Everybody loves to see ex-pats return home to Newfoundland and Labrador.
It's the one excitement we get - compared to the pain and anguish of outmigration and the family consequences it brings.
Follow this:
A 35 year old leaves home - the fishery is no longer viable in his/her community. The person moves to Ontario or Alberta for work. At first the family stays behind - they can't sell their home - it's not worth anything anymore. As the months drag on with no prospects of the fishery recovering -those months become years and the family is suffering from the continued absence of a parent or spouse.
That 35 year old is now 38 and is either going through a divorce or is in the process of moving the family to Alberta or Ontario in an effort to save the relationship.
If divorce happens - the family is split - one spouse is trying to keep the homestead going in Newfoundland and Labrador within a community that can not hang on without the fishery. The children will be shuffled across the country - while both spouses seek a new relationship and perhaps a new family.
If the family moves - other family members are left behind. Grandpa and Grandma who planned to live with their children in older years now move into a government subsidized home. Aunts, uncles, and cousins lose touch and lose the all important sense of family that's felt in a rural community.
So far we have the taxpayer and the future generation gone - left behind are retirees that will require more government assistance in order to replace what would have been provided by the family.
Worse the children who have moved away with the parents are no longer going to grow into Newfoundland and Labrador taxpayers and their grandparents needs; medical, transport, and care will be paid for by children of those who have stayed.
So the 35 year old who moved to Alberta and Ontario is lost to our tax base - as they spend productive tax years in another province. They pay for seniors care in Alberta or Ontario and nothing to the care of seniors in this province.
Eventually the 35 year old retires having spent 20 years of productivity somewhere else. Driving the economy of Alberta or Ontario. Driving the population and tax growth. Driving more seats in the House of Commons.
At 65 the person repatriates to Newfoundland and Labrador. They are on retirement income and in a very different tax bracket. As that person gains chronic and then debilitating illnesses - the taxpayer of Newfoundland and Labrador take on the health and drug costs. The taxpayer of Newfoundland and Labrador take on the cost of homecare or residency in a personal care home. The person who left at 35 did not contribute to the tax base for these essential services. That is left to the young Newfoundlanders and Labradorians who remain home to work.
As the oil goes and continued resource giveaways come home to roost - young Newfoundlanders and Labradorians cannot afford the tax necessary to maintain essential health, transport, and education services. Off they go - to upper or western Canada while Newfoundland and Labrador slips into economic distress - the Greece of 2041.
Upper Churchill will save us? No it won't and that's why politicians won't and can't deal with the truth.
Canada is like a starving vampire - and the only blood it thirsts is the life-blood of Newfoundland and Labrador - and so far we are keeping it satisfied.
“When truth is replaced by silence,the silence is a lie.”
Yevgeny Yevtushenko
2 comments:
I couldn't have written this much different as it mirrors my opinion on the same. As I look around at some of the small communities it's not hard to apply this blog to many of the people who have left and the few that remain behind. The future for these communities is very bleak and for anyone who loves rural NL, it has to rip your heart to pieces. No one knows what is being lost unless they have lived in or spent some time visiting these places. Just thinking about what we're losing I find very overwhelming and I feel ashamed that as a NLer I have not done anything to stop our governments from letting this happen.
Sue your statement in this article is so true that "Canada is like a starving vampire - and the only blood it thirsts is the life-blood of Newfoundland and Labrador - and so far we are keeping it satisfied".
My question is why have we produced so many politicians who have wanted to keep feeding that blood-thirsty vampire with the natural resources from Newfoundland and Labrador and the only ones who received any remuneration from our natural resources were the politicians who were corrupt enough to give away our natural resources??? A Big Question what is it all about?
But having said that isn't it time we rise up collectively and spoke to Canadians and say "Enough is Enough". We want our natural resources developed from this point on for the benefit of creating a vibrant economy that contains jobs and infrastructure in our province.
For God's sake we have the best location in Canada to do business, plus we have the great natural resource base that we have been continuously give away for other provinces to create economies, only British Columbia can compete with us, but British Columbia's politicians did not give away their natural resources the way the politicians of Newfoundland and Labrador have done.
You corrupt minded politicians, you better get your Act together before you all end up in jail. I'm sure if we had everything investigated in our province, that which happened over the past 62 years, many of the politicians who represented us would end up in jail at the end of the trials.
Post a Comment