Manitoba slows a tax cut, offers some additional health-care spending
WINNIPEG — Manitoba’s Progressive Conservative government is planning to move more slowly on a promised tax cut, reduce a handful of other levies and inject some money into a health-care system battered by COVID-19.
Tuesday’s budget was the first under Premier Heather Stefanson, who took over after Brian Pallister retired last fall.
The fiscal plan still includes the intention to phase out the province’s education tax on residential and farm property via rebates, but at a slower pace than Pallister had promised in last year’s budget.
“We chose not to accelerate it at the pace that it was before, and we did that for a reason, because we’re still in very difficult times,” Stefanson said.


