SOUND OFF: NDP’s seventh budget — pessimistic and uninspiring
IF YOU WERE EXPECTING BOLD ACTION and a bit of hope for the future in the NDP’s seventh budget — David Eby’s first as premier — you were likely sorely disappointed by what you heard this week. Budget 2023 provides no reassurance that this government has figured out how to address the serious challenges people in Kamloops and the Thompson Valleys are facing.
If throwing money at problems — with no targets to track progress — was a strategy that worked, we wouldn’t have the terrible outcomes we’ve seen over the past six years under the NDP. It seems as though we’re in constant crisis mode in this province under their leadership.
Life has never been more unaffordable in B.C., with the highest housing and fuel costs in North America. In Kamloops, the median single family home price is now $633,700. The average rent for a purpose-built rental is now $1,395 for a 2-bedroom unit. But this budget fails to provide meaningful relief for people.
The NDP’s renters’ tax credit is a watered-down version of what they promised two elections ago in 2017. And it doesn’t go as far as it could have, had they acted sooner to make good on their promise. The cost of rent has skyrocketed in that time, and now, $400 doesn’t do much to soften the blow for those who are even eligible for the credit.


