OTTAWA - Campaign promises made so far by the parties running in the federal election in Ontario (excluding the Bloc Quebecois). Projected costs have been included where applicable and available.
  
CONSERVATIVES

  • A two-cent-per-litre cut in taxes on diesel and aviation fuel over four years; projected to cost $600 million a year, fully implemented.
  • Reinstate veterans' benefits for Second World War veterans who have lived in Canada for more than 10 years; $9 million a year.
  • Put the recognition of foreign skills credentials for immigrants on the agenda of the next first ministers' conference.
  • A near-complete withdrawal of Canadian troops from Afghanistan in 2011.
  • Encourage foreign investment in Canadian companies, including allowing 49 per cent foreign ownership of airlines and foreign ownership of uranium mines.
  • Maternity, parental leave benefits for entrepreneurs who pay into EI. $150 million annually, financed by EI premiums.
  • Tax credit for first-time homebuyers to claim up to $5,000 in closing costs for a rebate of up to $750. $200 million a year, fully implemented.
  • Ban kid-friendly flavours and additives from tobacco products and require cigarillos to be sold in packages of at least 20. No cost provided.
  • Increase the Senior Age Credit by $1,000, saving those in the lowest tax-paying income bracket about $150 a year. $400 million a year.
  • $85 million in tax breaks for families where one spouse forgoes full-time work to care for a disabled family member.
  • Establishment of a stand-alone regional development agency for northern Canada.
  • Introduce maximum life sentences for offenders as young as 14 convicted of first- or  second-degree murder; maximum 14-year sentences for youths who commit violent crimes.
  • Teens over 14 who commit serious crimes would no longer have their identities protected.
  • End conditional sentencing, also known as house arrest, for 30 serious crimes, including robbery, theft, and arson.
  • $113 million over five years to crack down on environmental crime, including maximum penalties of $6 million for companies and $1 million for individuals.
  • A consumer protection package including an Internet anti-spam law, a ban on charging for unsolicited text messages and a crackdown on gas-pump tampering. No cost provided.
  • Prohibit the export of bitumen to countries without carbon-emission targets equivalent to Canada's.
  • $24 million to foster development of international cruise destinations along the St. Lawrence Seaway.
  • New tax credit for parents of children under 16 enrolled in eligible arts programs; $150 million a year.
  • Let charities and not-for-profit groups set up RESPs for kids from low-income families.
  • $2,000 incentives for apprentices who complete eligible training programs to ease shortage of workers in skilled trades. $60 million a year.
  • $400 million more over four years for the repayable Strategic Aerospace and Defence Initiative and Automotive Innovation funds.
  • Abolish industrial tariffs on imported machinery and equipment. $345 million.

GREENS

  • Tackle poverty with a Guaranteed Livable Income supplement; make locally grown organic produce more readily available to food banks.
  • A national student loan program that would forgive half the loan for those who get a degree or certificate.
  • More money for post-secondary institutions and research grants for institutions that focus on renewable energy and conservation.
  • Shift consumption taxes to environmentally harmful products and services and away from income and products, activities that do no harm.
  • Cut corporate tax by $50 for each tonne of carbon-emission reductions.
  • Reduce the paperwork burden on small business by eliminating duplicate tax filings and red tape.
  • Require manufactured goods and vehicles to be designed for easy re-use or recycling; to contain 90 per cent recycled materials by 2025.
  • Require appliance and equipment retailers to recycle or repair goods they sell, and establish a national deposit and recycling system.
  • Increase GST by six per cent to finance infrastructure improvements, with expanded exemptions on food, children's clothing and books. No cost provided.
  • A new carbon tax of $50 per tonne and new taxes on toxic chemicals.

LIBERALS

  • 'Green Shift" carbon tax on fossil fuels, offset by income and business tax cuts. Income tax cuts of up to 10 per cent. Cut the small business tax rate to 10 per cent from 11 per cent. Lower the corporate tax rate to 14 per cent by 2013. Overall, $90 million in lost revenue for the treasury over four years.
  • Add $350 to the Harper government's $1,200-a-year child-care allowance. Low-income families would also receive another payment of up to $1,225 a year.
  • Restore the Court Challenges Program to help defray the cost of Charter challenges, doubling budget to $6 million a year.
  • $50 million to upgrade Canada's food safety system.
  • $600 million in energy retrofit tax breaks for homeowners.
  • More robust energy efficiency standards for building codes and home appliances.
  • $250 million over four years to curb the spread of the mountain pine beetle.
  • $250 million to modernize and "green" fishing vessels and protect fish stocks in Canadian and international waters.
  • $100 million to improve Canada's small-craft harbours.
  • Retire commercial fishing licences in areas where fish stocks have collapsed. No cost provided.
  • $900 million over four years to create a new plan for catastrophic drug coverage.
  • $500 million more a year for university-based research and a $100-million research fund for scientists, researchers and grad students.
  • 200,000 student bursaries of up to $3,500 per year over four years, and guaranteed eligibility for $5,000 student loans, regardless of parental income.
  • National daycare program with 165,000 spaces. $1.25 billion a year, fully implemend.
  • $70 billion over 10 years for municipal infrastructure.
  • $1.2 billion over four years to help farmers adjust to green technologies.
  • $80 million to help police across the country fight organized crime and gang violence and $45 million to divert youth at risk from turning to crime.
  • Restore the $3-billion contingency fund abandoned by the Conservatives.
  • Create $1-billion Advanced Manufacturing Prosperity Fund to help manufacturers retain and create jobs.
  • End military mission in Afghanistan in 2011.
  • $420 million over four years to help increase the number of doctors, nurses and medical technicians across Canada.
  • A poverty plan to reduce the number of people living below the poverty line by at least 30 per cent and the number of children by at least 50 per cent.
  • Reverse the immigration measures brought in by the Conservatives and spend $800 million to help new Canadians and reduce the immigration backlog.
  • Bring back the Kelowna Accord and work with aboriginal peoples, provinces and territories to improve native health, education and housing. $2 billion.
  • Increase the Guaranteed Income Supplement for seniors by $600 a year for low-income seniors.
  • Simplify the tax system for post-secondary students, providing most students about $1000 a year.
  • Restore cuts made by the Conservatives to arts and culture funding and double the budget of the Canada Council for the Arts.
  • $75 million to bolster security at ethno-cultural centres and places of worship across Canada.
  • Restore $6 million in funding for Quebec's National Optics Institute.
  • A summit meeting on the economy with economists, regulators and premiers within 30 days of forming a government.
  • Finish mapping the Arctic seabed by 2013 and re-instate an ambassador for the North, to strengthen northern sovereignty. No cost estimate available.

NDP

  • A moratorium on expansion of Alberta's tarsands and requiring oil companies to reclaim land strip mined for petroleum production.
  • $8.2 billion over four years to create, protect and foster growth of "green-collar" jobs and manufacturing.
  • A "cap-and-trade" system to create incentives for big business to reduce their emissions.
  • Slashing greenhouse gas emissions by 80 per cent by 2050.
  • Create a price-monitoring agency to investigate price spikes and consult with provinces about regulations.
  • Cap credit-card interest rates by amending the Bank Act to limit them to five per cent over prime.
  • Outlaw automated banking machine fees, a measure the party claims would save consumers at least $104 per year.
  • $120 million a year in additional funding for women's groups.
  • $1 billion over five years to expand medical and nursing schools, increasing the number of student spaces by 50 per cent.
  • $125 million a year to forgive student loans for medical-school grads who spend 10 years as family physicians.
  • $100 million for skills training and job creation.
  • Comprehensive review of Canadian banking regulations. No cost provided.
  • A national child-care program calling for 220,000 spaces annually in the fourth year. It would cost $1.4 billion in the first year.
  • Home-care program for seniors. $250 million in the first year growing to $1 billion a year by Year 4.
  • All the provinces and territories will have the power to implement their own policies in their own jurisdictions.
  • Income averaging for artists and a $20,000 annual tax break on income generated by copyright and residual revenue. No cost provided.
  • Scrap Canada-U.S. softwood lumber agreement within six months of forming government.
  • $1,000-a-year grant to all undergraduate or equivalent students who qualify for student loans.
  • A new Ministry of Consumer Protection to investigate and prosecute gas-pump gouging and collusion. No cost provided.
  • $1 billion a year on a new catastrophic drug plan.
  • Reverse corporate tax cuts brought in by Liberal and Conservative governments, a move that would raise the rate to 22.12 per cent from 19.5.
  • A new monthly cheque of up to $400 that would replace three existing child benefits, including the Conservatives' $100-a-month cheque. A family with two children and an income of $75,000 would take in an extra $2,140 a year.
  • $5 billion over five years to improve health care, housing and infrastructure for First Nations communities.
  • Raise $2.5 billion a year in carbon auctions and reinvest the money in public transit and other green initiatives.
  • Re-introduce a national minimum wage and immediately set it to $10 an hour.
  • Direct one cent per litre of federal excise tax on gasoline into public transit; $400 million a year.