LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY OF
Friday,
April 24, 1992
The House met at 10 a.m.
PRAYERS
ROUTINE
PROCEEDINGS
PRESENTING
PETITIONS
Mr. Gregory Dewar
(Selkirk): Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of
Kelly Dawn Graham, Nikki Corlett, Katie Kuivenhoven and others requesting the
Minister of Family Services (Mr. Gilleshammer) consider a one‑year
moratorium on the closure of the Human Resources
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of
Trish Minish, Gordon MacKenzie, Ken Twomay and others requesting the government
consider restoring the former full funding of $700,000 to fight Dutch elm
disease.
Mr. Speaker: I have reviewed the petition of the honourable
member for Selkirk (Mr. Dewar), and it complies with the privileges and the
practices of the House and complies with the rules. Is it the will of the House to have the
petition read?
The
petition of the undersigned citizens of the
WHEREAS
the Human Resources Opportunity Office has operated in Selkirk for over 21
years providing training for the unemployed and people re‑entering the
labour force; and
WHEREAS
during the past 10 years alone over 1,000 trainees have gone through the
program gaining valuable skills and training; and
WHEREAS
upwards of 80 percent of the training centre's recent graduates have found
employment; and
WHEREAS
without consultation the program was cut in the 1992 provincial budget forcing
the centre to close; and
WHEREAS
there is a growing need for this program in Selkirk and the program has the
support of the town of
WHEREFORE
your petitioners humbly pray that the Legislature of the
MINISTERIAL
STATEMENTS
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Finance): It gives me great pleasure
to rise in the House today to announce the fourth offering of Manitoba Hydro
Savings Bonds to the people of
HydroBonds
are an exciting initiative that provide an opportunity for every family and
every individual to participate directly as a builder and beneficiary in the
As
in past issues, HydroBonds, Series 4 will be issued in denominations as low as
$100. HydroBonds will go on sale Tuesday,
May 19, with the interest rate being announced May 15. The rate will be
competitively priced with principal and interest in all bonds fully guaranteed
by the
*
(1005)
With
the last three issues, over 80,000 Manitobans have purchased HydroBonds,
resulting in over $760 million being raised for
Manitoba
Hydro employs thousands of people, and through export sales, brings millions of
dollars into our economy each year.
Manitoba Hydro has grown and developed through the years to extend the
benefits of electrical service throughout our province. Proceeds from the sale will provide a local
source of funds to meet the financial requirements for continued development of
this vast renewable energy resource to ensure the demands of future generations
of Manitobans are met.
Mr.
Speaker, Manitobans are already enjoying the benefits of three successful
HydroBonds series. I encourage all
Manitobans to share in this exciting opportunity with HydroBonds 4. Thank you.
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): Indeed, I would like to rise and respond to
the ministerial statement issued today by the Minister of Finance, dealing with
Manitoba Hydro Savings Bonds.
We
have said in the past and we will say it again today that we support the
program of HydroBonds. We think it is a
positive program for Manitobans, and we have always believed that it is very,
very positive for Manitobans to be investing in their own province.
We
find it very interesting, Mr. Speaker, to see the members opposite bringing us
good news in public enterprise. We know that
members opposite have a terrible time with public enterprise in public Crown
corporations. In fact, I recall many of
the members opposite were campaigning in 1981 to sell some of Hydro's assets to
private corporations. We like to see the
conversion on the road to
I
would ask also, Mr. Speaker, that while we are praising Hydro in this province
and public enterprise generally, which is one of the stronger parts of our
Having
said that, Mr. Speaker, this is good for
Mr. Reg Alcock
(Osborne): Mr. Speaker, it gives me some pleasure to rise
again and comment to the minister that this is and has been a very good
program. It is an opportunity for Manitobans
to invest in this province and to see that capital remains in this province.
It
is interesting that out of the some two dozen initiatives that this Finance
minister has announced since he became Finance minister, this is the only one
that has shown any real success and any ability to really produce any growth in
this province. Quite seriously, we are in a very difficult position in this province,
and the revenue generated from this, invested in this province, and the
interest return to this province is a good thing. It is unfortunate though that this Minister
of Finance is not more forthcoming with the results of other programs.
I
have had orders for return that the minister has very expansively accepted and
said, oh yes, we will get you all that information on what is happening with
Vision Capital and other economic programs, and to date has produced
nothing. He seems to be afraid to show
us the results of all his initiatives with the exception of this one which he
stands up in the House and speaks quite positively of.
It
is a good program. It is one that should
be supported, and I am pleased to see it is doing as well as it is.
Introduction
of Guests
Mr. Speaker: Prior to Oral Questions, may I direct the
attention of honourable members to the Speaker's Gallery where we have with us
this morning, nine visitors from the Women's Committee of the
On
behalf of all honourable members, I welcome you here this morning.
Also
with us this morning, we have from the
On
behalf of all honourable members, I welcome you here this morning.
*
(1010)
ORAL
QUESTION PERIOD
Free Trade
Agreement
Impact on
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, two studies have been released
this week dealing with the Canadian‑U.S. Free Trade Agreement, one
produced by the U.S. commerce department and another one produced by
corporations in
The
Mr.
Speaker, this Premier (Mr. Filmon) has talked about positive parts of the Free
Trade Agreement with
We
noted that when free trade was being discussed in this Chamber in 1988, the
Premier said, and I quote: Our empirical
study says that we will gain between 10,000 and 15,000 new net jobs in this
province, and it will lower the unemployment rates in this province.
Mr.
Speaker, my question to the Premier is:
Can he produce the empirical studies, as Chair of the Economic Committee
of Cabinet, on the total winners and losers and net benefits to the
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism): Mr. Speaker, the best source of
information for us in terms of dealing with the Canada‑U.S. free trade
are the people of
While
everybody recognizes that because of several other factors that have impacted
on our economy, the value of the Canadian dollar, the recession taking place in
I
do want to point out that while our trade situation with the
Mr. Doer: Well, the Minister of Finance (Mr. Manness)
from his seat says competitiveness. When
you go from a $450‑million deficit with the
Labour
Adjustment Strategy
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): In light of the statement made by the minister
and the government that these trade results are due to the recession: Has the government reviewed the study that
was released yesterday in
I
would ask the government: Does it concur
with those findings of the corporations in their study that was released in
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism): Mr. Speaker, first of all, we have
recognized as well that it goes beyond merely the recession in terms of the
impact of our trade relationship with the
*
(1015)
I
touched on at least one other area, and that has been the value of the Canadian
dollar. In terms of all the reports that
are prepared on Canada‑U.S. free trade, my department receives them and
does do an analysis of them, not unlike the other reports we referred to in the
House from the Royal Bank and other institutions.
In
terms of the issue of adjustment provisions, clearly that is fundamental and
important. I think as the Leader of the Opposition
(Mr. Doer) knows, in terms of the North American free trade agreement, we have
said on many, many occasions in this House, we do not support a North American
free trade agreement with
That
matter was once again addressed at our trade minister meeting as recently as a
couple of weeks ago. Clearly it is an important
condition of any North American free trade agreement.
Mr. Doer: I hate to remind members opposite it sounds
like an echo from the pre‑1988 free trade agreement where they said, oh, we
need adjustment strategies, and we trust the federal government will have
adjustment strategies. There were absolutely
no adjustment strategies dealing with the Canada‑U.S. trade agreement.
The
study further concludes‑‑
Point of
Order
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, I would ask the
Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) to withdraw his remarks about whether or
not I care about things. I care about employment. I care about improved economy for
Mr. Speaker: The honourable First Minister (Mr. Filmon)
does not have a point of order. It is a
dispute over the facts.
North
American Free Trade Agreement
Impact on
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, perhaps the Premier now would
like to answer a question in this Chamber.
The
study further goes on to say that there will be a significant hardship‑‑jobs
will be lost, firms will go out of business and some industries will suffer,
and particular areas that suffer may fall into long‑term decline with the
proposed free trade agreement with
I
would ask the Premier, has he got an empirical study that he has prepared, as
Chair of the Economic Committee of Cabinet, to show that
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, based on the analysis that we
have done in this province in the consultations with various industry sectors,
we came up with six conditions that should apply to any North American free
trade agreement. We have steadfastly
stated in this Legislature and throughout the country and other fora that those
are the conditions which must be met in order for any North American free trade
agreement to be of benefit to
I
just point out to the Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) that when he talks
about cutting off trade, putting barriers to trade that he runs the risk, of
course, of cutting off the things that have been able to build the economies of
That
is absolutely ridiculous, Mr. Speaker.
That is over and over and over again the kind of losses that will be
incurred if this country puts up barriers because the barriers are two‑way.
If we put up barriers to trade from other countries, they put up barriers to
our production and we lose because we are net exporters of goods over and over
and over again, and we lose thousands of jobs by following that kind of
ideologically blind course. It is wrong.
Hearing
Disorder Screening
Program
Funding
Mr. Dave Chomiak
(Kildonan): Mr. Speaker, my question is directed to the
Minister of Education and Training (Mrs. Vodrey).
*
(1020)
Hon. Donald Orchard
(Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, in allocating limited resources‑‑and
we dealt with this issue yesterday in my ministry of Health Estimates in terms
of funding for agencies‑‑we made the decision to prioritize rather
than take an across‑the‑board direction in terms of grants. We attempted to prioritize, and that was one
of the reductions in grant support funding that we made. That does not in any way, shape or form
disallow a reallocation of resource which is happening throughout the length
and breadth of government‑provided services to meet critical needs. That opportunity to continue a good program
exists and can and should be explored, Sir.
Mr. Chomiak: Speaker, my supplementary is to the Minister
of Education.
Will
the minister assure this House that she will contact the Minister of Health in
light of the fact that she has made pronouncements that she will work together
with other departments to insist that this grant be reinstated from Health or
from some other department in order that the program be reinstated and not cut
off?
Mr. Orchard: Mr. Speaker, again my honourable friend, the New
Democrat, from the comfort of opposition is saying the only solution to program
delivery is more money, more spending, more taxes, more deficit. That is NDP old‑think. It is not even being emulated anywhere that
an NDP party is in government. Consider
Mr. Chomiak: My final supplementary will be to the Minister
of Health.
Will
the minister table in this House any cost‑benefit analysis he has on that
program to show that it will decrease costs, in light of the fact that these
people will have to go to more highly expensive hospitals to get this program
and these kind of services? Will he
table a cost‑benefit analysis to show how this government is going to
save money by doing that?
Mr. Orchard: Mr. Speaker, my honourable friend obviously
missed the intent of the first answer that I gave to him and the first question
he posed.
My
honourable friend's only solution is to pour more money in. Mr. Speaker, what the system of health care,
what the system of government funding needs is management around existing resources,
because there is not anywhere in
Governments
are asking managers throughout the length and breadth of government‑delivered
services to manage better, to set priorities according to their budgets they
have. The global budget allows that to
happen. That is the request we are
making in this case and in many others, Sir.
Granting
Authority
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (
Will
the minister now tell us the real reason why this government is taking away the
granting authority from the
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship): Mr. Speaker, I think the issue here is that
the heritage community should be well served through allocation of Lotteries
dollars that do make good things happen throughout the breadth of this
province. We know that administratively
we can deliver a program that will serve the heritage community in a better
fashion with a peer process and with a volunteer component.
In
fact, Mr. Speaker, the heritage community will be involved, and they will have
an opportunity to ensure that the new program that is put in place will serve
the community well.
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, the minister is wrong. The community was well served through the
Heritage Federation. Is she trying to
say that the Heritage Federation did not serve the heritage‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
This is not a time for debate.
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, my question is: Will the minister reconsider her decision to
take away the granting authority and listen to what the Heritage Federation is
trying to tell the government as opposed to making a decision without
consulting with anyone?
*
(1025)
Mrs. Mitchelson: Mr. Speaker, there will be major consultation
with the heritage community in setting up the new program.
I
understand that the Heritage Federation met with many of the major heritage
organizations just last night. In fact,
major heritage organizations realize and recognize that a decision has been
made, that we will be putting in place a new structure to administer grants to
the heritage community in a very reasonable fashion with a volunteer component
and commitment.
Mr.
Speaker, in fact, the heritage community will be well served and we want to get
ahead with our consultation and ensure that the program and the procedures that
are put in place will serve the community.
Heritage
Community
Granting
Process
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (
My
question to the minister is: Will the
minister assure this House that the decisions as to who gets Heritage grants
will not be made from any politically appointed board or from the minister?
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship): Mr. Speaker, the heritage community will be
well served with the process that will be put in place in consultation with the
community, with a peer process. I think
that the entire heritage community will be the community that will make the decision
on how well they are being served in the future.
Health
Care System
Childbirth
Classes
Ms. Judy Wasylycia-Leis
(
Mr. Speaker: Question, please.
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis: Considering that this‑‑
Mr. Speaker: The honourable member for
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis: I will get right to the question, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: Yes, you will.
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis: On what basis could this minister justify cutting
back the only association that deals with labour companion services for women
who are isolated and without family supports, who provide preparation classes
for multiple births, and for vaginal births after Caesarean sections, when this
program saves money and keeps women and children healthy?
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
The question has been put.
Hon. Donald Orchard
(Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, the ministry of Health through
regional services provides significant childbirthing classes. Through other areas of funded agencies, language
instruction sensitive to newcomer languages are provided. The service will be maintained, Sir, but not
in a different location, and that is where we are coming at management across
the system to avoid the kind of duplication parallel funding that my honourable
friend has always said should not happen.
When
we make those kinds of adjustments, service capability to be in place
elsewhere, my honourable friend says, no, we cannot. It is NDP old‑think revisited again
where the answer is pour more money, never analyze outcome, never make any
changes because that is the old way of doing things.
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis: Mr. Speaker, why then would his own departmental
staff in communicating this cutback to the Association for Childbirth and
Family Education state clearly that some clients will undoubtedly be affected
by the withdrawal of funding?
Will
the minister, in light of this clear statement of an important service by his
own department, now reinstate this $21,000 grant for this association?
Mr. Orchard: Mr. Speaker, in the adjustment period of seeking
those services where other language capabilities are available, there may be a
period of time where maybe some individuals are not readily accessing the other
and alternate services that are in place.
That is an adjustment period potential only. The long‑run ability to deliver the
services in fact, Sir, is there.
Ms. Wasylycia-Leis: Would this minister reallocate over $21,000 in
salary increases for this year alone for the deputy minister, the assistant
deputy minister of Healthy Public Policy, the executive directors of Health
Promotion and Women's Health, which is precisely the size of the cutback to the
Manitoba Association for Childbirth and Family Education?
*
(1030)
Mr. Orchard: Mr. Speaker, I will go one better. I will suggest my honourable friend in the
New Democratic Party give up some of their overspending on mailing of absolute
balderdash to Manitobans and put that money toward health care.
Canadian
Airlines International
Reservation
Office Layoffs
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Speaker, on Wednesday of this week, we
saw the loss of 97 jobs at CN Rail, and today we hear about the loss of airline
jobs in the
Can
the Minister of Highways and Transportation indicate if he or his staff have
had any discussions with Canadian Airlines International to discuss these
layoffs in
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): Yes, my staff have been in touch with
Canadian Airlines on the issue. We do
not think that there is necessarily going to be a reduction in staff. According to the information we have received,
we figure there are going to be benefits that are well accrued to people in
Centralization
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Speaker, we have a letter here to confirm
these layoffs from the members of that particular company.
Will
the Minister of Highways and Transportation confirm that Canadian Airlines
International was considering
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): No, I cannot confirm that, but I want to
indicate that we have grave concerns about the economic health of both our
airlines. There has been ongoing discussion with the federal people, and we try
and play our role in terms of making sure that the interests of Manitobans are
going to be protected.
Employment
Creation Strategy
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): In light of the information that the Premier
said he was looking to protect the jobs in this province, we will give him a
chance to do so now for his government.
Will
the Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr. Driedger), and Industry, Trade
and Tourism (Mr. Stefanson) communicate with Canadian Airlines International to
determine if there is a role that we can play in this province to preserve the jobs
that are currently here and to bring new airline jobs to the
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): That is a very general type of
question. I can assure the member that
the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism, and my other colleagues in
government are continually looking to see whether we can enhance job
opportunities in this province.
Economic
Growth
Full-Time
Employment Decline
Mr. Reg Alcock
(Osborne): Mr. Speaker, one of the indicators of deindustrialization
is the conversion of full‑time jobs into part‑time jobs. After four years of Conservative government, five
budgets and nearly two dozen important economic announcements, we have nearly
16,000 fewer full‑time jobs in this province than we had when they came
to power.
I
would like to ask the Minister of Industry and Trade how he accounts for this.
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism): Mr. Speaker, I think when we talk about
the economy, we have to keep in context the national economy as part of our
discussion. We have had this discussion in the House on occasions before. No province, no jurisdiction within
The
projections for growth in this province in 1992 are among the best, the
Conference Board of Canada predicting that we will have the third highest
growth rate within
Mr. Alcock: Mr. Speaker, we are losing full‑time
jobs at a rate twice that of the rest of
I
would like to ask the Minister for Industry and Trade how he accounts for this
loss.
Mr. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, as I have indicated, that change
in the structuring of the economy is not something that is unique to
When
you look at capital investment opportunities in our province, we are projected
to have the fifth highest growth of all provinces in
Mr. Alcock: Mr. Speaker, why is this province doing so
much worse than the rest of
Mr. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, I think to a large extent I have
answered the honourable member's question.
There are restructurings occurring within the business community, within
job opportunities within every province, but in terms of the overall
performance of
So,
once again, as is normally the habit of the NDP and not traditionally the habit
of the Liberals, the honourable member picks one isolated aspect of the
economic indicators and likes to point to a negative aspect instead of looking
at the positive aspects of our economic indicators in terms of where we are positioned
in unemployment rates, where we are positioned in manufacturing investment,
where we are positioned in overall investment, in terms of the future of
North West
Company
Employment
Creation Strategy
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin
Flon): Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Industry, Trade
and Tourism talked about one isolated fact. There are 59,000 isolated
facts. They are called unemployed in the
Mr.
Speaker, one of the reasons we are losing jobs is because this government has a
very strange way of conducting business. Yesterday, the Minister of Industry,
Trade and Tourism took part in a press conference at which time the
Mr.
Speaker, my question to the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism is: Why has this government contributed almost
half of the cost of this development without protecting the jobs of the 174
people who work for
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism): Mr. Speaker, in response to that
question, again, as usual I cannot accept any of the preamble of the honourable
member for Flin Flon when he talks about unemployment and unemployment rates. I have to remind him that the highest
unemployment rate that this province has experienced goes back to November of
1982 when it was 10.8 percent, and we know who was the government of the day,
and they should know what the outfall is of coming through a recession.
In
terms of the specific questions about jobs, the member for Flin Flon is now
doing the opposite of the member for Osborne (Mr. Alcock). In terms of full‑time employment, the
impact on
The
two decisions were not related. The
Mr. Storie: The Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism is
beginning to believe his own press releases‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Question, please.
*
(1040)
Mr. Storie: Mr. Speaker, there are no full‑time jobs
as a result of the
My
question is to the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism, and it is a simple
question.
There
are 174 people employed by
Mr. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, we have created an opportunity
for those employees by assisting North West Company to establish 189 full‑time
jobs right here in our province. North
West Company indicated yesterday that they will be accepting applications in January
of 1993, and that those full‑time jobs will be up to 137 jobs by 1994,
going up to a high of 189 full‑time jobs, from a company that currently
has its headquarters here in our province of 270 jobs, on top of that 28 stores
in northern
Mr. Storie: Mr. Speaker, my final question for the
Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism is:
Why does
Mr. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, I have to stand here in
disbelief that the honourable member for Flin Flon is not supportive of a company
that has its headquarters here in
They
stand there and they criticize job opportunities for Manitobans. Here are 189 full‑time jobs being
created, and the NDP do not support that initiative, Mr. Speaker. Shame, I say to them.
Political
Interference
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Earlier this week the Minister of Culture,
Heritage and Citizenship replied to one of my questions by saying that if we
were setting policy for the Heritage Federation, we would be accused of
political interference, yet two years ago this minister signed a contract with
the federation representing 87 heritage organizations to communicate policies and
priorities for heritage development.
Would
the minister tell the House exactly what she has said to the Heritage
Federation on those occasions when she has conveyed the policy and whether she
in fact believes that that is political interference?
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship): Mr. Speaker, I have never in any way
attempted to interfere with the ongoing operations of the Manitoba Heritage Federation. I believe that government has a
responsibility to ensure that the dollars that are going out to the heritage community
and indeed to all communities within the
Mr.
Speaker, we are attempting to do that through a new process in consultation
with the heritage community and the heritage organizations. The community will be well served through the
new process.
Meeting
Cancellations
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Could I ask the same minister then: Why did she again break her contract with the
federation to annually review the effectiveness of their results based upon agreed‑upon
objectives and cancel six meetings with the federation and permit her deputy
minister to cancel five more meetings with the federation?
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship): Mr. Speaker, as I indicated earlier this
week, I believe, to questioning, or last week, whenever it was, it was a budget
decision to change the method that the heritage community would be funded
under. As a result of it being a budget decision,
it was announced to the Heritage Federation on budget day because of budget
confidentiality. We are living up to the
contract by giving them 90 days notice that in fact the contract would be
terminated, as it states.
Ms. Friesen: I think the contract has been broken so many‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
Volunteer
Role
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Will the minister explain to the House how she
plans to retain the confidence and the assistance of those hundreds of
volunteers who have worked for many years for the federation? How does she explain that she is going to get
them to assist her when in fact they have been so shabbily treated in the last
few months by this department?
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship): Mr. Speaker, I have letters on file from
members of the heritage community who have applauded government's decision to
change the method of funding and to try to efficiently and effectively
administer funds to their community. Volunteers and volunteer input will be part
of the process, and I have indicated time and time again that there will be a
peer process through the heritage community to determine where the grant
funding will go.
Repap
Manitoba Inc.
Ms. Rosann Wowchuk (
When
the government finally admitted that they made a mistake on the Repap deal, the
minister went to
I
want to ask the minister: Now that he
has these resolutions, will he put that into part of his plan as he renegotiates
the deal with Repap?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, the member
is mistaken. We did not make a mistake
in divesting of‑‑who made a mistake was the former government in trying
to maintain something that was not working very well; Manfor, $200‑million
loss over the years, $30 million lost one year when the corporation was
shepherded by the member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie). So when the member says that we have made a
mistake divesting of Manfor into Repap, I categorically reject that.
Mr.
Speaker, with respect to whether or not the negotiations and the renegotiations
that the southern wood forest is held inside or outside, let me say, that is a
matter that will be discussed in its fullness.
I am very well aware of the resolutions that have come forward from the
Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Speaker, we told this government that
they are categorically wrong. They
should not use chlorine bleach, and the cut area was wrong. The people tell them the same thing.
Has
the minister communicated with the people of
Mr. Manness: Well, the short answer is yes, Mr. Speaker,
but I want the members opposite to tell us where they stand as a collective or
not with respect to logging within provincial parks. I want to see where the members opposite are
coming. Does the member for
Ms. Wowchuk: Will this minister now meet with the
committee from Swan River, and will he begin to look at other opportunities for
the use of the wood in the Swan River area since they took away all
opportunities when they killed the wafer board plant deal with their signing of
Repap?
Mr. Manness: Mr. Speaker, I would love to know more about
this phantom wafer board plant. The
member tries to give the impression that there was a deal. Where was the deal? If there was a deal, the provincial government
certainly did not need to be involved.
If somebody wanted to come forward and provide their own resources to
employ people towards that type of activity, that would have been fine by way
of this provincial government. So where
was the deal? There was not one.
The
reality, Mr. Speaker, is that we will certainly have provided an opportunity
for the so‑called Sorthern Wood Resource that, indeed, if the community
there is approached by some concern wishing to base an activity, not based on
taxpayer money, based on the marketplace and it has a viability, certainly government
would be prepared to consider that. That
is the challenge that I have held out to the
Federal Co-op
Housing Program
Funding
Reduction
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows): Mr. Speaker, I would like to report a minor
miracle. For the first time the Minister
of Housing (Mr. Ernst) and I are in agreement.
We are in agreement on a serious issue and that is the unilateral
cutback in the federal Co‑op Housing Program. It is detrimental to the best interests of
*
(1050)
Hon. Jim Ernst (Minister
of Housing): Mr. Speaker, on April 10 of this year, the
Housing ministers from across the country met in
Mr.
Speaker, we have protested in the strongest possible terms. But not only that, not only have we protested
the issue, we have offered the federal government an alternative, an alternative
to reprioritize their budgets and an alternative from our side to streamline
our operations, reduce operating costs, increase revenue in order to have a
partnership to see social housing available for all people in need.
Mr. Speaker: Time for Oral Questions has expired.
MATTER OF
URGENT PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Second Opposition House Leader): Under
Rule 27, I would like to move a motion requesting a debate on a matter of
urgent public importance.
I
move, seconded by the member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs), that under
Rule 27, the ordinary business of the House be set aside to discuss a matter of
urgent public importance, namely, the decision by this government to withdraw granting
authority of the Manitoba Heritage Federation and its decision to politicize
the process.
Mr. Speaker: Before determining whether the motion meets
the requirements of our Rule 27, the honourable member for
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, the Budget Debate is over; the Throne
Speech Debate is over; there are no relevant bills. The government needs to reverse its decision
before the department comes up to the Estimates process, which could be four,
five weeks from now.
Mr.
Speaker, I would like to tell you why I believe that it is important that it is
in the public's best interest that debate on this issue be heard. What the government has done is taken away
the funding authority from the Manitoba Heritage Federation. Individuals, literally hundreds of
volunteers, represent and have volunteered thousands of hours toward the preservation
of the heritage throughout the
This
is, in the Liberal Party's opinion, a step backwards when we see what we are
seeing done to the heritage community, what we have seen done to MIC and the
multicultural community. The minister has tried to justify it, has tried to
justify her decision.
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Finance): Urgency. You are supposed to argue urgency.
Mr. Lamoureux: This is the urgency. I tell the Minister of Finance (Mr. Manness)
to be patient, and he will try to understand how urgent the matter is. He should be supporting the MUPI.
[interjection!
This
is why it is urgent, if the Deputy Premier would listen. The minister is on the record of saying that
the reason why the government has decided to take away the funding from the Heritage
board is because a third of their costs‑‑and the Premier (Mr.
Filmon) even from his seat has said, a third of the administrative costs, a
third of the grant money that is allocated from the Lotteries to the federation
is used towards administration. Mr.
Speaker, we know that is not true. We
know that in fact 94 percent last year was actually used. That is nowhere even close to what the
government is saying.
It
was only two years ago in fact when this government entered into an agreement
with the Manitoba Heritage Federation. Within that agreement they had an
agreement on the administrative costs, and at no point, from the day that
agreement was signed back on April 2, 1990, has this government ever negotiated
or hinted or suggested in any fashion whatsoever to the Heritage Federation that
their administrative costs were too high?
What
in fact happened was, while we were sitting inside the Chamber listening to the
Minister of Finance (Mr. Manness) give the budget speech, 24 hours notice was
given to the Heritage Federation to come down to the minister's office to speak
to the deputy minister, at which point in time, we are told, they were losing
their granting authority. Prior to that,
they had absolutely no indication whatsoever.
Again,
the minister has said that the Heritage Federation has been in violation of the
agreement. Mr. Speaker, I would ask the minister: Where have they been in violation of the
agreement? If there is anyone that has been violation of the agreement, it has
been the government.
Mr.
Speaker, if we take a look at some of the things that the Heritage Federation
has done and where they have had their grants going‑‑in all
disciplines, archaeologically, archives, natural history and environment,
genealogy, historical architecture, history, museology. They have done their job, contrary to what the
Minister of Culture and Heritage (Mrs. Mitchelson) tried to say in the
House. They were being served. The heritage community was being served, and
they were being served well. The volunteers
were doing an excellent job; the minister and this government are dead wrong.
That
is why it is urgent that we have this debate today, because if we do not have
this debate today, we are going to be going into the Estimates, which is the
only other time we are going to have to discuss this. The decision has to be changed prior to us
going into that debate.
*
(1100)
The
government House leader (Mr. Manness), as the Minister of Finance, knows full
well that we cannot go into Culture and Heritage four weeks from now if in
fact, Mr. Speaker, we even get there. We
see what is happening in the Department of Health. There is no guarantee that
we will even get into Culture, Heritage and Citizenship. So it is urgent because we need to ensure
that everything that is possible is done to try to get the government to change
its mind. They are moving in the wrong direction. They are taking an apolitical granting body
and turning the granting authority into politics.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
The honourable member's time has expired.
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, the issue
before us is urgency. I find it
deplorable that the Liberal House critic would flaunt the rules in the fashion
that he did. The issue is urgency. The issue is not to debate the issue, it is
to try and provide his point of view to the House that unless this is debated
now, right today, there will be some significant change not in the manner in
which but indeed the total funding that goes to the heritage community in
Manitoba.
Mr.
Speaker, the member by his own admission, I think, would suggest that he has
not made his point at all as to the urgency. That is what the rules say we are
supposed to spend these five minutes directed towards is the urgency. The member countered his own argument by
saying, yes, the Estimates are coming up and we can ask questions then. That is the truth, but if this was such an
urgent matter for the members opposite, why did they decide on the list of
department's Estimates that it would be towards the last three‑quarters
of the time‑‑Culture, Heritage and Citizenship after Health, Rural
Development, Agriculture, Native Affairs, Seniors Directorate, Labour, Civil
Service, Housing, Consumer and Corporate Affairs, Family Services, Education,
Urban Affairs, Status of Women, Highways and Transportation, and then Culture,
Heritage and Citizenship.
The
member knows fully well that he has other opportunities. He knows Estimates are
coming up. He knows his members have an opportunity
to grieve on this issue, if they want, on any day the Supply motion is before
the House. He knows that he can bring forward
a private members' resolution and appeal to the House to bring it forward then
in the order if he so wishes, and of course, there is concurrence. But what I find unacceptable, not that the
members do not have the right to bring forward a request looking for emergency
debate, is that he would spend a full 80 percent to 90 percent of his time not arguing
on the urgency but arguing the issue. I
would say to you, Mr. Speaker, that it is your responsibility to call the
member to order and force him to deal with urgency.
This
is not an urgent matter under the rules of definition. There are other
opportunities to debate this, and I would have to say, Mr. Speaker, that you
should rule in that respect. Thank you.
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Mr. Speaker, I would like to address this
issue and to make the argument that this is an important and immediate issue,
and I look forward to your ruling upon this.
I think, first of all, both the second opposition party and ourselves
have raised this issue a number of times in Question Period. I do not, unfortunately, have all the answers
with me, but the answers that the minister gave to my questions both today and
yesterday I do not feel answered the urgency of the situation, and they
certainly did not answer the content or the principles that I was trying to
address. So it seems to me that a
debate, and an immediate debate, given the minister's reluctance to deal in a
straightforward manner with our questions, is an important issue.
The
Minister of Finance (Mr. Manness) raised the issue in his capacity as House
leader, raised the question of the order of Estimates, and that is an important
one, Mr. Speaker. It is true that
Culture, Heritage, and Citizenship is down the list. The minister well knows that this is done by
negotiation. For example, would he want
to argue the issue of Health being the last one last year? It has no relationship to the nature of the subject
or to the importance of it. The point
is, it is negotiated and it is based upon ministers' timetables, members' timetables
and a negotiation between all the three groups, so that is an absolutely
irrelevant argument, and it is a very stupid one to have made in this kind of
situation.
In
the Estimates situation, Mr. Speaker, we have some weeks yet before we get to
it, and it may indeed be one of the very last ones that we are able to get
to. We have tried to deal with this in
Question Period. I have in fact brought
private members' resolutions in the past which have addressed the same issue as
this. Last year, I brought a private
members' resolution which drew the minister's attention to the fact that she
was drawing more of Lotteries money into her department when in fact her own policy
suggested that she should not be doing that.
This is the same principle; Lotteries money is being drawn into the department. So we have raised the principle of this in
private members' resolutions. The point
that the Minister of Finance (Mr. Manness) was making, I think, is perhaps a
little ill‑founded.
It
is an important issue, Mr. Speaker, because it involves people right across this
province. Eighty‑seven heritage organizations
are represented by the Heritage Federation of Manitoba. It is the umbrella organization for the
distribution of, in heritage terms, a very large amount of money. It affects people in all parts of the province. The federation has been formed for a number
of years. It has developed many ways of distributing
its money, and it has done it in a way that has been acceptable to many people
in the heritage field in
I
think the urgency here, Mr. Speaker, is the shabby and arrogant way in which
this government has treated those volunteers.
I think the kinds of co‑operation that the government anticipates
and expects in a transition period are simply not going to be there. You do not turn around and break a contract,
a written contract that you made two years ago, with 87 organizations who acted
in good faith. You do not break that, and
then in a transition period or even in the longer term, expect them to co‑operate
with you and to bring together those volunteers in the same way that they have
been able to work with Heritage in the past.
So
it is the arrogance of the government which is at stake. It is the transition
period and the distribution of the monies which is at stake. I think the government should certainly be prepared
to debate that in a way that the minister, for example, was not prepared to
answer in Question Period today. I think,
again, an immediate and important issue that the government should be concerned
about is the question that I raised in Question Period today, that the contract
was broken.
The
minister had the responsibility, as I said last week, as I have said again this
week, under Section 6.4 of that contract of April 2, 1992, to communicate, and
I am quoting, Mr. Speaker: provincial policies on priorities for Heritage
development to the federation and to annually review the effectiveness of
results achieved by the federation based on agreed‑upon objectives.
I
do not believe that has taken place. The
minister has been unable in the House, on more than one occasion, this week and
last week, to enunciate what the policies and priorities are of her
department. She has been unable to say
when she met with the federation and whether in fact any of those policies have
ever been conveyed to the federation. In
fact, when she was challenged on this, what she said was, it would be
considered political interference to convey those policies. So clearly there seems to be some political
confusion on the government side, and I do believe that this requires some
immediate discussion.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
The honourable member's time has expired.
Mrs. Sharon Carstairs
(Leader of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker,
the purpose for this debate today is because there is no other opportunity to
debate this issue. That is the matter of
urgency, and that is the matter of relevancy.
This contract was dissolved by the‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
Point of
Order
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Government House Leader): . . . rules, Mr.
Speaker, these issues, are we all available then to rise and speak on the
urgency for five minutes? Is that the
rule, all the members of the House?
Mr. Speaker: On the point of order raised by the honourable
government House leader, two cases in point:
first of all, I had indicated to the House, and I will quote this, I
said: "Before determining whether
the motion meets the requirements of our Rule 27, the honourable member for
Inkster will have five minutes to state his case for urgency of debate on this
matter. A spokesperson for the other
parties will also have five minutes to address the position of their party
respecting the urgency of this matter."
Rule
27(2), which I believe what I just stated to the House is derived from,
states: "A member making a motion
under sub‑rule (1) may explain his arguments in favour of his motion in not
more than five minutes, and one member from each of the other parties in the
House may state the position of his party with respect to the motion, in not
more than five minutes."
Point of
Order
Mrs. Carstairs: Mr. Speaker, we know that on similar debates
in the past, the introductory person has been allowed to speak as, in fact, an
introductory person of all three parties.
All we request of the Speaker at this point is that he review past precedents
on this matter to ensure that the rules are going to be applied equally to all
members of this House.
Mr. Speaker: On the point of order raised by the honourable
Leader of the second opposition party, I have to indicate that it is contrary to
the rules, but what I will do, I will review all my past rulings. The point of order that has been raised, I am
taking under advisement, and I will report back to the House.
At
this point, though, I will adhere to the rule because there actually is no
justification, and if I have done so, as I have indicated, I will report back
to the House.
At
this point, I would like to thank all honourable members for their advice as to
whether the motion proposed by the honourable member for
As
members know, our Rule 27 and Beauchesne's Citation 389, and I would like to
quote this for the members: "The
'specific and important matter requiring urgent consideration', for the discussion
of which the adjournment of the House may be moved under Standing Order 52 must
be so pressing that the public interest will suffer if it is not given
immediate attention."
Also,
Beauchesne's 390, this one I want to put special emphasis on. I am advising the House at this point in time
that we will adhere to this one. If we
have deviated from it, I apologize, but this rule, "'Urgency' within this
rule does not apply to the matter itself, but means 'urgency of debate', when the
ordinary opportunities provided by the rules of the House do not permit the
subject to be brought on early enough and the public interest demands that
discussion take place immediately."
They
provide the conditions required for the matter of urgent public importance to
proceed. First, the subject matter must
be so pressing that the ordinary opportunities for debate will not allow it to
be brought forward early enough. Second,
it must be demonstrated that the public interest will suffer if the matter is
not given immediate attention.
The
member for
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, with respect, I challenge the
ruling.
Mr. Speaker: The ruling of the Chair, having been
challenged, all those in favour of supporting the Chair, please say yea.
Some Honourable Members: Yea.
Mr. Speaker: All those opposed, please say nay.
Some Honourable Members: Nay.
Mr. Speaker: In my opinion, the Yeas have it.
Mr. Lamoureux: Yeas and Nays, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: Call in the members.
The
question before the House is: Shall the
ruling of the Chair be sustained?
A STANDING VOTE was taken, the result
being as follows:
Yeas
Cummings,
Dacquay, Downey, Driedger, Ducharme, Ernst, Findlay, Helwer, Laurendeau,
Manness, McAlpine, McIntosh, Mitchelson, Neufeld, Orchard, Reimer, Render,
Rose, Stefanson, Sveinson, Vodrey.
Nays
Alcock,
Barrett, Carstairs, Cerilli, Cheema, Chomiak, Dewar, Doer, Edwards, Enns, Evans
(Interlake), Friesen, Harper, Hickes, Lamoureux, Maloway, Martindale, Reid,
Santos, Storie, Wasylycia‑Leis, Wowchuk.
Mr. Clerk (William
Remnant): Yeas 21, Nays 22.
Mr. Speaker: The rule of the Chair having been overturned,
the question before the House is: Shall
the debate proceed? It is agreed?
House
Business
Mr. Manness: Mr. Speaker, what I was hoping to do, I would
like to make just a very brief announcement with respect to House Business
before the debate ensues.
Mr. Speaker: Will the House allow the honourable government
House leader? Yes. Okay.
Mr. Manness: Mr. Speaker, I would like to cancel the
Standing Committee on Economic Development previously scheduled for Tuesday,
April 28, 1992, at 10 a.m. to consider the Annual Report of the Manitoba
Lotteries Foundation and to change and reschedule that meeting to Thursday, May
21 at 10 a.m., at which time the Economic Development Standing Committee will
meet to consider the Annual Report of the Manitoba Lotteries Foundation.
Also,
I would like to announce that the Standing Committee on Economic Development
will meet to consider the '90 and '91 Annual Reports of the Manitoba Mineral
Resources on Thursday, May 7 at 10 a.m.
Mr. Speaker: That is agreed? I thank the honourable government House
leader.
I
would ask the honourable Deputy Speaker to take the Chair, please.
(Mrs. Louise Dacquay, Deputy Speaker, in
the Chair)
*
(1220)
* * *
Mr. Lamoureux: I should start off by thanking the member for
The
system previously, prior to the budget, was that the Manitoba Heritage
Federation, an organization that has been respected for a number of years, an
organization that has literally hundreds of volunteers and commitments of
thousands of hours towards the preservation of the heritage of the province of Manitoba‑‑and
what we have seen happening is that the granting authority has been withdrawn
from the Heritage Federation in support of, Madam Deputy Speaker, some
political‑appointed board, as all we know.
We
have seen what they did with the Manitoba Intercultural Council, where they
took it away from MIC. They appointed a political
board in which workers of the Premier (Mr. Filmon) have been appointed to, now
responsible for allocating out those grant monies, and now we see the same
thing happening to the Manitoba Heritage Federation.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, what is most important is perception. The perception on this
issue is all wrong because the public, Madam Deputy Speaker, know full well
that the government, by taking away the funding allocation from the Manitoba
Heritage Federation and adopting a principle of having grants handed out based
on politics, based on a politically appointed board, which they have done with
the MIC, is wrong.
Not
only is it a question of perception in this case, it is also tragic in the
sense that the Heritage Federation has done a service to all Manitobans. In return for the hours of dedication that
they have put in to preserving that heritage over the past number of years, the
government did not even have the basic decency to try to come to some sort of
an agreement with the Heritage Federation if in fact they had problems with the
Heritage Federation.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, the Heritage Federation was given 24 hours notice to attend a
meeting, at which point they were told that they were no longer going to be
responsible for the allocation of grants to the different heritage groups and individuals. The Minister responsible for Culture,
Heritage and Citizenship (Mrs. Mitchelson) said, and the Premier (Mr. Filmon), from
his seat, the reason why is because a third of the costs of the allocated
$712,000, that the minister herself said out in the hallway, is being used for
administration. She even made reference
to $215,000 out of the $712,000. Well,
Madam Deputy Speaker, that is not true.
In fact, what we have seen is that 94 percent was in fact allocated for
grants.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, what is going to happen now to all of those who have put in
that effort, that time, that commitment, those hundreds of volunteers
throughout the province of Manitoba, when they see the carpet pulled from under
their feet and are now being told that they did not do a good job, that they
did not do a sufficient job? That is
what the Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship said today during
Question Period.
In
a question that I asked, she implied that the community now will be better
served as a result of this government's new bold change, that in fact the
heritage groups will be better off for it.
Well, what do they base that on?
The minister herself will say that they do not have anything in place
currently or nor do they know, that in fact they want to go out and consult. Madam
Deputy Speaker, what they did is they took away the funding authority knowing
in the back of their minds what they want to do‑‑they want to make
it more political‑‑but just not too sure how they are going to do
it because they want to now go out and consult.
Well,
ultimately, what we will see this government do is the same thing that they did
for MIC. They will come up with some grandiose
scream in which they can try to take more political credit. That is the whole problem with this
government. Because they did not get
enough credit and the Manitoba Heritage Federation was getting the credit for
approving the grants, that is the reason why this government has chosen to do
it.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, I would be very interested in knowing why the member for
Madam
Deputy Speaker, I believe that if there was a free vote on this, we would have
seen a lot more support, and the government House leader had an obligation to
recognize the importance of debating this issue today. Because he refused to allow the debate to
proceed, unfortunately, we are not going to get as much time as we would have
liked to have had to debate this issue.
Plus, he put the Speaker of the Chamber in a hell of a bind. If it is unparliamentary, I withdraw that,
but my feelings are the same, that the government House leader has caused the
situation that we are currently in, in terms of the procedure, that the
minister responsible for Culture and Heritage has done a disservice to the
Madam
Deputy Speaker, if it is the Heritage Federation that they oppose, well, let us
have this other umbrella group, let us have another form of grassroots
involvement that has nothing to do with political appointments. That was the third question that I asked the
minister today: Give us the assurance
that she will not have the decision‑making body as to who is going to
receive the grants; give us the assurance that it will not be a politically
appointed board. Her response was, no,
she is not going to give us that assurance.
What
that tells me is that this government wants to do the same thing for the
Heritage grants that they did for MIC.
That is wrong. This government is
leading us down the wrong path when it comes to giving out grants in the
Department of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship. It has chosen to politicize wherever it is
possible, and no minister has done the job like the Minister of Culture and
Heritage when‑‑
*
(1230)
Madam Deputy Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member's time has expired.
The
hour being 12:30 p.m., this House is adjourned and stands adjourned until 1:30
p.m. on Monday.