Ontario PC platform sees larger class sizes, cancels teacher pay hikes

Ontario PC Leader Tim Hudak holds a tablet displaying his party's election campaign platform, dubbed the Million Jobs Plan, during a town hall event in Toronto Wednesday.

Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Hudak has released his party's campaign platform, including plans to increase class sizes and rein in education spending toward delivering a balanced budget by 2016 and, ultimately, tax cuts.

Hudak released the platform, called the Million Jobs Plan, during a "town hall" in downtown Toronto Wednesday, saying job creation is "at the core of every decision I make."

"I'll make Ontario number one again for new Canadians to start that business, to raise their families," said Hudak.

"Balancing the budget is job number one to ensure we get private sector job creation in our province."

The platform lays out more specifics of Hudak's plan to balance the budget quickly to attract investment and spur private-sector job creation, which has been the main theme of his campaign so far.

"I want to free up small business to focus on selling their product, innovating, creating more jobs, not filling out useless government forms," said Hudak.

"Instead of pressing [for] more handouts, we'll pressure the federal government for more trade opportunities, protect our gains with the Americans, the Europeans, have more trade with Asia and sell Ontario products worldwide."

In a message directed at managers and business owners, Hudak also vowed to end "corporate welfare."

"I'm not going to give you a grant, but I'm not going to give your competitor a grant either," he said. "I'll lower taxes for both of you, so you can create more jobs for workers in our province."

Specifically, he vowed to end "the excessive and expensive subsidies for wind and solar projects and downsizing that massive and expensive hydro bureaucracy."

Among the measures in the campaign document are cuts to education spending and teachers as part of Hudak's pledge last week to eliminate 100,000 public sector positions over the first two years of a PC government. The government slim down includes his cabinet, which Hudak says will be cut from "27 down to 16 ministers."

He also put forward measures to save money in education, including moves to:

Increase classroom sizes by 2-3 students.

Increase the ratio for full-day kindergarten to one teacher for every 20 students, from the current ratio of two teachers per 26 students.

Cancel a planned raise for elementary teachers in the public school boards.

Cut 9,700 non-teaching positions in schools — on top of the 100,000 public sector jobs.

End a 30 per cent tuition grant for post-secondary students.

Eliminate proposed raises for early childhood educators and personal support workers for students with special needs.

The platform includes other spending cuts or freezes as part of Hudak's pledge to balance the books by 2016, among them plans to:

Freeze the Ontario child benefit at $1,200.

Forego proposed funding for in vitro fertilization treatments.

Eliminate the $1,500 Healthy Homes Renovation Tax Credit.

Combine Ontario Works and the Ontario Disability Support Program.

End public funding for advocacy groups such as the Toronto Environmental Alliance.

Hudak's platform projects a small surplus in 2016 that will grow to $4 billion by 2017 — and, once that is accomplished, the PC plan calls for income tax cuts of up to 10 per cent as well as corporate tax cuts.

"I want to see all parts of the province firing on all cylinders. I want to make sure we are pro-resources, pro-jobs and anti-red tape."

Mobile users, read the Ontario PC platform here