FREDERICTON — New Brunswick’s new minority Tory government has delivered a throne speech that promises a balanced budget by March 2020 or sooner.

The 10-page document, read by Lt.-Gov. Jocelyne Roy Vienneau, sets out five main themes — finances, energizing the private sector, health care, education and helping the poor.

“Sometimes we can hear our challenges repeated so often that we accept them as inevitable. Nothing is inevitable. Nothing says small towns must grow smaller, nothing says children will struggle to learn, that young people will leave, that hospitals will close, and nothing says our population will decline,” she read.

The Tories were sworn-in two weeks ago, after defeating a Liberal minority government on the confidence vote on their throne speech with the support of the three-member People’s Alliance party.

Premier Blaine Higgs is proposing to launch an interactive pre-budget process in early 2019

“Every dollar we spend imposes a tax on the hard work of our children, our grandchildren. We are making it harder for them to afford great schools, modern hospitals and good roads. Borrowing without a plan for balance is not compassion. It is an act of inter-generational theft,” Roy Vienneau said.

The government plans to phase out the small business tax and the double property tax on secondary properties, as well as take a leadership role in eliminating trade barriers between provinces.

New Brunswick was at the centre of the debate over interprovincial trade after a New Brunswick man was charged for transporting too much alcohol from Quebec into New Brunswick.

The Supreme Court of Canada upheld New Brunswick’s right to impose trade restrictions aimed at protecting their citizens’ health, safety, and environment.

Just a day after announcing changes to the provincial ambulance service, the new government is detailing other measures to improve the health care system, including a review of the contract with Medavie Health Services for home care services.

“Your government will work with urgency to reduce wait times for surgical procedures. The minister of health will work with regional health authorities to prioritize expenditures on actions that will most quickly reduce wait times,” Roy Vienneau said.

The throne speech also repeats Higgs’ promise to join several other provinces in the fight against the federal carbon tax, and says the government plans to create a legislative officer responsible for science and climate change.

The government is setting the goal of having 85 per cent of students reading at grade level by the end of Grade 2.

It is also planning to restart the poverty reduction process and re-open the Provincial Nominee Program for immigrants and review programs that help new arrivals start businesses.

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By Kevin Bissett, The Canadian Press