I hope to be re-elected in 2019 as the Member of Parliament who will champion these issues on behalf of my constituents. Please see my blog for an ever-growing list of policy positions.
I’ve been listening to the people of Markham-Stouffville since I made this community my home in 1998. I listened as a family doctor here for 17 years. For the last four years, I’ve been listening as a MP. This website is another step in our community conversations.
As we get closer to the 2019 election, I’m focused on a short list of priorities for the people of Markham-Stouffville - issues where the federal government has a critical role.
Health
Prescription drug coverage
I commend the Final Report of the Advisory Council on the Implementation of National Pharmacare, I hopes its recommendations will be implemented, ideally in a time frame shorter than the report envisions. I continue to have concerns over pharmaceutical pricing for Canadians, including the lack of progress on reform of the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board (PMPRB). The PMPRB was created in 1987 to protect consumers and make sure pharmaceutical companies don’t use monopolies to charge excessive prices. In May 2017, when I was Minister of Health, I announced consultations on a suite of regulatory changes that would help the PMPRB in its ability to protect consumers from high drug prices. You can watch my speech from that announcement by clicking here.
These were to be the first substantial changes to the regulations in over 20 years. It included a proposal to change the list of countries to which we compare our medication prices. (By continuing to use the USA as a comparator country, we allow inappropriately high ceiling prices.) We also proposed that value for money should factor into determining a fair drug price. And we proposed a requirement to report rebates, discount and refunds to payers, in order to increase transparency and set a fairer price ceiling. I wanted those new regulations in place no later than the end of 2018. But unfortunately, this has not happened.
Housing
Housing supply
Transit & Transportation
Public transit options
VIA Rail will be studying routes and stops for potential new passenger lines, some of which may go right through Markham-Stouffville. Currently there is no planned stop to pick up and drop off passengers in our community. Most importantly, I want to hear your perspective, so I can advocate for the best decision for our community.
Biography
She was first elected as Member of Parliament for Markham-Stouffville in October 2015. She served in numerous cabinet positions from 2015 to 2019, including Minister of Health, Minister of Indigenous Services, President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Digital Government.
Jane has played a lead role in policies that have shaped Canada: bringing Syrian refugees to Canada; legislating a balanced approach to Medical Assistance in Dying; negotiating a health accord with new resources for mental health and home care; improving infrastructure for First Nations to provide clean water on reserve; and reforming child welfare to reduce the over-apprehension of Indigenous children.
Prior to her political career, Jane worked as a family doctor for 30 years, with the first decade of her career as a doctor in Niger, West Africa. In 1998, she and her family moved to Stouffville, Ontario, where she served for 17 years as a family physician. She was Chief of Family Medicine at Markham Stouffville Hospital and Associate Professor in the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Medicine. Jane led the opening of the Health for All Family Health Team and the Markham Family Medicine Teaching Unit.
Jane’s greatest joy is to work with others to address socioeconomic gaps so every Canadian has a fair opportunity to live a life of dignity, wellness and peace.
Her husband is CBC Radio journalist, Pep Philpott. They have four children - Bethany, Jacob, David and Lydia. (Their first daughter, Emily, died in Niger in 1991.)
janephilpott.ca www.janephilpott.ca