N.B. Tories’ stance on rural hospitals careful after February policy retreat
FREDERICTON — New Brunswick’s Progressive Conservative leader is trying to extinguish fears he’ll revive plans to cut acute care beds and ERs at rural hospitals, while also declining to confirm if existing levels of service will continue if he’s re-elected.
Blaine Higgs was campaigning Saturday in front of the rural hospital in the village of Perth-Andover, as voters in New Brunswick headed to the first of two advance polling days for the Sept. 14 provincial election.
The rural hospital issue — and how to shift health resources to care for an aging population — has proved to be one of the most volatile for the Tories over the past year.
The leader of the province’s minority government had to scrap plans in February to reduce ER hours and convert acute-care beds into long-term care at the hospital in Perth-Andover, along with similar rural facilities in Sussex, Sackville, Grand Falls, Caraquet, and Saint-Anne-de-Kent, after a public outcry.


