Province Putting Significant Focus on Education, Health Care in Budget 2025

Province Putting Significant Focus on Education, Health Care in Budget 2025

The 2025 budget includes some significant spending in education, accounting for 17 per cent of total expenses.

Perhaps the biggest increase goes to the K-12 system.

Government is pumping an additional $20-million into the teaching services budget, which they say will result in 400 new teachers and learning assistants. That funding will increase to $44-million next year. As well, government is putting $850,000 towards recruitment and retention initiatives for positions in hard-to-fill areas.

Five-million dollars is being put towards technology devices and infrastructure in K-12 schools, an amount which will be doubled next year. An additional $24-million is being put into the expansion of school food programming in pre-kindergarten and K-9 schools. That brings the total funding for that program to $42-million.

Education Minister Krista Lynn Howell (VOCM News)

Under post-secondary education, over $400-million is being set aside for Memorial University. That includes $312-million for the institution’s core operating grant, and $78-million for the Faculty of Medicine – which includes nearly $7-million to increase undergrad seats, clerkships and the expansion of internal medicine.

As well, $70-million will be given to the university over the next eight years to help with deferred maintenance. Funding for the College of the North Atlantic has been increased by $11-million to $82-million, and government is giving CNA over $3-million for an electric boiler at their Prince Phillip Drive Campus.

Under the early learning umbrella, $110-million is being funneled into the operating grant program and $10-dollar-a-day daycare, $3.9-million for projects to increase the number of childcare spaces, and $1.7-million for grants and bursaries to encourage people to become ECEs.

Health Care Another Main Focus of Budget 2025

Interim Health Minister John Haggie (VOCM News)

Meanwhile, government is putting a significant amount of money behind health care initiatives.

Included in that is $10-million to reduce backlogs – such as through the expansion of MRI and CT services, expanded capacity for orthopedic surgeries and joint replacements, an outpatient ambulatory care clinic at Carbonear General, a dedicated hip fracture unit at St. Clare’s, and five additional orthopedic surgery beds.
There is also a focus on mental health and addictions supports.

Six-million-dollars is going towards addiction recovery, including a 10-bed unit in Labrador, $5.7-million to Choices for Youth to support their programs, and over $600,000 to increase the availability of Naloxone kits.

Cancer care and screening is also getting a bump – $1.5-million has been put aside for human papilloma virus screening, and another $1.5-million is going toward the expansion of the lung cancer screening program.

Elsewhere, $140-million is being put into a modernized health information system, and over $26-million is going into the integration of the integration of ambulance services – including $8.5-million for the expansion of emergency medevac services.

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