T
the patriot
Guest
Military funding on the rise again, but only slightly
Bulk of new money slated for troops‘ pay
but allocation is lower than expected
Jeff Sallot
Parliamentary Bureau
Wednesday, February 17, 1999
Ottawa -- After a decade of post-Cold War budget cuts, defence spending is increasing again, but modestly and with most of the new money earmarked for pay raises and improved benefits for the troops.
The increase falls short of what had been hoped for by the military, which is facing the possibility of taking on a major new peacekeeping mission in Kosovo within weeks and is still trying to get cabinet approval for new maritime helicopters after five years of delay.
Nevertheless, Defence Minister Art Eggleton said the budget is "great news" and will allow him to announce new pay rates and compensation measures next month.
In his budget, Finance Minister Paul Martin provided the Canadian Forces an additional $175-million in each of the next three years to cover what the military calls its quality-of-life improvement package for the 60,000 uniformed personnel. He also restored $150-million in defence cuts made last year.
With these increases, defence spending will reach about $8.7-billion for the fiscal year that begins in April. Defence is one of the largest items in the budget. Yesterday‘s announcement increases defence spending from 5.4 per cent of total federal spending to 5.7 per cent in the coming fiscal year.
Finance Department officials have told the Canadian Forces to plan on annual budget increases of only 1.5 per cent well into the new decade.
Mr. Eggleton said last night pay and benefits improvements are his highest priority, and he is determined to implement a package recommended by a House of Commons committee last year. Defence officials have costed out that package at $700-million over three years. Mr. Martin‘s budget would thus leave his cabinet colleague with a $175-million shortfall. But Mr. Eggleton said internal reallocations fill in the gaps.
The House committee travelled the country, hearing horror stories about soldiers lining up at food banks and their families living in substandard military houses with leaky roofs and broken furnaces.
The deadline for the government to respond to the committee‘s report is not until March 26. That‘s when the details of new pay rates will be announced.
Mr. Eggleton is trying to squeeze additional money from the federal treasury. He is asking to keep the money from the sale of surplus military assets, such as the bases that have been closed. But the Treasury Board is resisting this idea.
Defence Department sources have said recently that some drastic steps may have to be taken over the next few years to make up for shortfalls, including the possibility of reducing the size of the forces by 5,000 troops over two years or mothballing some of the navy‘s 12 frigates or selling off some of the air force‘s 122 CF-18 fighter planes.
But Mr. Eggleton played down these possibilities at this time, but did not rule them out down the road. "There‘s a lot of planning we have to do in terms of future considerations about what we need in the Canadian Forces," he said.
The budget still leaves unanswered questions about when the Canadian Forces will be able to buy some major new equipment, such as maritime helicopters. Mr. Eggleton said he will have an announcement soon.
**********************************************************************
-the patriot-
Bulk of new money slated for troops‘ pay
but allocation is lower than expected
Jeff Sallot
Parliamentary Bureau
Wednesday, February 17, 1999
Ottawa -- After a decade of post-Cold War budget cuts, defence spending is increasing again, but modestly and with most of the new money earmarked for pay raises and improved benefits for the troops.
The increase falls short of what had been hoped for by the military, which is facing the possibility of taking on a major new peacekeeping mission in Kosovo within weeks and is still trying to get cabinet approval for new maritime helicopters after five years of delay.
Nevertheless, Defence Minister Art Eggleton said the budget is "great news" and will allow him to announce new pay rates and compensation measures next month.
In his budget, Finance Minister Paul Martin provided the Canadian Forces an additional $175-million in each of the next three years to cover what the military calls its quality-of-life improvement package for the 60,000 uniformed personnel. He also restored $150-million in defence cuts made last year.
With these increases, defence spending will reach about $8.7-billion for the fiscal year that begins in April. Defence is one of the largest items in the budget. Yesterday‘s announcement increases defence spending from 5.4 per cent of total federal spending to 5.7 per cent in the coming fiscal year.
Finance Department officials have told the Canadian Forces to plan on annual budget increases of only 1.5 per cent well into the new decade.
Mr. Eggleton said last night pay and benefits improvements are his highest priority, and he is determined to implement a package recommended by a House of Commons committee last year. Defence officials have costed out that package at $700-million over three years. Mr. Martin‘s budget would thus leave his cabinet colleague with a $175-million shortfall. But Mr. Eggleton said internal reallocations fill in the gaps.
The House committee travelled the country, hearing horror stories about soldiers lining up at food banks and their families living in substandard military houses with leaky roofs and broken furnaces.
The deadline for the government to respond to the committee‘s report is not until March 26. That‘s when the details of new pay rates will be announced.
Mr. Eggleton is trying to squeeze additional money from the federal treasury. He is asking to keep the money from the sale of surplus military assets, such as the bases that have been closed. But the Treasury Board is resisting this idea.
Defence Department sources have said recently that some drastic steps may have to be taken over the next few years to make up for shortfalls, including the possibility of reducing the size of the forces by 5,000 troops over two years or mothballing some of the navy‘s 12 frigates or selling off some of the air force‘s 122 CF-18 fighter planes.
But Mr. Eggleton played down these possibilities at this time, but did not rule them out down the road. "There‘s a lot of planning we have to do in terms of future considerations about what we need in the Canadian Forces," he said.
The budget still leaves unanswered questions about when the Canadian Forces will be able to buy some major new equipment, such as maritime helicopters. Mr. Eggleton said he will have an announcement soon.
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-the patriot-