Rivals hit out at Ford's record on health care, public education during Ontario leaders' debate
90-minute debate came with 17 days of campaigning left
Ontario's major political party leaders sparred over the province's past and future in a prime-time debate Monday, with health care, education, affordability and climate change sparking tense exchanges.
One of the sharpest criticisms levelled at Progressive Conservative Leader Doug Ford came from Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner, who attacked Bill 124 and said the province's nurses are "overworked, underpaid and disrespected by their government."
Bill 124 was passed in 2019 and limits public sector wage increases to one per cent of total salary for three years. It is estimated that the salaries of more than one million people are affected by the law. The bill has faced fierce opposition from public sector unions and came under particular scrutiny during the COVID-19 pandemic, as the wages of many front-line health workers were limited by its parameters.
"Mr. Ford, have you talked to a nurse lately?" Schreiner asked. "Have you talked to a nurse about how ... insulted they feel being called heroes and then essentially having their wages cut by having them frozen? Mr. Ford, if you want to build capacity in our system you have to invest in the people that deliver our care."

New Democratic Party Leader Andrea Horwath also went after Ford on Bill 124.
"We need to respect those health-care workers who we call heroes and then treat like dirt," she said.
The NDP, Greens and Liberals have all promised to repeal the legislation if they form government.
WATCH | Rivals hit out at Ford over testy relationship with nurses:
Ford defended his government's wider record on health care, saying that when he took office in 2018 the system "was on the brink.
"Our hospitals were crumbling for decades due to lack of investment," he said. Ford pointed to the $40 billion his government earmarked for capital spending on hospitals and health services in its pre-election 2022 budget.
"Every region in this province is getting a new hospital ... 50 projects right across every single region," he said.
Ford also said the Progressive Conservatives would fund nurses' tuition fees if they work in an underserved area, and noted that his government gave personal support workers a $3-an-hour raise and are giving nurses a $5,000 retention pay bonus.
Ford also defended his response to the COVID-19 pandemic, while acknowledging that his government didn't always get everything right.
"Every decision I made was with the best intention, with the best medical advice I could get at the time," he said, before responding directly to Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca, who earlier accused the PCs of leaving Ontarians to fend for themselves during the pandemic.
"Mr. Del Duca, for 2½ years, literally 24/7, I was working on this pandemic. It's easy to sit back from the sidelines, when you didn't have to make the tough decisions that I had to make, and criticize. You have the easiest job. You just sit there and criticize."
Del Duca shot back: "Mr. Ford, respectfully, this is the job you signed up for four years ago.... You ran for the job."
WATCH | Ford defends Ontario's response to COVID-19:
Leaders attack PC record on public education
The leaders then had an opportunity to lay out their visions for Ontario's public education system.
Schreiner harkened back to the first year of Ford's premiership, when the government faced criticism for a plan to increase class sizes and implement mandatory online learning. He also went after the Liberal record on education, saying the last Liberal government closed 227 schools, many in rural communities, while the school repair backlog increased by billions of dollars.
For his part, Liberal Leader Steven Del Duca said Conservatives want to privatize education in Ontario and called Ford's record on the file "appalling."
"Doug Ford does not value public education. I do," Del Duca said. He said that a Liberal government would divert the $10 billion from cancelling the proposed Highway 413 to build and repair schools while hiring 10,000 new teachers in the coming years.
"Your record on public education is an embarrassment and you should be ashamed of yourself," Del Duca said. "You, sir, have failed this province."
WATCH | Horwath hits at Ford over changes to class sizes: