setting
up and running our own pension plan would be quite small.
CPP was a foolish and needless federal trespass into provincial
social jurisdictions that would never be contemplated today. Alberta
has a chance to lead Canada toward the kind of regulated private
pension alternatives that are proving so superior in countries
such as Chile.
Morton and Stelmach have the right idea. An Alberta pension plan
would secure the future of our provincial workforce, and encourage
a long-overdue redesign of national social entitlements.
Link Byfield is and Alberta Senator-Elect,
Chairman of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy, and
was co-chair of last month’s Calgary Congress.
A
Note to the rest of Canada: Hands Off!
By LICIA CORBELLA
Canada's puppet
police force
By Licia Corbella -- Calgary Sun
Solution More
Alberta...Less Ottawa
By Licia Corbella -- Calgary Sun
Tories mull pension
MLAs ponder 'made-in-Alberta' plan at convention
By Neil Waugh -- Calgary Sun
Equalization. Just say no!
By Ted Morton -- For the Calgary Herald
Is it time for that Alberta constitution?
By Neil Waugh
Quebec EI case advances Alberta Agenda
By Sylvia LeRoy
Firewall
could burn Klein Tories
By Neil Waugh
Albertans
are moving beyond alienation
By Ken Boessenkool
The case for
an Alberta pension plan
By Danielle Smith
A New Manifesto for Alberta
By Ted Morton
Westerners
want change and we want it now
By Allan M.R. MacRae
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