Andrew Francis Wallace via Getty Images TORONTO, ON - DECEMBER 19 - Premier Kathleen Wynne during a year-end interview with Rob Benzie and Martin Regg Cohn in her Queen's Park office, December 19, 2016. (Andrew Francis Wallace/Toronto Star via Getty Images)

The hydro plan Premier Wynne announced last week is the most expensive band aid in Ontario's history.

To stop the Liberal's bleeding poll numbers, the Premier is going to borrow $14 billion dollars over the next decade. She says her baind aid will reduce electricity prices by 17 per cent. This is on top of the $1 billion per year her HST cut on hydro bills will cost.

That's a $24,000,000,000 dollar band aid, costing each household about $5,000.

The premier has said nothing about what programs will be cut to pay for her Band-Aid.

$14 billion in interest payments may be good for bankers, but not for you and me.

When I think about where I want my tax dollars to go, big banks aren't on my list.

$1.4 billion per year would pay for 20,000 nurses in Ontario. It could save some of the 11 schools slated to close in Ottawa and dozens more around the province. It would go a long way to improving regional transit links. It could build hospitals, protect our water; the list goes on.

"These shell games have cost billions. None of them have worked."

This is what happens when politicians mess up the hydro file and become desperate to buy votes. You end up paying big time.

Don't get me wrong. We have a real affordability crisis on our hands. No one should have to choose between food and heat.

But I think you deserve more than a Band-Aid. You deserve permanent, long-term solutions so we can put that $14 billion into public services, instead of banks.

Here's the thing -- we do have better options! But first the government needs to stop repeating the mistakes of the past.

In 2002, Ernie Eves froze electricity rates. Debt went up and cost us billions.

In 2011, Dalton McGuinty moved two gas plants and we paid $1.1 billion. Then he added another subsidy that had us borrowing $1.1 billion a year.

Now Wynne's 25 per cent rebate is just the latest in a long line of shell games on hydro.

These shell games have cost billions. None of them have worked.

"Right now our provincial electricity surplus means Ontario has to sell excess power at a loss. If we need additional power, Quebec water power is much less expensive."

We should be looking at how we can provide relief to those who desperately need it now, and also save in the long run. Here's a plan on how we can get there:

First stop: target programs to provide rate reductions for people who need it the most.

Electricity rate increases are unaffordable for people with low/fixed incomes. The increases are punishing anyone on electric baseboard heating.

Across the board cuts like those supported by the NDP and Liberals are tax cuts for the rich. Wealthy homes use more energy and benefit the most by these programs. Instead, it is more financially responsible and effective to target price cuts for those in need. This can best be achieved by putting more money into programs like the Ontario Electricity Support Program.

2. Next, tackle the expensive elephant in the room: nuclear.

The Premier must say no to the nuclear lobby. No nuclear project has delivered on time or budget.

Increases in the Global Adjustment (GA) are driving up electricity prices. 46 per cent of the increase in the GA is due to nuclear power. Two companies operate nuclear plants in our province: privately owned Bruce Power and publicly owned Ontario Power Generation (OPG). Between 2002 and 2016, their rates rose by 54 per cent and 60 per cent.

And now OPG is asking for a massive price increase over the next decade to finance the Darlington Nuclear plant rebuild.

Instead of pouring billions more into nuclear power, let's close Pickering Nuclear on time in 2018. This will save us money by reducing Ontario's electricity surplus. Right now our provincial electricity surplus means Ontario has to sell excess power at a loss. If we need additional power, Quebec water power is much less expensive.