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Autism treatment delay will cost votes, says Hampton

Globe and Mail Update

HANMER, Ont. — New Democrat Leader Howard Hampton says a broken promise regarding treatment for autistic children will cost the Liberals votes in the election.

Speaking today in Hanmer, about 20 kilometres north of Sudbury, Mr. Hampton said desperate parents voted for the Liberals in 2003 based solely on promises to improve access to expensive treatment.

But the NDP leader said parents were left disappointed as waiting lists for the treatments grew and hundreds of kids went without help.

Better access to autism treatment is among Mr. Hampton’s six major commitments leading up to the Oct. 10 election.

He says the work of his wife and fellow New Democrat Shelley Martel in raising awareness of autism issues will convince parents to shift their support to his party and away from the Liberals.

While Ms. Martel is not running again for office, she says the NDP caucus is committed to taking on her cause.

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Angry voter confronts Tory for backtracking

toronto.ctv.ca

A day after he softened his controversial stance on funding religious schools, Progressive Conservative Leader John Tory got an earful from a Conservative voter who was angered by the sudden backtracking.

Jim Devine confronted Tory on Tuesday morning during a campaign stop in Toronto, where the leader was speaking about phasing out the province’s unpopular health tax.

“You also had said that you believe in segregating schools, then halfway through that you suddenly changed and said, ‘No, we’ll have a free vote,’” Devine charged inside a suburban grocery store.

Tory took exception to the “segregation” claim, and said he changed his tune after listening to constituents.

“Allowing for the free vote and talking about it before the election is exactly what (Liberal Leader Dalton) McGuinty did not do (before raising taxes),” he said.

On Monday, Tory announced he would, if elected premier, allow a free vote in the legislature on his funding proposal for faith-based schools.

Tory said his plan to spend $400 million to bring private religious schools into the public education system will only proceed after extensive public consultation.

The about-face came nine days before the Oct. 10 election. Tory’s election campaign has been hindered by the proposal, which has been widely unpopular among voters and even created divisions within his own party.

Tory says he is going to spend the remaining week talking about issues such as taxes, jobs and health care.

At a campaign stop in Goderich, McGuinty questioned Tory’s leadership.

“Now what he lacks the courage to do immediately, he plans to do by stealth. Just like he’s demonstrated bad judgment in the past, he continues to show bad judgment,” McGuinty said.

NDP Leader Howard Hampton said it’s a shame so much attention has been paid to the religious schools issue when the province has other serious concerns.

“I think it’s a travesty in Ontario that we’ve become the child poverty capital of Canada and the issue hardly gets raised, hardly gets any attention,” he said in Hanmer, in northern Ontario.

McGuinty touts health care record

McGuinty spent Tuesday touting his party’s health care record, and vowed more Ontario residents will have a family doctor if he is re-elected.

He said 500,000 more people have a family doctor now since he came into power in 2003. McGuinty says he could double that number with another term in office.

The Liberal leader also pledged to add 50 family health teams to provide a range of services — many of them in rural areas. He said 150 such teams have been created during his mandate.

McGuinty said his health-care premium, which costs residents up to $900 a year, is the sacrifice taxpayers have made to guarantee a strong medical system.

“The reasons again that we’ve got all those nurses, all those doctors, that we’re building hospitals, is because (Ontarians) are making sacrifices,” he said.

Hampton vows to better autistic treatment

Hampton, meanwhile, promised parents of autistic children his party will help families struggling to receive the expensive intensive behavioural intervention treatment.

He said McGuinty has failed to deliver on promises he made for autism care four years ago.

“These desperate parents and these vulnerable kids have been among the most deceived and manipulated by Dalton McGuinty of anybody in the province,” Hampton said.

“People want to know what this election is about? It’s about getting justice for these parents and these kids.”

The NDP leader promises to spend $100 million annually for children with autism and clear the wait period for treatment. The plank is one of his six major commitments leading up to the election.

With a report from CTV’s Paul Bliss and files from The Canadian Press

 
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Star
 
Hampton attacks bank tax breaks
 
Oct 02, 2007 10:08 AM

Staff Reporter

SUDBURY - NDP Leader Howard Hampton turned his guns on big banks and insurance companies today, saying it’s “deplorable” that they don’t pay their fair share of taxes while working families are hit hard.

In a vintage early morning breakfast speech, Hampton accused Premier Dalton McGuinty’s Liberal government of handing out tax breaks to big business, yet single mothers have to dig deep into their pockets to pay the health tax.

Hampton spent the day campaigning in northern Ontario where the NDP holds three of the 11 seats.

Speaking to about 100 party faithful near Sudbury, Hampton emphasized that McGuinty didn’t raise taxes on banks and insurance companies, which he says are already getting multi-million dollar tax cuts from the Liberals.

“Those poor impoverished banks, they only had $18.2 billion in profit last year. They need a tax cut from Dalton McGuinty,” he said sarcastically, referring to the capital tax that is being phased out.

But Hampton noted that a single-parent mother with two children and an income of $30,000 a year had her income tax increased by 24 per cent because of the controversial so-called health tax the Liberal government imposed.

“Banks and insurance companies should stop whining and start paying some taxes so single-parent moms won’t have to carry the weight for them,” he said. “I think it is deplorable.”

Knowing that he is not going to form a government, Hampton told reporters his job in this election campaign is to raise the “real issues.”

“Under Dalton McGuinty, Ontario has become the child poverty capital of Canada while at the same time banks and insurance companies are getting multi-million tax breaks. Under Dalton McGuinty, children with autism and their parents have been deceived and manipulated and the McGuinty government still treats them with disdain. I think those are some of the real issues.”

Before the 2003 provincial election, McGuinty, who was then opposition leader, promised parents to dramatically improve treatment but after the election broke that promise and then spent $2.4 million to fight a lawsuit launched by parents.

 
 
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All autistic kids in Ont. should receive treatment: Hampton
By THE CANADIAN PRESS

2007-10-02

HANMER, Ont. - The parents of autistic children overwhelmingly supported the Liberals in the 2003 election but after years of broken promises and growing waiting lists for treatment those same voters will be shifting their support elsewhere, New Democrat Leader Howard Hampton said Tuesday.

Hampton was spending the day travelling through northern Ontario and met a group of supporters in Hanmer, about 20 kilometres north of Sudbury, where his wife Shelley Martel has been the provincial representative since 1999.

Martel has been the most outspoken advocate for families struggling to receive the expensive intensive behavioural intervention treatment for autism and has made the NDP synonymous with the cause, Hampton said.

The Liberals, on the other hand, have simply developed a reputation for failing to deliver on promises and letting kids go without the help they desperately need, Hampton said.

“These desperate parents and these vulnerable kids have been among the most deceived and manipulated by Dalton McGuinty of anybody in the province,” Hampton said.

“People want to know what this election is about? It’s about getting justice for these parents and these kids.”

Better access to autism treatment is among Hampton’s six major commitments leading up to the Oct. 10 election.

While Martel is not running again for office, she said the NDP caucus is committed to taking on her cause.

Autism was one of several issues Hampton was expected to address while visiting three of the 11 northern ridings on Tuesday.

 
 
 
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