Open Ontario Plan revealed in Speech from the Throne to begin provincial legislature

Ontario press release 

Speech From The Throne Launches Open Ontario Plan

March 8, 2010

Ontario will create jobs and strengthen the economy by exporting clean-water technology and strengthening postsecondary education for all Ontarians.

The government's five-year Open Ontario Plan was unveiled in a Speech from the Throne delivered by The Honourable David Onley, Ontario's Lieutenant Governor. The speech opened the second session of the province's 39th parliament.

The government will introduce a new Water Opportunities Act, designed to take advantage of the province's expertise in clean-water technology. Ontario companies already employ 22,000 in a growing sector that's worth $400 billion (US) annually.

Ontario's colleges and universities will also play a key role in the five-year Open Ontario Plan, starting with the addition of 20,000 students this year. The plan also targets e-learning with a new Ontario Online Institute, which will give students access to the best professors in top university programs from their home computers.

The plan also looks to capitalize on northwestern Ontario's deposit of chromite -- said to be one of the largest deposits in the world and a key ingredient in stainless steel. The government will work with northerners and Aboriginal communities to take advantage of the find and continue to protect half of the northern Boreal Forest.

And as health care costs continue to rise, Ontario will introduce new legislation to improve accountability in our publicly funded health care system. The government will improve services for patients by encouraging health care professionals to work together.

The five-year plan includes several initiatives already underway:

  • A tax reform package, which will create nearly 600,000 new Ontario jobs.
     
  • The Green Energy Act, which will create up to 50,000 jobs.
     
  • A $32-billion investment in roads, bridges, public transit and energy retrofits for schools that is creating and sustaining over 300,000 jobs.
     
  • Full-day learning for four- and five-year olds, starting at schools across the province this September.
     
  • A strategy to make Toronto one of the world's leading financial centres.

QUICK FACTS

  • In the next 20 years, worldwide demand for water is expected to be 40 per cent greater than current supply.
     
  • Ontario has already made room for 180,000 additional students at colleges, universities and apprenticeships since 2003.
     
  • Health care costs could rise to 70 cents of every dollar spent on government programs in 12 years, up from 46 cents today.
     
  • Ontario's 2010 budget will move the Open Ontario Plan forward and lay out a plan to eliminate the fiscal deficit caused by the global recession.

LEARN MORE

Office of the Premier - www.ontario.ca/premier