Now at the halfway point to the Alberta election on May 29, New Democratic Party Leader Rachel Notley has made some key campaign promises related to health care, power bills, and children’s activities.
The party said it would invest $1.5 million into Calgary’s Chinatown and “important antiracism funding/commitment to affordable housing in Calgary,” plus introduce health teams with “language specific resources.”
Affordability has been a theme for both the NDP and the United Conservative Party this election, with the NDP promising it will “be releasing a clear plan” to house 40,000 Albertans within the next five years.
“We will also expand mental health support and provide stable, predictable funding to shelters and agencies. We will collaborate with Indigenous peoples and invest in more housing under a new Indigenous Housing Strategy,” the platform states.
The NDP said it would “begin the hard work of reforming income support and rental supplement programs.”
The party said it has plans to attract $20 billion in private-sector capital investment, which would “create 47,000 good-paying jobs,” in addition to hiring 4,000 more public school teachers and 3,000 support staff over four years.
“We will end the crisis in our classrooms,” said Notley on May 14.
Notley also said it would start constructing a new, north leg of the Green Line Light Rail Transit system in Calgary, build 40 schools in Calgary, and “begin work” on the North Calgary/Airdrie Regional Health Centre.
The NDP is campaigning on a program it called “Hometown Alberta,” and pledged to “improve local community facilities, like hockey rinks, in every corner of the province.” The party states it would “build, repair, renovate, upgrade or expand” sports, recreational, museum, art centre, and other public-use spaces.