Jim Flaherty's timelines on national securities regulator, international tax
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has repeatedly talked about plans to strike two panels: One to create draft legislation for a national securities regulator, and the other to identify ways to improve the fairness and competitiveness of Canada’s system of international taxation.
Canada's health care rated poorly
The latter panel was even suppose to produce an interim report by the end of 2007 and a final report in 2008. But the panels don’t exist yet. When will they be created?
“Soon,” Mr. Flaherty told reporters after speaking at a Rotary Club of Toronto event. Asked to clarify how soon, he said the international tax panel will show up within the next ten days. He did not elaborate on the national securities regulator panel.
Canada has the worst rating in a new study of health care in seven countries when it comes to wait times for seeing doctors and getting elective surgery.And the Commonwealth Fund says Canadians are most likely to report going to an emergency room as an alternative to a visit to a doctor's office or clinic.
Only 22 per cent of Canadians surveyed say they could get a same-day appointment when they're sick. Thirty per cent -- by far the highest among the countries -- say they had to wait six days or more.
And 15 per cent reported waits of six months or more for non-emergency surgery.
Meantime, two-thirds reported having a lot of difficulty getting care at night, on weekends or holidays.
"The report indicates that Canadians are saying the same thing to politicians that they're saying to the Commonwealth Fund: access to physicians and access to medical services has to improve," said Health Minister Tony Clement.
"We share that concern."
SEE
Finally Some Common Sense
Still Waiting On Wait Time 2
Still Waiting On Wait Time 1
Find blog posts, photos, events and more off-site about:
health care, medicare, Canada, Conservatives, Harper, Tony Clement, waittimes, politics, health, government, CMA, doctors, failing grade
Stock-Eschanges, Canda, economy, capitalism, Flaherty, Conservatives, Regulation, Stock-Regulation, SEC, TSX,