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N.B. premier says 2025 set foundation for health care — and 2026 is about results

N.B. premier says 2025 set foundation for health care — and 2026 is about results

By Globalnewsdigitalglobalnews-feed

With increased pay for nurses, a $270-million deal for doctors and 11 new collaborative care clinics, New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt says her party spent the year building a foundation for health care and that patients should start seeing results in 2026. There were “so many big moments” in 2025, the first full year since Holt took office, the premier said in a recent interview. After winning the October 2024 election, the Liberals made good on a promise to pay full-time and part-time permanent nurses $10,000 retention payments by the end of that year. In October 2025, Holt’s government signed a new contract with nurses that included a 12.5 per cent wage increase over four years and raised premiums for weekend and night shifts. Then, Holt fulfilled a campaign promise to open 10 collaborative care clinics this year, and last week announced the opening of the eleventh such primary care centre. “We knew it was an ambitious promise. The previous government had promised four (clinics) and couldn’t get those done,” Holt said. In November, the New Brunswick Medical Society voted in favour of a new $270-million agreement that incentivizes doctors to work in team-based clinics. “These are some of the shifts that are gonna change the foundation of health care for New Brunswick that we can then build on,” she said. The past year was not without its struggles, Holt said. Among the greatest challenges came from U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian goods and the historic summer wildfire season. Get weekly health news Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy . New Brunswick is considered among the most at-risk Canadian provinces to U.S. tariffs, due in large part to its forestry sector that has historically relied on American business. A CIBC provincial forecast from October says New Brunswick and Quebec are seeing two of the biggest declines in trade as a result of the tariffs. “The economic challenge has been certainly one of the biggest challenges we’ve faced, in part because it wasn’t forecast. In 2024, we had imagined the same trend of economic and GDP growth as we had been seeing,” Holt said. New Brunswick has signed memorandums of understanding on free trade and labour mobility with four provinces, and has established a new loan program of up to $5 million for businesses to help maintain operations, among other supports for workers and companies. Holt’s government tabled a $14.3-billion budget that was driven deep into deficit by the increases in health-care funding and a contingency fund to deal with U.S. tariff threats. The premier said the other top challenge that stands out this year was the wildfire season, which had 448 fires that burnt more than 34 square kilometres of forest. In 2024, there were 281 wildfires that burnt 2.3 square kilometres of New Brunswick, and the province’s 10-year average is 256 fires over 4.6 square kilometres of forest. “The magnitude and extent of the fires really challenged everyone in our system. And boy did they step up...

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N.B. premier says 2025 set foundation for health care — and 2026 is about results | Read on Kindle | LibSpace