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This article was published 27/6/2016 (1546 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

WINNIPEG - A week after opting out of a deal to boost the Canada Pension Plan, Manitoba says it wants Ottawa and the provinces to consider a raft of amendments.

Manitoba, along with Quebec, refused to sign the agreement last week in Vancouver, in part because people need to set aside their own retirement savings, Premier Brian Pallister said.

On Monday, he said Manitoba wants to see changes made that would help people who are on the verge of retirement as well as those retiring decades from now.

"The Canadian pension plan was designed to be part of Canadians' retirement security," he said. "But it was designed a half-century ago. It is time to bring the CPP into the 21st century, into the new millennium. But not just for millennials. For all Canadians."

The deal, which is to be finalized next month, is to be phased in starting in 2019. By 2023, an extra $34 a month in pension premiums will mean up to $4,300 more in annual retirement benefits for the average Canadian wage earner.

The maximum annual benefit is to increase by about one-third to $17,478. Employers will see their premiums increase as well.

Manitoba wants to see Ottawa stop clawing back part of the survivor benefits for widowed seniors, Pallister said. The province also wants to see the one-time death benefit paid to the estate of a CPP contributor indexed to inflation.

Such suggestions have "fallen on deaf ears" in the past, he said.

But a spokesperson for federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau suggested the deal is already done.

"A week ago today, the provinces and the federal government reached a historic agreement on behalf of all Canadians that will help people reach their goal of a strong, secure and stable retirement; we are 100 per cent committed to implementing that agreement," Daniel Lauzon, Morneau's director of communications said in an emailed statement.

The agreement can go ahead without Manitoba's approval. It only needs support from seven provinces representing at least two-thirds of the country's population.

But Pallister said if the deal stays as it is, Canadians will regret it.

"I think a year from now, we'd look back and say, 'That was a missed opportunity back there' and it will be too late," Pallister said. "It's critical that we use the consensus that seems to have emerged."

Pallister, who worked for decades in insurance and financial planning, stressed again that CPP is just one part of a retirement plan.

"I don't think I can overstate how important it is for Canadians to get back in touch with the reality that they need to save as well in other ways. This will not do it for everybody."

Manitoba Finance Minister Cameron Friesen said Manitoba wants to look at ways to help people who have left the workforce to raise children catch up more quickly. The province also wants to avoid "rate shock" for higher-income earners by phasing in their increased contributions more slowly.

Friesen wouldn't say who he has been talking to, but said there is growing support among his peers for some of the ideas Manitoba is putting forward.

"These and other examples must be explored," he said. "We have an opportunity and an obligation to get this right for all Canadians."

— By Chinta Puxley in Edmonton