LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY OF
Monday,
April 18, 1994
The
House met at 1:30 p.m.
PRAYERS
ROUTINE
PROCEEDINGS
PRESENTING
PETITIONS
APM
Incorporated Remuneration and
Pharmacare
and Home Care Reinstatement
Mr.
Jim Maloway (Elmwood):
Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of L. Meyers, N. LeBlanc, C.
Corman and others requesting the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba urge the
Premier (Mr. Filmon) to personally step in and order the repayment of the $4
million paid to Connie Curran and her firm APM Incorporated and consider
cancelling the recent cuts to the Pharmacare and Home Care programs.
Mr.
Conrad Santos (Broadway):
Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of Fred Heiland, Alice Zdril,
Rosemary Heiland and others requesting the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
urge the Premier to personally step in and order the repayment of the $4
million paid to Connie Curran and her firm APM Incorporated and consider
cancelling the recent cuts to the Pharmacare and Home Care programs.
Curran
Contract Cancellation and
Pharmacare
and Home Care Reinstatement
Mr.
Speaker: I have
reviewed the petition of the honourable member (Mr. Clif Evans). 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?
Some
Honourable Members:
Yes.
Mr.
Speaker: The Clerk will
read.
Mr.
Clerk (William Remnant):
The petition of the undersigned citizens of the
WHEREAS
the Manitoba government has repeatedly broken promises to support the Pharmacare
program and has in fact cut benefits and increased deductibles far above the
inflation rate; and
WHEREAS
the Pharmacare program was brought in by the NDP as a preventative program
which keeps people out of costly hospital beds and institutions; and
WHEREAS
rather than cutting benefits and increasing deductibles the provincial
government should be demanding the federal government cancel recent cuts to
generic drugs that occurred under the Drug Patent Act; and
WHEREAS
at the same time
WHEREAS
the
WHEREFORE
your petitioners humbly pray that the Legislative Assembly urge the Premier to
personally step in and order the cancellation of the Connie Curran contract;
and consider cancelling the recent cuts to the Pharmacare and Home Care
programs.
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(1335)
APM
Incorporated Remuneration and
Pharmacare
and Home Care Reinstatement
Mr.
Speaker: I have
reviewed the petition of the honourable member (Mr. Dewar). 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?
Some
Honourable Members:
Dispense.
Mr.
Speaker: Dispense.
The
petition of the undersigned citizens of the
WHEREAS
the Manitoba government has repeatedly broken promises to support the
Pharmacare program and has in fact cut benefits and increased deductibles far
above the inflation rate; and
WHEREAS
the Pharmacare program was brought in by the NDP as a preventative program
which keeps people out of costly hospital beds and institutions; and
WHEREAS
rather than cutting benefits and increasing deductibles the provincial
government should be demanding the federal government cancel recent cuts to
generic drugs that occurred under the Drug Patent Act; and
WHEREAS
at the same time
WHEREAS
the
WHEREFORE
your petitioners humbly pray that the Legislative Assembly urge the Premier to
personally step in and order the repayment of the $4 million paid to Connie
Curran and her firm APM Incorporated and consider cancelling the recent cuts to
the Pharmacare and Home Care programs.
Curran
Contract Cancellation and
Pharmacare
and Home Care Reinstatement
Mr.
Speaker: I have
reviewed the petition of the honourable member (Mr. Hickes). 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?
Some
Honourable Members:
Dispense.
Mr.
Speaker: Dispense.
The
petition of the undersigned citizens of the
WHEREAS
the Manitoba government has repeatedly broken promises to support the
Pharmacare program and has in fact cut benefits and increased deductibles far
above the inflation rate; and
WHEREAS
the Pharmacare program was brought in by the NDP as a preventative program
which keeps people out of costly hospital beds and institutions; and
WHEREAS
rather than cutting benefits and increasing deductibles the provincial
government should be demanding the federal government cancel recent cuts to
generic drugs that occurred under the Drug Patent Act; and
WHEREAS
at the same time
WHEREAS
the
WHEREFORE
your petitioners humbly pray that the Legislative Assembly urge the Premier to
personally step in and order the cancellation of the Connie Curran contract;
and consider cancelling the recent cuts to the Pharmacare and Home Care
programs.
TABLING
OF REPORTS
Hon.
Gerald Ducharme (Minister of Government Services): Mr. Speaker, I would like to table the
Government Services Annual Report 1992‑93; the Annual Report of the Fleet
Vehicles Special Operating Agency for the year ended March 31, 1993; and the
Seniors Directorate Annual Report 1992‑93.
Hon.
Darren Praznik (Minister of Northern Affairs): Mr. Speaker, I would like to table today the
1992‑93 Annual Report of the Department of Northern Affairs, as well as
the Annual Report for the Communities Economic Development Fund for the year
ended March 31, 1993.
Introduction
of Guests
Mr.
Speaker: Prior to Oral
Questions, may I direct the attention of honourable members to the gallery
where we have with us this afternoon, from the
Also
this afternoon, from the Nelson McIntyre Collegiate we have twenty‑two
Grades 8 to 12 students under the direction of Ms. Faye Barsy, Mr. Jordy
Cameron and Mr. Garth Collier. This
school is located in the constituency of the honourable member for St. Boniface
(Mr. Gaudry).
On
behalf of all honourable members, I would like to welcome you here this
afternoon.
ORAL
QUESTION PERIOD
Lerner
Report
Release
Request
Mr.
Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Premier.
Over
the weekend, again we had some problems in the emergency wards with closures of
some emergency wards on a temporary basis, patients backed up in the hallways
and considerable public concern about the impact on their ability to access our
emergency wards.
Mr.
Speaker, this is not a new issue in terms of
In
response to a similar problem, four years after being elected, in 1992, the
government commissioned a review committee dealing with both the emergency ward
situation at
Of
course, because this is such a very major public issue for people in terms of
the emergency ward situations, I would like to ask the Premier: Does his government have a copy of the report
that they announced in May of 1992?
Will he make that report available to members of the Legislature and
members of the public so we can deal with some of the recommendations of
emergency wards and their impact on patient care in
Hon.
Gary Filmon (Premier):
Mr. Speaker, I am sure that is a question that would be more
appropriately asked of the Minister of Health (Mr. McCrae).
Just
because in the preamble the member tries to always bring in the spectre of
budget cuts in the health care field, I just want to quote the
Rather
than try and tie this all in to another political issue, I wish that the member
would be much more candid and honest in the way in which he tries to bring
issues to this Legislature.
Point
of Order
Mr.
Doer: On a point of
order, Mr. Speaker, the only dishonesty in this House is the Premier has stated
something that I never asked in my question.
I never raised the issue of budget cutbacks. I would ask the Premier to withdraw his
comments about honesty and keep his comments straight and to the record here
published.
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. To deal with the point of order
raised, the honourable First Minister in his response made reference to the
fact about honest and honesty, and I believe there have been several occasions
where I have asked the member to withdraw the unparliamentary word
"honest."
At
this point in time, I am going to ask the honourable First Minister to withdraw
the word "honest" that he has just used in his answer.
*
(1340)
Mr.
Filmon: Mr. Speaker, I
will be happy to withdraw the word "honest" in any reference to the
Leader of the Opposition.
Mr.
Speaker: Thank you,
sir. [interjection] Order, please. We
have another issue here now.
The
official opposition House leader in his point of order used the word
"dishonest." This also, sir,
is unparliamentary. [interjection] Order, please. I will decide this. Now I would ask the Leader of the official
opposition to withdraw the word "dishonest."
Mr.
Doer: I withdraw it
unequivocally.
Mr.
Speaker: Thank you,
sir.
*
* *
Mr.
Speaker: Now, getting
on with Question Period, the official opposition Leader.
Mr.
Doer: Thank you, Mr.
Speaker. Sorry to start off the Monday
in such a cantankerous way, but these are very important issues.
Lerner
Report
Release
Request
Mr.
Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): Now I asked the Premier a specific question
dealing with the Moe Lerner Committee that the government commissioned some two
years ago. The government has a copy of
the report that they commissioned. It
does have a number of recommendations based on the terms of reference that they
released in 1992.
I
would like to ask the government: Will
they now make public this report that they now have so that we can deal with
the issues in our emergency wards in terms of the pressure on emergency wards,
the manpower issues that we have on the weekends, releasing patients on
Sundays, which was one of the issues raised, the issue of bed closures and what
impact that has on patients in the hallway, and what issue patients in the
hallway has on the emergency ward itself?
Will
the government now release the report that it commissioned two years ago
dealing with the urban hospitals and the emergency wards?
Hon.
James McCrae (Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, indeed, this past weekend,
because we had some very lovely weather as a matter of fact, I think a lot of
Winnipeggers were out doing things perhaps they have not had the opportunity to
do for some time. That did lead to some
things that occurred over the weekend, and it put pressure on emergency rooms
in
I
would like to point out that one point raised perhaps in the public media and
repeated by the Leader of the Opposition having to do with discharge policy at
Grace Hospital, I am advised that the discharge policy at Grace is the same
every day of the week, so that needs to be said too.
With
respect to the emergency services report, we are using the report and the
people involved with it to help us in the development of policy. That report will be forthcoming in due
course.
Lerner
Report
Release
Request
Mr.
Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, the government is using a report
that they commissioned on behalf of the public.
We have community‑based hospitals that have made proposals to the
government to close emergency wards in the midnight period of time at
There
is a lot of confusion about where the government is going on the whole issue of
emergency wards and how bed closures and hallway line‑ups impact on
emergency wards.
Mr.
Speaker, I would ask the government to release the report that they have so
that the total public that is affected by changes in health care can be
involved. One of the fundamental
principles of dealing and changing our health care system is that we do it in
consensus together, not in a back room in the minister's office.
I
would ask the government to release the report so we can have a debate about
our health care services and we can all be involved, not just the selective
government.
Hon.
Gary Filmon (Premier):
Mr. Speaker, I know that the Leader of the Opposition has been, in the
course of his discussions‑‑in fact, he is quoted in the Selkirk
Journal and on Richard Cloutier's program as promoting a better answer from
I
would like to bring to his attention the article in yesterday's
It
quotes the Liberal Health critic as, of course, condemning the government for
the lack of funding to the hospitals and so on.
I
just say that the difficulty all Manitobans will have is that every province in
That
kind of initiative is there, is being pursued by every government in
*
(1345)
Lerner
Report
Release
Request
Mr.
Dave Chomiak (Kildonan):
Mr. Speaker, it seems to me that if what the Premier says is true, they
should be willing to release the report, not be afraid to release that report,
because apparently it will justify their position. I think that to the average Manitoban, more
bed cuts seem to indicate there are more line‑ups in the hallways and
difficulty getting to the hospitals.
Mr.
Speaker, my question to the Minister of Health is: Why has the government not released the task
force report by Dr. Moe Lerner, since the government has hired Dr. Moe Lerner
to do something in health reform, or at the department, full time, anyway? Why have they not released the report, since
they hired the author of the report to work for them full time?
Hon.
James McCrae (Minister of Health): I answered the question when I answered the
honourable Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) about the use we will be making
of the report and of the services of Dr. Lerner, and have been using.
The
honourable member, the other day in relation to health care, raised the issue
of We Care home services, and referred to that as the Americanization of health
care. I remind the honourable member
that We Care home services 10 years ago began its operations in
An
Honourable Member:
Relevance?
Mr.
McCrae: Relevance‑‑the
honourable member might be interested in knowing, in response to the question‑‑
Mr.
Speaker: Order, please.
Point
of Order
Mr.
Steve Ashton (Opposition House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I remind you and would like to
raise the question of Beauchesne again in terms of relevance of answers. I mean, quite frankly, on this side, we are
not interested in how many franchises We Care or McDonald's or anyone else
has. We want answers to the specific
questions asked by the member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak).
Mr.
Speaker: On the point
of order raised, I believe the honourable Minister of Health had just made
reference that he was going to answer the question now.
*
* *
Mr.
McCrae: Yes, Sir, the
We Care contract at Seven Oaks also assisted this past weekend in making
available eight additional beds in the hospital. If that had not happened, the 90‑minute
closure might have been much longer, except for the fact that we were able to
discharge eight people from the hospital and put them into appropriate services
at home.
These
are the kinds of things the honourable member opposite wants to be against. I am going to be for the patient; he is going
to be for something else, Mr. Speaker.
Mr.
Chomiak: Mr. Speaker,
the minister tries to answer the question three days later. He finally tried to get his facts there. He did not even answer the question I asked.
I
will ask him: When will they release the
Moe Lerner task force recommendations?
Can he confirm whether or not the 13 recommendations that were
recommended in the interim report about
Mr.
McCrae: Mr. Speaker, I
think, in conjunction with emergency services, we have to examine issues like
bed availability, about bed usage and developing the most co‑ordinated
and efficient emergency system here in this city that we can co‑ordinate. The more emergency services personnel who are
knowledgeable and aware of what is going on in every corner of this city, the
better we are all going to be served in emergency services.
The
report to which the honourable member refers is assisting us as we develop
policy. As I have said to the honourable
Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer), that report will be made public in due
course.
Health
Care System
Consultations
Mr.
Dave Chomiak (Kildonan):
Mr. Speaker, my final supplementary to the minister, who is refusing to
make public reports paid for at public expense, is: Will the minister start working with patients
and the public?
We
have recommendations by MARN that say that by instituting services such as
having community health nurses provide immunization we could save the province
$800,000. We have the MNU saying that by
going to more development, primary nursing care demonstrations, instituting
long‑term human resources strategy and supporting the role of all nurses,
LPNs, RNs and RPNs, we can improve the system.
When
will the government start working with people in the system and listening to
people in the system, not their private friends?
Hon.
James McCrae (Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, we are already doing all of
those things the honourable member refers to, and as reported in the media the
other day with respect to the services provided at Seven Oaks Hospital, the
patients like it. The NDP hates it. I guess if we know what the NDP hate we can
serve the people better.
*
(1350)
Personal
Care Homes
Staffing
Mr.
Paul Edwards (Leader of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, by correspondence dated March
29, 1994, Mrs. Margaret Redston, the Acting Director of the Long Term Care
Branch, advised all chief executive officers of freestanding, nonproprietary
personal care homes that the government, and I quote, was going to be
implementing a one‑time reduction in their 1994‑95 rate
recommendation representing the net anticipated savings to be realized through
the application of Bill 22 and that the policy would apply to all employees
with the exception of nurses who agreed to the 2 percent reduction under Bill
22.
This
recommendation, which is going to result in a decrease in staffing in personal
care homes, goes against every piece of medical information in evidence which
suggests quite the contrary, that staffing needs to be increased in these
personal care homes due to the increasing acuity of the patients.
My
question for the minister: Given this
policy which apparently his department is intent on implementing, on what
medical basis are they suggesting to personal care homes that they can decrease
staffing levels and still do the right thing for the patients?
Hon.
James McCrae (Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, no medical basis. The honourable member is referring to the
same issue referred to earlier with respect to community health centres.
We
have demonstrated in
I
am very interested in ensuring that care provided at personal care homes is not
adversely impacted by Bill 22. We are
hearing from various care home providers as to their proposals for how they
might comply.
Mr.
Edwards: Mr. Speaker, I
would still appreciate hearing from the minister, advised by whom, because I
want to table as well the report of last week of Judge Rusen, his inquest
findings on the tragic death of Anne Sands back in 1992.
I
want to quote from that report which sets out three recommendations. Judge Rusen specifically indicated: "In my opinion, the staffing at the time
of Mrs. Sands' death, namely, five (5) people for eighty‑five (85)
residents was woefully inadequate."
Judge
Rusen goes on to talk about the lack of regulations and lack of enforcement by
the provincial government on staffing issues.
This has come, granted, a week or so after the edict was issued to
reduce the funding and staffing levels at those personal care homes.
Will
the minister now withdraw his policy of implementing staff reduction of
personal care homes in view of the clear indication from Judge Rusen who
studied this issue that the staffing is woefully inadequate in personal care
homes in this province, Mr. Speaker?
Mr.
McCrae: The honourable
member will also note that Judge Rusen's inquest response or report also came
after we announced last week that we are setting up a review mechanism to
review standards and levels of care at our personal care homes in
We
are very mindful, Mr. Speaker, that in recent years, with shifts from acute
care and more emphasis being placed on home care, this is an obvious piece of
evidence that home care is keeping people home longer and that in our personal
care homes, the acuity levels are rising.
We recognize that. We are asking
the task force to take that into account, too, in making its findings.
Mr.
Edwards: Why does this
government, Mr. Speaker, always review after they have done the cuts? The fact is there are thousands of residents
in these homes today who need the protection of this government.
Mr.
Speaker, I want to conclude by asking the minister to respond specifically to
Judge Rusen's comments talking about staffing in the hallways. It is hoped, he says, that the
recommendations will be implemented so as to contribute to the well‑being,
care and comfort of the residents of personal care homes in the
Why
is he implementing the cuts before he has done the review, Mr. Speaker?
*
(1355)
Mr.
McCrae: Mr. Speaker,
before the honourable Leader of the Liberal Party gets carried away with this,
the report referred to last week by the member for Crescentwood (Ms. Gray), of
the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation, Dr. Evelyn Shapiro,
contains this short paragraph which I remind honourable members is contained in
that report: Overall, the care in
Manitoba's nursing homes appears to be very good.
The
honourable member ought to bear that in mind, and the Centre for Health Policy
and Evaluation went on to review various comparisons.
The
honourable member also heard me announce last week that we are asking the task
force composed of Health, Seniors Directorate and Family Services people to
consult with various regulatory agencies to ensure that appropriate levels of
care are provided to senior citizens and others who are resident in personal
care homes in
Domestic
Backlog
Mr.
Gord Mackintosh (
Back
in 1990, the then Attorney General said that family violence and dealing with
it was a No. 1 priority of the government.
By September of '93, the backlog in the
It
is my understanding, Mr. Speaker, that today the backlog in the Family Violence
Court is anywhere from nine months to one year from the date of the offence
until the hearing.
My
question to the minister is: In the face
of this historical crisis, Manitobans want to know if it is this minister's way
of getting tough on crime by reducing severely the number of judges in this
province and ordering layoffs in the Crown attorneys' department.
Hon.
Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I would like to start by reminding the
honourable member that it was this government and this government's commitment
to the concerns of family violence that began the
Relating
to the issue of the number of judges, the honourable member has obviously done
his in‑depth research into this very serious issue of domestic violence
and the courts operations through reading an article in the newspaper. So I can tell him that I believe he has some
incorrect facts.
Provincial
Court
Vacancies
Mr.
Gord Mackintosh (
Would
the minister advise the House just how many vacancies, in real terms, will be
on the
Hon.
Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): At the moment, there are three vacancies
because judges, in those positions‑‑one has been promoted to the
position of chief provincial court judge, one judge has resigned and another
has moved to another court.
We
have at the moment now in progress the mechanism to fill those vacancies.
Mr.
Mackintosh: The
minister never answered my question. My
question was, how many vacancies in total will there be on the
Does
she think that backlogs in the
Mrs.
Vodrey: I can also
inform the member that as a result of the judicial compensation package, we do
expect some judges to take advantage of a retirement package. However, the member may not know that when
judges retire in
But
the member yesterday at an open forum made a very interesting comment of his
concerns and this government's interest in listening to the people of
I
would like to tell all Manitobans that that will be the way that the NDP will
deal with this issue, and not this government.
We will pay attention to Manitobans.
Point
of Order
Mr.
Mackintosh: Mr.
Speaker, the minister is misconstruing any words that I ever said
entirely. What I said yesterday was that
this minister was bringing in policies which would threaten the further safety
of Manitobans. That is what I said.
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. The honourable member does not
have a point of order. That is clearly a
dispute over the facts.
*
(1400)
Education
System
Transportation
Policy
Ms.
Marianne Cerilli (Radisson):
Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Education must be held accountable for the
inequities, the chaos and the dismantling of the public education system that
is occurring in the province, including the elimination of school busing which
is disrupting families and creating unsafe situations for young people in the
province, especially in areas of my constituency of Harbour View South and
south Transcona.
I
would like to ask the Minister of Education:
Does the Minister of Education think it is reasonable to eliminate
school busing to a new subdivision so that young people have to take a Transit
bus across Highway 59 at a cost of $300 per student for three bus stops and
still have to walk over a kilometre to their school?
Hon.
Clayton Manness (Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, the latest Education critic for
the New Democratic Party should know fully well that I do not make decisions
with respect to school busing. These are
matters that are left totally to the discretion of the local school division.
Ms.
Cerilli: Mr. Speaker,
it is this minister who has eliminated funding for Grades 7 to 12 school
busings in the River East School Division.
I
would like to ask the minister to respond to my letter of February 24, which I
wrote on behalf of my constituents, and be accountable to explain what his
government is willing to do to ensure that this area, which is a very isolated
area in a new subdivision, is going to have equal and safe school transit
service.
Mr.
Manness: Mr. Speaker,
was it the River East School Division that the member referenced? If it was, I cannot remember exactly how many
dollars of the $750 million that was directed towards all the school divisions
in this province went particularly to that school division. The very essence of local decision making and
local autonomy means if a school division has to make determinations around the
priorities, if that school division has decided that school busing is of lesser
priority than some of the other educational issues, then I say that it is
within their power to do so.
Transcona‑Springfield
School Division
Meeting
Request
Ms.
Marianne Cerilli (Radisson):
Mr. Speaker, this minister is cutting funding and then leaving school
boards and families and the City to pick up the pieces to ensure that children
get to school safely.
Will
the minister at least send a representative, as he has been asked to do, to a
community meeting tomorrow night so he can be held accountable for the change
in funding policy to the people in
Hon.
Clayton Manness (Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, I will be held accountable for
the 2.6 percent reduction in funding to the public school system. I will be held accountable for that, but I
will not be held accountable for decisions that the local school board have
entered into and deciding how it is they want to allocate their funding and
into what specific services they provide to the students in their school
division. I am sorry, I am not
accountable for that.
Legislative
Offices
Appropriate
Use
Mr.
Steve Ashton (Thompson):
First it was Preston Manning's suits, now it is the Liberal lotto‑‑a
party that has been so critical of gambling running what has been called Club
600 out of its legislative offices. Just
as there is some element of hypocrisy in criticizing lotteries so strongly and
operating one, there is also a question of public policy‑‑a party
that appoints an ethics commissioner and then runs a lottery out of its
legislative office.
My
question is to the government House leader (Mr. Ernst) or to the Minister of
Government Services (Mr. Ducharme).
Mr.
Speaker: Order, please.
Point
of Order
Mr.
Kevin Lamoureux (Second Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, the
opposition House leader has forgotten that the purpose of Question Period is to
answer questions of the government. If
he wanted to talk about hypocrisy, we could talk about the Leader of the New
Democratic Party and staff saying yes to a casino in The Pas and saying, in the
city of
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. The honourable member does not
have a point of order. It is clearly a
dispute over the facts. There was no
point of order.
On
a new point of order? [interjection] Okay, then, on the point of order that was
raised by the honourable member for Inkster, I believe the honourable member
for Thompson was just premising his comments to either the government House
leader (Mr. Ernst) or the Minister of Government Services (Mr. Ducharme).
*
* *
Mr.
Ashton: Mr. Speaker, I
would have loved to ask the Liberal ethics critic about this, but our rules
require I ask it to a government minister.
I
would like to ask whether it is legitimate practice to use government offices,
legislative offices, for fundraising purposes?
Hon.
Jim Ernst (Minister charged with the administration of The
Mr.
Ashton: Mr. Speaker, I
want to indicate that we will be raising this with the Legislative Assembly
Management Commission.
As
a further question, Mr. Speaker, has the government House leader been able to
determine whether indeed this was being conducted on government time, in terms
of public time, because, indeed, my understanding is that government offices
and, in this case, legislative offices cannot be used, once again, for the
purposes, in this case, of raising funds for a political party?
Mr.
Ernst: Mr. Speaker,
this matter came to my attention, of course, after the fact. In fact, the scheme had already been
conducted, so I have no way of determining whether or how a government office
was used, other than the fact that on the brochure that was distributed related
to this matter, which I would be pleased to table, appears a government phone
number, so I would assume that at some point during this lottery the phone
calls were placed to that office.
Liberal
Fundraiser
Lottery
Licensing
Mr.
Steve Ashton (Thompson):
I have a question, Mr. Speaker, and this is to the same minister who is
also minister responsible for Lotteries.
I
did, indeed, provide notice to the minister of this question some one week ago,
and I would like to ask if the minister could indicate whether this lottery was
licensed.
Hon.
Jim Ernst (Minister charged with the administration of the
Those
that are $3,000 in total prize money or less are not required to be licensed by
the Manitoba Lotteries Corporation, but are required to either be licensed by a
municipality in which that lottery scheme is conducted or by the Manitoba
Lotteries Corporation. If it is a
province‑wide, it is obviously difficult to go to 200 municipalities to
try and license these activities. So I
do know that this was not licensed by the Manitoba Lotteries Corporation.
Mr.
Speaker, as a result of a newspaper article appearing in the Winnipeg Free
Press this morning, we are now trying to ascertain if in fact it was licensed
by municipalities in the
*
(1410)
Year
of the Family Initiative
Budget
Ms.
Norma McCormick (Osborne):
Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Family Services.
An
Honourable Member:
About lotteries?
Ms.
McCormick: No.
Much
is being made of the government's initiatives in this the Year of the
Family. Daily, our caucus receives
glossy promotional literature asking us to buy pins, posters, certificates,
sweat shirts and memorabilia to demonstrate our support and commitment to this
celebration of the family. [interjection] Yes.
Can
the minister advise this House as to the budget for this Year of the Family
initiative?
Hon.
Bonnie Mitchelson (Minister of Family Services): Mr. Speaker, indeed, as our budget comes out
within a couple of days, there will be a line that will be there in support of
International Year of the Family. I am
pleased and proud that we have as a government supported an initiative that
promotes and encourages family participation right throughout the width and the
breadth of this province.
Mr.
Speaker, I take some exception to the comments made that the only information
the Liberal Party has received from the IYF office is a list of pins and
souvenirs and sweat shirts that they might be able to purchase to support
International Year of the Family, because I do know that the volunteer council
that has been appointed throughout the province has worked extremely hard and
there are many, many activities ongoing within each Manitoba community in
support of International Year of the Family.
Ms.
McCormick: Mr. Speaker, a
supplementary to the same minister.
We
have reason to believe that the budget is in the area of $240,000 a year. We have an obligation as elected
representatives to think carefully how we spend the public's money at a time
when
Can
the Minister of Family Services tell us, given that her department is cutting
back on subsidized daycare spaces and support for child advocacy groups, as
well as other meaningful programs and services which support the family, does
she believe that this public relations campaign is the best use of those
dollars?
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. The honourable member's question
seeks an opinion. It is therefore out of
order. I would ask the honourable member
for Osborne to kindly rephrase your question, please. The honourable member's question did seek an
opinion, was out of order.
Ms.
McCormick: Okay. My question to the minister: Is this the most appropriate use of this
money?
Mrs.
Mitchelson: As I
indicated in my first answer, there are many, many volunteers throughout the
width and the breadth of our
I
was just at a forum in my constituency on the weekend that was organized by the
River East Teachers Association, and it had the International Year of the
Family logo on it. Their conference, and
many of the conferences that are being held throughout the province this year,
Mr. Speaker, do have a focus on the family.
I
believe that the office that has been put in place by this government has
provided support to the thousands and thousands of volunteers right throughout
Year
of the Family Initiative
Staffing/Salary
Information
Ms.
Norma McCormick (Osborne):
My final question is to the Premier.
Will
the Premier identify the names of the people who have been seconded, employed
or contracted to the Year of the Family office and the salaries they are being
paid?
Hon.
Gary Filmon (Premier):
Because that is a question of detail which I do not have available to
me, Mr. Speaker, I would suggest to the member that she might want to pose that
question during the course of the Estimates debate that is coming forward in a
matter of weeks.
Workforce
2000
IBM
Canada Ltd.
Ms.
Jean Friesen (Wolseley):
According to lists provided by the Minister of Education, IBM Canada received
$50,000 under Workforce 2000 program to train 87 people in what the government
calls human relations.
It
is my understanding that IBM maintains no education or training department in
Could
the minister explain why he has added $50,000 to a fully developed corporate
training program and cut community colleges, New Careers and the Transcona
School Division?
Hon.
Clayton Manness (Minister of Education and Training): Again, the essence of the question is that
the NDP is against market‑driven training and wants to drive all of the
training into the traditional institutions.
Since
1991, the basic criterion, to help the member for Wolseley with this‑‑training
has been, under Workforce 2000, supplied to those companies who introduce new
technologies, equipment and processes, and/or high‑demand skill shortage,
occupations and high‑demand skills.
That
has been the overriding and some would say, general, some might say too
general, criteria that have been in place.
But that has allowed the expenditure of several millions of dollars,
some of it as an offset against payroll tax but still directed towards the
training of 60,000 to 80,000 people over the period of time.
I
do not know what point the member is trying to make, as I have indicated to her
that we now, given the experience of the success of the program and yet bearing
in mind there should probably be some greater focus around some of the
criteria, have entered into those changes.
That will be brought into place as of May 1994.
Ms.
Friesen: Mr. Speaker,
the point of my first question clearly is the priorities of this government.
The
point of my second question is the issue of accountability.
Will
the minister make a commitment to table the curriculum of this human resources
course paid for in part by the people of
Mr.
Manness: Mr. Speaker,
let me again deal with the process. I am
led to believe an employer training program is required for each training
contract and is maintained on file. We do
not provide any grant money until, of course, there is this training plan that
is on file and, secondly, the training has already taken place.
With
respect to the larger companies, and obviously IBM would be one of them,
because there probably is a tremendous commitment to payroll tax by that
company in this province, the amount that we are talking about here might be a
fraction as an offset against that significantly high 2.25 percent payroll tax
that they pay.
Ms.
Friesen: Mr. Speaker,
do I understand the minister then to say that the government and people of
Mr.
Manness: Mr. Speaker, I
doubt very much that I have the curriculum.
What I probably have and obviously have on file is the training plan.
When
the member says, pay a large amount of money, no, exactly the opposite has
happened. The company has paid a
significant amount of payroll tax, and what we have done is taken a fraction of
that amount, in this case using the member's amount, $50,000, and rebated it as
against that tax.
Provincial
Sales Tax
Arrears
Mr.
Jim Maloway (Elmwood):
Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister of Finance.
Over
three years ago, under pressure from the opposition and the public, the former
Minister of Finance was forced to act on problems with the sales tax arrears at
the time. In fact, the Provincial
Auditor did a special report later in that year.
My
question for the Minister of Finance is this:
What is the current amount of sales tax arrears in this province?
Hon.
Eric Stefanson (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I will have to obtain the exact
figure to provide the honourable member for Elmwood, but I can assure him that
I received a report recently on sales tax arrears in
Clancy's
Ventures Group
Mr.
Jim Maloway (Elmwood):
Mr. Speaker, my supplementary to the same minister is: Given that two months ago the Clancy's
Ventures group of restaurants closed, owing over $350,000 in sales tax to the
province, can the minister tell the House when his department realized that the
firm was behind in payments and what efforts they made to collect this
outstanding amount?
Hon.
Eric Stefanson (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I will take that question as
notice and provide the honourable member with the detail.
Mr.
Speaker: Time for Oral
Questions has expired.
*
(1420)
Introduction
of Guests
Mr.
Speaker: I would like to
draw the attention of honourable members to the loge to my left where we have
with us this afternoon Mrs. June Westbury, the former MLA for
NONPOLITICAL
STATEMENTS
Volunteer
Week
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable member for Niakwa have leave to make a nonpolitical statement?
[agreed]
Mr.
Jack Reimer (Niakwa):
Mr. Speaker, I ask the members of the House to join me today in
recognizing the beginning of Volunteer Week here in
Volunteers
in
It
should be recognized, Mr. Speaker, that Manitobans are particularly generous
with their time as 37 percent of Manitobans volunteer in some way or another,
whereas the average for Canada is only 27 percent. In the city of
In
economic terms, the efforts of volunteers in
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable member for Radisson have leave to make a nonpolitical statement?
[agreed]
Ms.
Marianne Cerilli (Radisson):
Mr. Speaker, I would like to echo the member opposite's comments with
regard to Volunteer Week. It is indeed
significant to recognize the contributions of the many volunteers across the
province who give of their time and their talents to benefit their
community. Volunteerism benefits not
only the volunteers in the organizations that they are involved in, but the
community as a whole by forging links which ensure that people are actually
involved and participating in their community which benefits everyone.
I
would like to commend the ongoing involvement of the provincial government in
supporting volunteer training and volunteer co‑ordination in the
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable member for Crescentwood have leave to make a nonpolitical statement?
[agreed]
Ms.
Avis Gray (Crescentwood):
Mr. Speaker, I, too, join the other two parties in celebrating Volunteer
Week and in saying congratulations to the many thousands of volunteers in the
Having
come from rural Manitoba, where certainly volunteerism was a way of life in
many activities, and having had an opportunity to live in northern Manitoba and
now in the city of Winnipeg, I certainly recognize and realize that we, as a
province, would not be what we are today if it were not for the many, many
thousands of volunteers in every walk of life.
Certainly,
when you look at volunteerism here in Manitoba, and we think of what we do in
any particular day or any given week, we run across people who provide
volunteer activities and, in fact, devote their very lives to the aspect of
volunteerism, whether it is in the health care field, whether it is in
assisting church organizations or cultural organizations.
We
must say thank you to all of those volunteers.
I know many of us, as well, probably have and do provide volunteerism to
some of our community organizations as well, so we certainly celebrate
Volunteer Week with the volunteers. We
wish them all well. We say to them,
thank you for all of the work that you have done for us in the past, and, as
importantly, thank you for all the work that you will do for us in the
future. Thank you.
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable Minister of Family Services have leave to make a nonpolitical
statement? [agreed]
Hon.
Bonnie Mitchelson (Minister of Family Services): Mr. Speaker, I want to join with other
members of the House as we look to Volunteer Week and recognition of volunteers
right throughout the
The
last few months, we have just had volunteers around to our doors and our houses
canvassing for the Heart and Stroke Foundation and for the Cancer Foundation,
just this past week I had someone at my door.
This is the month for cancer fundraising.
Mr.
Speaker, we have to look to this year as being a very special year for
volunteers, in that it is International Year of the Family and there will be
volunteers right throughout this province that will be committing and
dedicating a lot of their volunteer activities and a lot of their initiatives
throughout the province, recognizing families and the importance of families in
our province.
I
would encourage all members of this Legislature to become very actively
involved in International Year of the Family in their own communities and in
their constituencies, because I do not believe there is a community throughout
Manitoba that will not be celebrating, in some way, International Year of the
Family. I encourage all of you to become
actively involved and to volunteer for families in your communities. Thank you.
World
Curling Championships
Canadian
Winners
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable member for
Mr.
Brian Pallister (
Yesterday
was truly an historic day in the history of our nation. This is the first time that any nation on
this earth has had representatives sweep the men's, women's, junior men's and
junior women's titles in the same year.
At
the World Curling Championships in
On
the men's side, a former confrere of ours, a former MLA in Saskatchewan Rick
Folk, who now resides in
Also,
I am happy to say that earlier this curling season
An
Honourable Member:
You were almost there, Brian.
Mr.
Pallister: I will keep
working on it.
Mr.
Speaker, I am sure that all members of this Legislature will join with me in
applauding our Canadian curlers for this 1994 record‑breaking year. With more than one million Canadians taking
part in the sport of curling, it is no surprise that we are the strongest
nation in the world when it comes to that sport.
*
(1430)
Mr.
Speaker: Does the
honourable member for Interlake have leave to make a nonpolitical statement?
[agreed]
Mr.
Clif Evans (Interlake):
Mr. Speaker, I would also like to join with the honourable member for
I
know, and I certainly do agree with the honourable member for Portage that
Manitoba, not only Manitoba but Canada is a hotbed for curling, a sport that I
think, even though we are around the million mark as far as curlers go, is a
sport that could be expanded and should be expanded to our junior level more so
that we have more opportunity to represent this province and this country in world
championships such as this.
Mr.
Speaker, again, on behalf of our members, we congratulate these four
teams. Thank you.
ORDERS
OF THE DAY
THRONE
SPEECH DEBATE
(Seventh
Day of Debate)
Mr.
Speaker: On the
adjourned debate, the seventh day of debate, on the proposed motion of the
honourable member for Sturgeon Creek (Mr. McAlpine), for an address to His
Honour the Lieutenant‑Governor, in answer to his speech at the opening of
the session, and the proposed motion of the honourable Leader of the official
opposition in amendment thereto, standing in the name of the honourable member
for Transcona, who has 34 minutes remaining.
Mr.
Daryl Reid (Transcona):
Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to continue my comments from where I left off
on Friday.
Before
I get to that point, I would first like to welcome the new members of the
Legislature. It is a challenging job
that they have undertaken by letting their names stand for nomination, of
course, being successful in the recent by‑elections. I am sure they will hopefully enjoy their
time in the Legislature, and they will gain not only many new friends and make
many acquaintances but actually learn more about the province, as I believe we
all have during our time here when we have had to meet many Manitobans.
(Mrs.
Louise Dacquay, Deputy Speaker, in the Chair)
I
would like to welcome the member for Rupertsland (Mr. Robinson). It has been a pleasure to travel to the
northern parts of
I
also, Madam Deputy Speaker, would like to welcome the member for Rossmere (Mr.
Schellenberg). I listened to his speech
in the throne speech debate and appreciate very much the facts that he brings
to this House and the perspective that he brings to this House with respect to
his own constituency of Rossmere. I know
he will do credit to uphold the tradition of the previous elected representatives
from Rossmere, of course, one of whom was the Premier of Manitoba and also a
prior representative was the Attorney General for the province of
Manitoba. So there was strong history
there of representation from Rossmere.
I
would also like to welcome, Madam Deputy Speaker, the member for St. Johns (Mr.
Mackintosh), of course, who has brought to this House the perspective dealing
with the judicial system of our province, and I know he has been working in an
advisory capacity with our caucus and advising and consulting with us on
various matters relating to justice and to community issues. We look forward to further consultations with
him on that and, of course, the perspective that he brings.
I
would also like to welcome the new members for The Maples (Mr. Kowalski) and
Osborne (Ms. McCormick), who I am sure will fulfill their duties to the best of
their ability and, of course, they have taken on the very difficult task, I
believe, and the challenge that it is in trying to represent the wishes of
their constituents. I had the
opportunity to work with the member for Osborne on various issues prior to her
election to this House relating to environmental matters when they affected my
community, and we thank her for the opportunity to have her expertise and
guidance on those matters. I know the
member for The Maples, as well, whose spouse and my spouse also have a
relationship that goes back quite a number of years, and it was only upon his
election that I found out that our two spouses knew each other from past times.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, on February 19 of this year, we had the good fortune not only
from the community of Transcona and the city of Winnipeg, but for the province
and the country as a whole, we had the opportunity to witness an event that
took place in the Olympics wherein a young woman from the community of
Transcona represented our country, Canada, at the Canadian speed skating races
in the Olympics.
Susan
Auch, a 27‑year‑old woman, represented
I
had the honour to represent the community of Transcona, the people of
Transcona, on March 3 of this year at the Manitoba Sports Federation to honour
Susan's accomplishments, and we are very proud of her in the community for what
she has been able to accomplish. Susan
brought home the silver medal, and she was quite proud in displaying that
silver medal. I know, in welcoming Susan
back to
I
know I talked with Susan's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Auch, as well, and they were
bubbling over with enthusiasm and pride for the accomplishments of their
daughter.
On
the one note, though, I was a little bit disappointed that the Manitoba Sports
Federation did not see fit to have Susan come and visit some of the schools in
the community. It would have been nice
if she could have come back to her own home community, talked with the young
students there and encouraged them to take on the challenges of life, as Susan
has herself. But I am hopeful that Susan
will come back and have an opportunity some time in the future to visit the
various schools and to talk with the young people.
During
my comments on Friday about the throne speech and also some of the issues that
have been facing us not only as a province but as a country, I made reference
to some of the decisions that have been made by the federal government, the
Liberal government, and how they are impacting upon the province of Manitoba,
whether it be cruise missile testing that they said they would not undertake if
they were elected, to the fact that they would not sign the North American Free
Trade Agreement without considerable renegotiation of issues affecting
Canadians, in particular the energy portion of that agreement.
Of
course, that did not come to pass and the Liberals eventually capitulated on
that and did sign the agreement. But
there were also other issues.
I
know and I have talked to many people in my community on this particular
issue. It is dealing with smoking and
how it affects the health of our young people and people in general in our
various communities.
I
was very much disappointed to see that the Liberal government chose to listen
to the wishes of only one province in Canada and did not listen to the other
provinces and went ahead and instead of dealing with the issue of the time,
which was smuggling of cigarettes, chose to put pressure on the province to
reduce the taxation on cigarettes.
One
only needs to talk to young people in our various communities through this
province to find out that if the cost of cigarettes goes down, there will be an
encouragement because through peer pressure and the reduction of prices for
this product, more young people are taking up the habit of smoking. I think that it will lead to a deterioration
of the health of these young people, putting pressure on the families, the
individuals themselves, and of course on the health care system of our
province.
I
wish that the Liberal Party had chosen to go a different course of action and
to not reduce the taxation level on cigarette taxes. Of course, I think that if they had addressed
the problem itself, instead of looking at another issue that was away from the
problem, we would have been further ahead on this issue.
I
hope that my Liberal colleagues in the House here will take this message back
to their party in Parliament and have them make some changes. I do not mean just cosmetic changes to the
colour of cigarette packages; I mean real substantive changes to the smoking
policies of this country. Putting more
money into an advertising budget that can be eroded with one federal budget is
not the answer. We need long‑term
solutions to this problem, not short‑term, knee‑jerk reactions as
we saw took place.
During
the course of time, Madam Deputy Speaker, when we were out of session, I took
the opportunity not only to talk with many of my constituents in Transcona but
also to travel with some of my colleagues to various parts of the province.
I
am quite fortunate to have had that opportunity on several occasions over the
last three and a half, four years. I
have had the opportunity to see the lifestyle that northern Manitobans live
with and the conditions that they live under.
I find it is unfortunate that we have not taken some steps to correct
the deficiencies that we find in our northern communities.
Many
of the northern communities are living without sewer and water, and I find it
difficult to comprehend how we could not have done something over a period of
time to help correct, at least move in a direction where we were bringing
forward similar services to what we have in the southern parts of the province
so that our northern Manitobans can live in a similar quality of life.
With
the infrastructure program that we saw come out we saw very little money go to
the northern part of our province. Even
the geese coming back in spring flying over the Golden Boy here know the
direction the province is headed in, and that is to the northern part of our
province. Even the geese are smart
enough to recognize that.
*
(1440)
Unfortunately,
our Minister of Northern Affairs, and Industry, Trade and Tourism (Mr.
Praznik), as my colleague the member for Interlake (Mr. Clif Evans) said‑‑[interjection]
I guess maybe that is what it is, that the people of northern Manitoba maybe do
not know how to vote, in the minds or the estimation of the government. That is unfortunate. I thought the ministers, when they got into
their various portfolios, were there to represent all of the people of the
province, not just special or selective interests.
I
hope, when the second round of grants are announced to the infrastructure
program, that there will be monies to recognize the inadequacies of the various
northern communities as they attempt to eke out a living and to live without
the services that we have come to take for granted in southern Manitoba. We do not need to have more overpasses in
certain parts of the city when we have communities without sewer and water
programs. I think we need to take care
of the basic human needs first before we look at building more overpasses.
Also,
Madam Deputy Speaker, when I was in northern
When
we attended the public meetings that were in these communities, because the
people want to have a chance to talk with us as we toured, we found that there
were several comments. The one comment
that stuck in my mind the most was‑‑and this was from one of the
residents, and I believe it was in Thicket Portage, if my memory serves me
correctly‑‑that the Liberals had cut more jobs in the railway in
four months than the previous Conservative government had done in nine and a
half years.
It
is obvious the discussions that took place during the federal election campaign,
wherein the Liberals said they were going to restore Manitoba as the
transportation hub of Canada, certainly appears at this point in time to be
nothing but pure rhetoric, and we have seen a further erosion of the railway
jobs.
I
asked the Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr. Findlay) last week,
since there was a shortage of hopper cars for grain transportation in this
province and indeed western
I
do not know why the minister would not want to raise that issue with the
railways and indeed the federal government, to try and have this work brought
to the province of Manitoba and ensure long‑term prosperity and
employment for the railway people who have been under attack by the federal
government for a number of years now, much to my dismay in that the provincial
minister has sat idly by and has not raised these issues and has not taken‑‑[interjection]
The Minister of Transport, to be fair, the Minister of Transport had not raised
these issues. This current Minister of
Transport has not raised these issues, and I would hope that he would do that
when he meets with CN, because I very much want those railway jobs to come to
I
listened also as well and I was shocked to hear the federal Minister of
Transportation's comments on March 11 of this year where he said with respect
to railways in this country that railways are nostalgia and that they have, in
his estimation, no place in the future of our country. At least that is what I interpret from his
comments. I have a copy of the Hansard
from Parliament here in my hands and can reference it quite readily. I know for the Minister of Agriculture (Mr. Enns),
if he cares to read it, I would be willing to share this with him.
The
federal Minister of Transport talks about the merger of the rail lines. I believe looking at the comments that were
made by the federal minister, that if he allows the CP Rail and CN Rail to
merge that it is going to have a detrimental impact on the province of
Manitoba, not only on the rail operations where we do maintenance and repairs
on the road bed itself, but also in the fact that there will be potentially
less jobs in the maintenance shop where we repair our rolling stock equipment
which again puts pressure on the province of Manitoba either in CP Rail repair
shops or in CN Rail repair shops.
Those
jobs are essential to this province, and I think we need to take the steps to
make sure that they stay here. The one
way to do that is to have serious discussions with the federal Minister of
Transport to ensure that
That
will in turn put pressure on the grain elevators and Manitoba Pool operations
in
I
want that tradition to continue because I think the railways have a critical
role to play in the further development of this country, and we need to have
the policies in place that demonstrate that.
We cannot just sit idly by and allow the federal government to further
erode rail transportation jobs in
An
Honourable Member:
What did you say, Daryl? This
sounds like an old CPR speech to me.
An
Honourable Member:
No, CNR.
Mr.
Reid: Well, I am not
sure, Madam Deputy Speaker. I worked
some 22 years for the railway. My father
worked for the railway. My grandfather
worked for the railway. My uncles work
for the railway. My brothers work for
the railway. We have a history of
railway in our family, and we are proud of that. We will do everything within our power to
make sure that the interests of the railway workers of this province are
represented. We want the railways to be
here. [interjection]
Madam
Deputy Speaker, I am also quite proud that my grandfather was actively involved
in the founding of the CCF Party when it first started up in this
province. That, too, as a railway
worker. The railway workers have a long
tradition of working with CCF and New Democrat Parties. Of course, they know whose interests that the
New Democrats represent, and it is the working people of this province.
An
Honourable Member:
You grandfather was shovelling coal, Daryl.
Mr.
Reid: Actually, my
grandfather was a machinist, a skilled tradesperson.
I
know the Minister of Education, with his‑‑and I will get to him in
a minute with respect to Education issues and how they affect my community, but
I am sure he recognizes the importance of railway lines for the southern part
of the province in that they are essential to moving or transporting the grain
that is produced in our province to export position.
An
Honourable Member:
That is why I rolled back the locomotive fuel tax.
Mr.
Reid: The minister
says that he rolled back the locomotive fuel tax.
An
Honourable Member:
That is right.
Mr.
Reid: We never said
that was a bad move at the time, Madam Deputy Speaker. I attach a caveat to that, in that I asked,
at the time the minister was going to do that, that he get some assurances from
the railway to protect the railway jobs in this province before he gave away
the money. That is what I wanted, some
assurances that railway jobs would stay in this province. He did not get that assurance; in fact, we
lost more railway jobs. Railway jobs
still went to
I
listened when the government made their announcement last week about CP Rail
Customer Service Centre coming to
I
am glad they were able to bring those jobs here, but we are still seeing‑‑[interjection]
Do not use the inflated figure to your own advantage; tell what the real story
is to the public so that they know that there were not 210, but there were
somewhat less than that‑‑72 less than that.
*
(1450)
At
the same time, I hope that the government will take the steps to stop the
further erosion of jobs that we are seeing going to Edmonton now, the
announcement that is due to come out very soon, and I hope the Minister of
Transportation (Mr. Findlay) is listening to this, that we are going to see,
from what I am hearing now, further announcements about loss of rail jobs in
this province.
There
are discussions taking place right now in the Transcona main shops where we are
having jobs potentially going to be cut.
The numbers will be coming out soon.
I am hearing 150‑some jobs within the car shop facility, and there
are several dozen jobs out of the motor parts facility at the Transcona CN
Shops.
So
we are seeing further loss of railway jobs.
The
minister often says that he wants constructive ideas on how we can improve
transportation in this province. So when
I said, bring hopper car work to
These
are amortized over a period of time and the minister knows it. For a $75,000 car it does not take long to
amortize that. Even the former Minister
of Finance can figure that one out.
I
am sure, Madam Deputy Speaker, if the Liberal Party was interested in the ideas
that we have they would come and listen to some of the meetings that we have
with some of our railway workers. But we
saw in the federal election where we brought out some ideas, all they did was
photocopy it. This is the prime
photocopier team that the Liberal Party has.
They take everybody else's ideas and run with it. If they had an original idea I am sure it
would be something new, and we would welcome seeing something like that.
The
federal Minister of Transport also said, and this is something that the Liberal
House leader can do something about, when he talked about railways being
nostalgia and transportation of the past, even when the Liberal task force was
holding hearings in this province, only at four locations, I might add, when
there are dozens of other communities that are going to be adversely affected
by the loss of VIA Rail services, I made a presentation to those hearings.
I
travelled to the northern communities that are going to be affected by the loss
of these services, but there was not one Liberal that made a presentation to
any of those hearings‑‑not one Liberal made a presentation. At the same time that those hearings were
being held, the Liberal federal Minister of Transport was announcing in Parliament
that VIA Rail had to cut back services.
A report came out that said that
Now,
this is something that the Liberal House leader can do something about if he
wants to play an active role in preserving railway jobs in this province. I call upon him to take those steps to make
sure that
Those
jobs, if the north line services do not move down or continue into
That
is something you can do something about as Liberal House leader. Take that message to your colleagues in
I
would like to spend a few minutes‑‑I am not sure how much time I
have left‑‑of my time talking about‑‑
Madam
Deputy Speaker: The
honourable member has nine minutes remaining.
Mr.
Reid: I would like
to spend a few minutes talking about issues that are important in my community
with respect to education. I listened to
the government's announcement with much dismay earlier this year when the
government announced there was going to be 2.6 percent reduction in funding to
public school education. I know what
effect that had on public education in my community, to the Transcona‑Springfield
School Division, and what decisions had to be made last year when the
government announced they were cutting back 2 percent last year.
Last
year we lost 17 teaching jobs, which impacted upon the students in the
Transcona‑Springfield School Division.
Transcona‑Springfield School Division last year had the lowest per‑pupil
assessment of the city of
Now,
I am not a financial analyst or anyone with a great deal of financial
experience, but anybody knows that if you keep borrowing from the future, as
this government has often talked about here and has tried to turn that argument
back on us from the time when we were in government, it does not make sense to
use the same solutions to solve the problems of the school division by
borrowing on next year's grant money when he has already told that school
division, Transcona‑Springfield School Division, to expect less money
next year.
Now
we are going to see further erosion of public education in Transcona‑Springfield
as we will in other communities of our province. This year we are losing over 30 jobs, some 25
of them teaching positions. The funding
decrease for the Transcona‑Springfield School Division‑‑this
is a sheet, not my figures, but the trustees have put out‑‑3.6
percent decrease in provincial funding over '93‑94, not 2.6 percent but
3.6 percent.
The
special requirement 2 percent cap that the government brought in by way of
their legislation only allowed the school division to increase about
$218,000. Now, $218,000 is not going to
cover the retention of those 30 jobs that were lost. We are losing two child guidance clinician
positions. We all know the difficulties
that the teachers and the schools are facing with either special‑needs
students or children that have emotional problems within the school, whether it
be family breakup or other issues that are facing them. We need these people in the schools. We are losing paraprofessional positions, a
significant number of them. The funding
for this has been reduced by $100,000.
On top of that we are losing some of the quality‑of‑life
programs, where we talk about music instruction, library services. These are the services that we have within
the school that make the schools what they are, a sense of community in there.
I
know the minister has told us over and over again that funding decisions are
difficult. All I am asking of this
Minister of Education (Mr. Manness) is that he have some sense of fairness when
he distributes the education dollars in our province, and when he made the
decision to increase the funding to the private schools, the private elite
schools of our province, he has essentially taken dollars away from school
divisions like Transcona‑Springfield and shifted those into the private
elite schools, the people that can afford it.
I have many single families in my community that can ill afford to send
their children to these elite schools.
It
was your own announcement, Mr. Minister, that made that decision. Now it is affecting the number of teachers
within my school division, and how is that going to have any long‑term
positive impact for the children of my community? All I am asking is for you to take some
action to bring in a fair funding formula.
If you say you do not have more money, distribute it equitably to the
school divisions of this province. That
is what I am asking you to do.
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The
trustees of my school division met with you; they met with the former Minister
of Education. She promised at that time
to take some steps to review the circumstances under which the Transcona‑Springfield
School Division was operating. Obviously
that never came to pass, and I am asking this minister to take the same
action. The trustees brought forward
options that this minister wants, to make a fair funding formula, and if this
minister does not like that proposal that they have brought forward, then come
up with his own ideas that will make it fair.
Now, I have listened to the trustees in my division at several meetings
that I have attended over the last three and a half years. The one thing that they tell me is that the
funding formula that was there prior to this government coming in was
essentially fairer than the funding formula that you have there right now.
Some
Honourable Members:
Oh, oh.
Mr.
Reid: You know, Madam Deputy Speaker, the interesting part
is‑‑[interjection]
Madam
Deputy Speaker: Order,
please.
Mr.
Reid: What the
government members do not know is that the people who were making those
decisions were members of their party.
It is not people who have the same political persuasion that I do, Madam
Deputy Speaker; it was people who have the same political bent that these
people opposite do, the government members.
An
Honourable Member:
What has that got to do with anything?
Mr.
Reid: Well, you are
talking that you do not like the formulas that were there before. It was your own people who were saying that
the formula that was there before was a lot better than the one we are seeing
right now.
An
Honourable Member:
Our people? Who are our people?
Mr.
Reid: I will tell
you later, off the record, who these people are.
An
Honourable Member:
Put it on the record. Do not make
allegations and leave it off the record.
Mr.
Reid: No, I am not
going to put that on the record. It
would be unfair to these people. These
people want to see some changes in the funding formula. Now it may be too late for this government,
Madam Deputy Speaker. They may not have
the time to make some changes prior to the election, and I hope that‑‑[interjection]
Well, maybe it would be unfair for me to speculate at this time, but I can only
go on what has happened in the past and that there has been no action to
improve the situation for the funding, even though my trustees have requested
it for a number of‑‑[interjection] 1900, keep that number in mind.
I
ask the minister, in all seriousness, to look at changing the funding formula
that he has or at least have some alternate action in place so that the school
divisions that are being adversely affected and have essentially no surplus‑‑because
my division, from what I have been told and the figures that I have been given
here, show that the Transcona‑Springfield School Division has only
$450,000 in its surplus account which does not come anywhere close to the
surplus that would be required to sustain the programs that were in place prior
to the budget cuts.
When
the government talked about health care reform, I can tell the government
members that I am still getting calls from seniors in my community quite
worried about the cutbacks to home care services. They see the announcements about cutbacks to
hospital beds, surgical beds and the further erosion of our health care
services in this province. It worries
the people of my community.
Health
care services are essential and are the one thing that distinguishes us from
many other countries of the world. If we
do not take all the steps within our power to preserve and protect health care,
we are going to see ourselves led down the same path and we are going to end up
in the same position as our American counterparts to the south, where I believe
we have some 35 million people without health care services. Those that can afford will have it; those
that do not will not have it.
Madam
Deputy Speaker: Order,
please. The honourable member's time has
expired.
Hon.
Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I am very pleased to have the opportunity
today to respond to the throne speech. I
would like to begin by welcoming back all members of the Legislature and look
forward to a working relationship with those members in this coming session.
I
would also like to extend a special welcome to those new members of the
Legislature who have taken their places for the first time. The member for The Maples, Mr. Kowalski, who
in addition to being a new member is also the Justice critic for his
party. I look forward to working with
that member on the many issues and challenges that I face as Minister of
Justice. I welcome input in the House
and also as we are doing our work in the community.
I
also would like to welcome the member for Rossmere (Mr. Schellenberg), the
member for
I
also would like to welcome the member for Osborne (Ms. McCormick). She is an individual that I have known for a
good many years and in the many kinds of work that she has done. I welcome her to her place in the Legislature
for the first time also. I would like to
welcome also the member for Rupertsland (Mr. Robinson).
Madam
Deputy Speaker, I also welcome you back to your position and also I welcome the
Speaker back. In the past, you have both
carried out your responsibilities with wisdom and with honour and with the best
interests of this House in mind. I am
sure that you will continue to do so in this coming session.
I
extend my welcome and thanks to the Pages and to the legislative interns. Your contributions here are appreciated by
all the members of the House. I know you
will have the opportunity to learn a
great deal and become very familiar with the issues, and I hope that you find
it a very enjoyable experience.
I
also must extend my sincere thanks to the residents of
Madam
Deputy Speaker, one of the primary roles of government is to listen to the
people, and Manitobans have told us a great deal as we have been
listening. Manitobans have told us that
taxes during the Pawley years were crippling families and the provincial
economy, and we have responded by holding the line on provincial income tax,
sales tax and corporate income tax for six consecutive budgets. Given the record of other provincial
governments and the federal government, Premier Filmon and this government
certainly deserve some recognition for that achievement.
Manitobans,
after six years of responsible provincial government, now have the third lowest
combined federal and provincial income tax rate. This is an amazing feat given the onerous tax
burdens that Manitobans faced during the Pawley years. Manitobans have said also that the deficit
and the debt have to be brought under control.
This government under the leadership of our Premier has done just
that. Many major financial institutions
have praised this government and our responsible approach to our financial
affairs. Our containment of the deficit
is even more remarkable given our freeze on major taxes.
Manitobans
have praised this government's record on job creation. In addition to freezing all major taxes since
taking office, we have further enhanced the tax environment through incentives
such as the manufacturing investment tax credit, the research and development
tax credit and the mineral exploration incentive program. These incentives have spurred investments in
small business jobs. In addition, we
have progressively raised the payroll exemption. Now 90 percent of the taxable businesses are
exempt from the payroll tax. This
government has successfully created a positive environment for small business
growth, and our incentives are working.
In
1993, Madam Deputy Speaker, there were 6,000 more jobs in the private sector in
Madam
Deputy Speaker, recently at
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Madam
Deputy Speaker, about eight months ago, I became the Minister of Justice and
the Attorney General, as well as the Minister responsible for the Status of
Women. The mantle of this office, of the
Minister of Justice, has been worn by many distinguished Manitobans over the
past 122 years. As the first woman to
hold this office, I feel very honoured to be given the opportunity to
contribute to that legacy.
Every
Attorney General has shared one common and recurring challenge, the challenge
to identify and to respond to the safety needs of the people of
As
the Minister of Justice, I have made the growing problem of youth crime and
violence a top priority on my agenda.
For this reason, I hosted the first‑ever summit on youth crime and
violence on December 4. This summit came
about because of the public's ever‑increasing concern for their public
safety and an expressed concern about public confidence in the Young Offenders
Act and in what happened to young people who came into conflict with the law.
That
summit, Madam Deputy Speaker, included 500 Manitobans. It was over 500 Manitobans on the actual
day. Those Manitobans came together in
small working groups, and they looked at issues of particular concern. They looked, first of all, at prevention and
what could be done to prevent young people from coming into conflict with the
law. Then they looked at intervention
strategies, and they said for young people who are highly at risk: What kind of intervention could be provided
to steer those young people onto the right path and away from coming into
conflict with the justice system?
Then
they looked at consequences, and they said that, when young people do come into
conflict with the justice system, it should not just be a brush with the law,
but they gave very specific recommendations of what should occur as
consequences when young people came into contact with the justice system and
into conflict with the law.
Flowing
from that summit, Madam Deputy Speaker, were a series of 700 recommendations
that came from the people of
The
document itself addresses recommendations that the people of Manitoba put
toward, yes the justice system, but also to the community, to the education
system and to the family because they recognize that the family is a place to
start, that families have responsibility and that it is very important to
include the family and the community as we are looking at how we can deal with
youth crime and violence.
Government
came out with a nine‑point plan which is based on the 700 recommendations
that the people of
So
I appreciate the support that I have received from the members of the NDP
caucus and the Liberal caucus because they have accepted the fact that youth
justice committees are an important part of involving the community in dealing
with youth crime and violence.
I
said in the nine‑point plan that I would like to even expand the role of
youth justice committees so they could do the most effective work and that each
youth justice committee would be able to sit down and examine what it is in their
community that would be effective, how they would like to become involved.
I
have met with the chairs of the youth justice committees. My probation side of Corrections meets with
the youth justice committees on a regular basis, and we are looking to make
them an extremely effective mechanism within the community and a way to involve
Manitobans across this province in the concerns of youth crime and violence.
We
also, in the nine‑point plan, are setting up a youth council. We recognize that the voice of young people
themselves is absolutely essential if we are going to deal with the issues of
youth crime and violence, and so by putting together a youth council chaired by
a youth, a young man from Thompson, youth will then be able to have their ideas
and their views and their concerns funneled through to government in a very
formal way, so that government will be able to attend to and listen to what the
concerns of young people are.
We
will also support that provincial youth council and the community youth justice
committees with a provincial council.
The purpose of that is to bring together a series of experts and people
with experience and ability to act as a resource for the youth justice
committees and for the youth council.
That committee is being chaired by Mr. Gill Tyrrell. He lives in the city of
So
we look forward to those councils becoming very effective in our assistance and
in our plan to deal with youth crime and violence at the prevention end.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, I have another message.
In the nine‑point plan I made my position clear, and I also made
it clear to Manitobans that I had heard them and that I would take their
message to
Manitobans
said that they were not satisfied with the Young Offenders Act, that they were
concerned that young people did not see the Young Offenders Act as an effective
piece of legislation. They asked that we
take a much stronger and tougher position to the federal government. The Liberal federal government made as a
commitment during the last election that it would bring forward changes to the
Young Offenders Act. We will be holding
them to that promise, and we will be watching, as Manitobans, that the Liberal
federal government will in fact do what they said they would do.
The
people of
The
people of
We
know that young people sixteen and seventeen years old also will use children
younger than twelve to commit crimes.
The people of Manitoba have said that that is unacceptable and that
there must be a deterrent and that people who are sixteen and seventeen years
old who use those young children because they do not fall into the justice
system as it stands under the Young Offenders Act, that there should be a
presumption of those young people being tried in adult court.
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Madam
Deputy Speaker, they also asked, and the position I took was for a category of
dangerous young offenders so that there could be an increase in sentencing
options for those young people who had committed very serious crimes and would
in fact be dangerous in our community.
Publication
of names was another of the five points that I took to
Madam
Deputy Speaker, the people of
Some
people have accused us of presenting an old‑fashioned idea, bringing
parents back in and making parents responsible, but I do not think there is
anything wrong with that old‑fashioned idea, Madam Deputy Speaker. In fact, I think it is an important one, and
the people of
I
received a petition about two weeks ago from 4,000 Manitobans, who said that
they wanted changes to the Young Offenders Act, and I promised, when that
petition was delivered to my office, that I would write to the federal minister
and again say to the federal minister, the people of
So
I can look at our corrections system because that is our provincial responsibility. When young people are sentenced under the
Young Offenders Act, they come into the corrections system in which I, as
Minister of Justice, become responsible.
So
I have said in corrections that it is very important for young people who
receive this sentence to believe that what they are experiencing is
important. It provides them with a
structure that when they leave corrections, they will not want to return, they
will not want to re‑offend.
So
I am looking across our corrections system for both adults and young people and
a rigorous correction, but I have said that for some young people, they need a
highly structured environment, and they need an experience which we look to
provide them with a future benefit. So
we introduced the concepts of wilderness camps and boot camps. The underlying principle of those particular
corrections facilities will be that there is a well‑known structure, that
the rules will be well known to the young person.
Sometimes
young people have problems because they just do not know what the rules
are. They get mixed messages. In this case, we are saying the rules should
be very well known. We are saying that
the consequences should also be well known, when young people break a rule,
that they know what the effect of breaking that rule will be and what the
consequence to themselves will be, that also they will be characterized by a
very high activity level.
Young
people, particularly adolescent young people, do require a great deal of
activity, and a high level of activity will be an important part of the
rigorous confinement within the wilderness camps and the boot camps. In addition, we have said an austere
environment, a stay within these facilities should be a stay which is not as
comfortable as people have at home, or more comfortable in some cases, but
should be an austere environment. The
basis of this is to provide structure for young people and to help them
experience the structure which some young people have not experienced in their
lives. This provides the opportunity.
We
recognize also that young people need rehabilitation, and the opportunity to
experience structure can be rehabilitative in itself, but also some young
people will come into the corrections facilities with a need for assistance
with drug and alcohol dependency and also require some assistance for insight
to their criminal behaviour. These will
all be considered.
We
are also meeting with Manitobans.
Manitobans have expressed a great deal of interest and a great deal of
support for these particular initiatives, and so we have taken very seriously
that Manitobans have things that they want to tell us. I have met with several aboriginal groups,
and my corrections people continue to meet with the aboriginal community so
that their special concerns can be considered.
Manitobans
are making themselves very clear. They
want to make sure that young people recognize that when they are sentenced, it
is a consequence. Manitobans have also
said repeatedly that youths must be made more accountable for their
actions. A stronger Young Offenders Act
is essential to make the wishes of Manitobans a reality.
The
throne speech also outlined that government will bring forward legislative
amendments to deny drivers' licences to young people who have shown that they
cannot be responsible. The issue of
public safety is one of the most important issues that Manitobans have asked us
to consider. Public safety is dealt with
by, in this case, looking at responsible drivers.
We
have a program that deals with drinking and driving. We are saying now, where actions of young
people lead us to believe that they will not be responsible drivers, and we
know that there is a very high accident rate for young people, sixteen,
seventeen and eighteen, in that group of young people, where we believe that
they will not be responsible drivers in the interests of public safety, we will
be denying a driver's licence. A
driver's licence is very important to young people, and so we look to increase
the responsibility of young people and also the public safety of Manitobans.
I
know that the Minister responsible for MPIC (Mr. Cummings) is also looking at
some initiatives where young people owe money to MPIC and where they are
required to pay that money back, that we will be seeking to have that debt
settled before young people are able to drive.
Youth
crime is a top priority for this government and a top priority for Manitobans,
but we have also enhanced the public safety of Manitobans in other areas. Our zero‑tolerance policy has shown
that this government has a commitment to the victims of domestic violence. We have introduced guidelines which charge
offenders in all cases of domestic violence and oppose bail in each case. Zero tolerance in
This
government's achievements in the area of antistalking are also well known
across
We
have asked for an enhanced penalty if the stalker violated a protective order
while stalking. We have asked for a bail‑reverse
onus where evidence demonstrates that the accused poses a threat to the safety
of the victim. We have asked that those
charged should be required to surrender all firearms and firearms acquisition
certificates.
This
government's action in the area of stalking and domestic violence demonstrates
our commitment to the victims of violent crime.
In addition, Madam Deputy Speaker, we have introduced other legislation
in the interests of public safety. The
drinking and driving laws have been expanded, enforced and made a lot tougher
under this government. It has made it
possible for Crown attorneys and the courts to deal harshly with drinking
drivers. Just as our domestic violence
and our zero tolerance policy says no to domestic violence, our anti‑drinking‑and‑driving
legislation spells out the consequences for disregarding public safety.
This
government has also made policing of
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As
the Minister of Justice, I have made public safety a No. 1 priority. The public must have confidence in the laws
that govern our province. The public has
told me, again particularly in the area of young offenders, that they do lack
confidence in this legislation, and we look to the federal government to assist
in this way. In the interests of public
safety, as I said, we have come forward with a nine‑point plan to make
young people responsible for their actions.
The government is committed to safe communities. Our measures on youth crime will enhance
public safety. Sadly, the opposition
parties seem to stress less importance for safe communities.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, it is also my honour and privilege to represent the women of
We
also facilitated the appearance of Heather Jane Robertson as the keynote
speaker for the guidance counsellors' annual special area grouping conference
on socialization of girls and boys. She
made a very good presentation and obviously impressed people in
We
worked with Winnipeg School Division No. 1 to co‑sponsor a school‑based
antiviolence program called ASAP, a pilot program to train teachers, and it was
developed and presented by the
Madam
Deputy Speaker, also in keeping with our directorate's mandate to provide
province‑wide information, we have established a central 1‑800
women's information line. We produced
two expanded issues of the About Women publication, and those who have taken
the time to read about women will see that it highlights careers and work of
women across this province. It will also
show that the women of the province of Manitoba take part in a whole range of
types of work and that young women, in particular, looking ahead to plan, can
see the women who have taken on these challenges and will have the opportunity
to read about the kind of work that they do.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, this government is committed to the women of our province. Many changes and accomplishments have been
initiated across government also to reflect our commitment to women. I would like to just mention a few because I
believe they are important to restate so that women who will read this and
women who need information can have it.
Health benefits are extended to disabled persons and sole‑support
parents moving to employment. That was a
very important change which occurred last year and which allowed for,
particularly, sole‑support parents to move into employment. Funding for women's crisis shelters and
resource centres has been increased.
Funding for child care has increased from 1987 to 1993 by $21.1
million. Manitoba Health has implemented
a breast‑screening program. This
is an important initiative on behalf of women's health. It is an area in which women can now
participate for their own benefit and the benefit of their families and have
access to a health program which, we hope, will lengthen their lives.
Madam
Deputy Speaker, we also have the Women's Advocacy Program in the Department of
Justice. We also have increased
resources for counselling of male abusers, and I am very proud to say,
Over
the past eight months, I have had the opportunity to meet with many women's
groups and many organizations throughout our province, and I know as the weeks
go by, I will have the opportunity to visit and to meet with many more. It is important to hear firsthand what the
issues of
As
I outlined, this government has poised
I
look forward to the coming months, Madam Deputy Speaker, and I thank you for
the opportunity to speak here today.
Mr.
Eric Robinson (Rupertsland):
Madam Deputy Speaker, allow me to express my gratitude to yourself and
also to the Speaker of the House for the kind assistance that has been rendered
to myself and the other new members of this House. I am standing here this afternoon both
honoured and to some degree humbled. It
is not every day that our people are elected to the Legislature like this, to
any Legislature in
Allow
me to begin this afternoon by talking in a language that I am more acquainted
with. It will be a repeat of what I have
previously said.
(Mr.
Speaker in the Chair)
Cree
spoken.
[English]
Mr.
Speaker, I would like to, as well, express my respects and express my hand in
friendship to all members of this House.
I would like to join other people who have spoken in acknowledging the
new members for Rossmere (Mr. Schellenberg),
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I
come from a society that was almost destroyed.
I come from a group of people, a nation that entered into an arrangement
called a treaty with the British Crown in 1875.
I am a proud member of the Cree Nation, and I always am mindful not to
forget about the elders, the children and the women that belong to the society
that I do.
We
are told in the community that I am from‑‑and having been raised in
a traditional home‑‑that we are always to acknowledge the Creator
in all our affairs. That is the mind
that I speak today, hopefully. We are
told in our spiritual understanding that the spirit of the eagle is the one
that we offer our prayers to, because we are told in my society that there is
no man or woman who is holy enough for them to talk to God, the Great Spirit or
the Creator. We are taught in the
culture that I am accustomed to that the sacred things Mother Earth provides
for us, ultimately, we must give thanks to the Great Spirit.
One
of the ways we express our appreciation to the Great Spirit is offering our
prayers and our humble words through the spirit of the eagle. That is signified by the eagle feathers that
most members here have seen. We are
given these feathers upon earning them.
We sacrifice a little bit of our life.
We sacrifice by going without food or water for periods of up to four to
10 days to pray for the ones who are less fortunate than we are. That is the society I come from‑‑to
again pray for strength for our people, to again pray for the strength for our
children to be reunited with their families, those ones who have been taken
away in years gone by.
In
our treaty arrangement, we agreed, our forefathers, to share our land and
resources with the new Europeans. We
have never claimed this land as our own.
We have simply claimed the role of being caretakers for the land that we
shared with the new settlers, in my case in 1875, and my forefathers when they
entered into the treaty arrangement. My
people have endured a lot of suffering and continue to this day. We are no stranger to the abuses that are
talked about in everyday society. We
have been through the residential school system and, literally, we have numbers
from the time we are born till the day we die.
We have experienced sexual abuse, emotional abuse, physical abuse, but
it is not my purpose to lay the blame or put my finger to blame on another
culture or another society. It is my
role to speak on behalf of my constituents of Rupertsland to prevent these
things from happening again in our society.
It
is not a good feeling to stand here, realizing the fact that many of my people
are suffering under the influence of alcoholism, drug abuse, solvent abuse
where family violence is rampant, when some of the communities that I represent
are 98 percent unemployed, when there is no hope for a better tomorrow. In spite of all of that, we are here, and no
matter what our political colours or political stripes may be, we are here to
make a better tomorrow for all Manitobans, particularly the children.
I
have been raised by my elders to show respect to all in spite of my differences
in philosophy, to always listen and to always show respect, and I hope that
teaching will carry on during my tenure in this House.
I
also come from a society where we were regarded as Indians. Later we were regarded as natives. Now we are regarded, commonly, as aboriginal
people. We have a very complicated yet a
very beautiful society where I come from.
We had our own traditional systems of governing ourselves. We have our teachings, and we always
believed, in the society that I come from, that all things are divided equally
between men and women, unlike the society that we all know commonly today.
Some
of us from the society that I am from have been chosen to stand for political
office in the big world, meaning this House here. It has been through dialogue with our elders
who have influenced us and asked us that it is time that we have made our
contribution to our society, to our community and to our province. That is why I am here today, Mr. Speaker.
I
am also told by the wiser ones from our communities never to forget about our
veterans that went to war to protect this country, this province. Many of our aboriginal veterans were willing
to give the ultimate sacrifice. Many are
buried throughout
The
traditional economies of our people, hunting, trapping, fishing, gathering,
traditional activities of my people are slowly disappearing. Our people have told me that they want to
retain those economies, the traditional economy. Such things as commercial fishing should not
be looked upon any differently than farming.
We are told as well that we have our own systems of reintroducing and
perhaps restimulating our economies within our own communities with our
traditional activities, and I am a firm believer in that.
*
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I
want to talk about the diversity of Rupertsland. As many know here I represent roughly 28
communities starting in Sagkeeng First Nation to the south and all the way up
to Churchill to the northern part of this province, to the Territories. In between we have many different concerns,
many different needs that the people want, Manitobans want, and want to catch
up on with the rest of this province and the rest of this country. A lot of the communities that I represent do
not have the luxury of highways or roads, and everything has to be flown in,
supplies, and it is not uncommon for our people to live with the high cost of
living, substandard housing in many communities. It is not uncommon to meet our people who pay
two and three times higher the price of goods and commodities than southern
Manitobans are accustomed to. It is also
not uncommon to meet individuals who pay between $400 and $800 a month for
hydro. It is a situation that requires
examining.
The
The
riding that I represent is not only First Nations people, nor Metis people, but
we have a number of northern people that have been there for a long time that
are not necessarily native, and I am representing their concerns as well. We have in the different communities of
Rupertsland different concerns. We are
all acquainted with the issue of the chemical spill recently in
We
have the matter of solvent abuse in some of the communities that I represent as
well. As I said, it is not a good
feeling to stand here when I consider the suffering that is going on and the
I
commend the government of
We
have a situation in northern
We
have an activity that is going on in Churchill right now, the spaceport
development. We look forward to good
things happening there. We will continue
asking the government in a good way that they support the initiatives of the
people in Churchill with respect to job creation, developmental activities of
that nature. We will encourage this
government as well, on matters that relate to the federal government, to stand
with the people of Rupertsland by intervening and writing letters on behalf of
the communities in Rupertsland.
In
Gillam we have a crisis centre, and certainly family violence is no stranger to
the communities that I represent as well, but we need this government to be
proactive in this activity in Gillam as well.
We need them to be a willing partner to the community of Gillam and also
to the First Nations people of
We
have many outstanding issues in this province that require our collective attention
as a matter of the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry.
We have many excellent recommendations, and we need to be in partnership
with government to ensure that the recommendations are carried out that are
contained in the AJI. As well, we have
had the recently released First Nations child welfare task force report, and I
was pleased to hear the Justice minister talk this afternoon and the
discussions that she has undertaken with First Nations communities with respect
to policing. We certainly need that in
Rupertsland as well, and I do encourage her.
I am glad to hear that the dialogue has begun with respect to having the
tripartite arrangement become a reality in the
I
talked about the gains that my people have made, and at the same time I am also
very careful that there is still a lot of work to be done and there is still a
lot of need in our communities. I talked
a little while ago about some of the diseases that do exist in the communities that
I represent. Alcoholism, drug abuse,
solvent abuse, those things I talked about earlier, family violence, sexual
abuse.
*
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It
is my belief that people be empowered to deal with those things. An example of how they have dealt with that
is in Hollow Water, by allowing the community to come up with their own
arrangements with respect to dealing with some of those issues in that
community. I certainly encourage them as
well to carry on.
In
Rupertsland too, I am happy to say that we have wilderness camps that have been
operating for the last several years. It
is a way of taking our youth from the environment, we can call the negative
environment, of some of the communities where they are exposed to drinking and
family violence, those sort of things.
We
have Gods River, St. Theresa Point, Bloodvein, Shamattawa, who have undertaken
initiatives to develop wilderness camps where our kids are given back a little
bit of their culture, are given back a little bit of their pride, a restoration
of pride and a restoration of their lives and the way their forefathers and
grandfathers lived and given a sense of pride that they should be proud of
their First Nationhood.
We
had the opportunity of being in
Throughout
Rupertsland, both for aboriginal and nonaboriginal people, there is a sense
that we want to have economic and training opportunities and we want to be able
to give our children an opportunity to see into the future, give them some hope
as opposed to revisiting the residential school system by way of boot camps.
I
am no stranger to residential schools. I
have witnessed the abuses that go on there, having been a student at a
residential school; perhaps not many here have had that opportunity.
We
are‑‑I am anyway‑‑and so are the people that I sit
with, will be constructive in our criticism for the needs of northern
Manitobans. If I wanted to fight
somebody, we would do that somewhere else.
I
want to explain a few things that I am very proud of. The diversity of the caucus that I sit with‑‑we
have two First Nations people here, we have a Metis, an Inuit, and women in
this caucus, all with their own training, their own experience and their own
talents. I commend them for that, but I
do not ignore the talents of other people in this House as well. That is the traditional respect that I was
talking about earlier. Each and every one
of the people in this House have their own separate talents, and I admire that.
We
are in the process in this province of dismantling the Department of Indian
Affairs,
We
are, as well, in support of the dismantling of Indian Affairs, on this side
anyway, but at the same time we must assure First Nations governments that they
will be dealt with with respect on matters and on issues that relate to the
province.
When
the throne speech was talked about, we did not hear a whole lot about northern
We
have as well some healing programs that are happening in northern
I
do not think it is the desire of the people I represent that they live on
welfare. As I indicated earlier, 98
percent of our people are unemployed in Rupertsland and social assistance is
certainly not the answer for the people that I have talked with in detail. We must make every effort to ensure that
opportunities are given to northern Manitobans as other northern Manitobans
have been given that respect.
I
think many times particularly First Nations people, Indian people, have been
regarded as a drain on the taxpayers' dollar.
I want to go on record as saying that my people have been proud and are
proud people and have been willing contributors to this society and to the
development of this province.
In
conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I cannot make any apology for being a part of a social
democratic party. To me it is a natural
parallel from the traditional First Nations government that I am familiar
with. I cannot be anything else, because
I believe in the good of all and I do not base my thinking for myself and my
own individual needs.
Mr.
Speaker, I would like to thank you for your kind help, to the members of this
House for showing their respect. I know
that is part of the way it is done here on a person's initial speech. I want to thank the members of this House for
rendering that respect to me.
It
is my commitment to speak on behalf of the people who have elected me to work,
hopefully, in a good way with people who are in government in this House so
that the people whom I represent in northern Manitoba will get just a small,
small piece of what is going on in this province overall. That is all we ask for, the First Nations
people and all other people in Rupertsland.
Cree
spoken
[English]
In
conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I thank you for your honourable way of conducting
yourself and, as well, I thank all members in this House.
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. I would like to thank the
honourable member for Rupertsland with his comments on his first speech, and as
we have customarily done, we have allowed a member to speak in a language other
than English or French. The only thing
we would ask the honourable member for Rupertsland is that he would provide
Hansard with a translation of what he actually said in the Cree language. Thank you.
*
(1610)
Point
of Order
Mr.
Kevin Lamoureux (Second Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, I would move,
seconded by the member for Crescentwood (Ms. Gray), that the member for Osborne
(Ms. McCormick) be now heard.
Mr.
Steve Ashton (Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, under Rule
32, I want to indicate I am not debating the motion; it is not debatable. But it is a rather unusual motion, and I am
just wondering with leave of the House if there might be some way in which we
could get some explanation from the Liberal House leader informing members of
the House why the motion is being made.
We have a normal speaking rotation.
It might assist in terms of dealing with this motion. Once again, it is by leave. I understand there is no possibility of
debating this.
Speaker's
Ruling
Mr.
Speaker: The honourable
member for
I
am ruling the honourable member's motion out of order. The reason for ruling it out of order is that
on January 24, 1984, Mr. Graham, the then‑member for Virden, rose on a
point of order and moved that the member for Morris at that time be now heard.
In
making his motion Mr. Graham referred to Rule 32, which states very
clearly: "When two or more members
rise to speak, the Speaker shall call upon the member who first rose in his
place; but a motion may be made that any other member who has risen 'be now
heard' or 'do now speak,' and the motion shall forthwith be put without
debate."
Mr.
Speaker Walding ruled as follows:
"The Honourable Member for Virden will no doubt be aware that it is
not permissible to rise on a point of order to move an amendment or a motion or
a resolution."
Therefore,
the honourable member's point of order is out of order.
*
* *
Mr.
Brian Pallister (Portage la Prairie): Mr. Speaker, it is my extreme pleasure to
rise and to comment on the Speech from the Throne in this year of the House;
and, before I begin, I would like to sincerely welcome all members of the House
back into action and tell them that I wish them the very best of luck in this
coming session, which promises to be a very challenging session in many
respects.
I
would also like to especially welcome the new members of our House. Being the only true sophomore, I guess, in
this House, I am very sympathetic to the decisions that those members made to
let their names stand for election, and I recognize the difficulties that their
families and themselves will face in their first full year in the House, so I
congratulate them.
At
the same time I would like to congratulate the member for Rupertsland (Mr.
Robinson) for a fine speech in his first speech in the House, and as well all
the other new members in their first speeches, those who have spoken thus far. They have been very good, and I congratulate
them as well.
*
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I
also would like to welcome back the Pages, legislative staff, and Mr. Speaker,
you yourself, in what promises to be a most demanding session for you
certainly.
Also,
I would like to, not congratulate, I guess, Mr. Speaker, but just support the
member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) in his decision to leave this House. I know that it must have been a difficult
decision for him. Just as it is a
difficult decision to enter politics, I am sure it is also a difficult decision
to leave. Finally, I would like to, at
this opportunity, congratulate and offer thanks to all the spouses and, in
particular, to my wife for the support that they have to show for this
difficult and very demanding position that we all have here.
Mr.
Speaker, there is a prayer I think most members of the House are familiar with
that says: God grant me the serenity to
accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change those things I can,
and the wisdom to know the difference. I
believe that this throne speech illustrates that this government has the wisdom
to know the difference. I think it is
very important to know the difference.
On a personal level, we only have so much time; we only have so many
resources; and it is vitally important that we focus those resources in a
meaningful way for the achievement of betterment in our lives. It is important that we do not squander our
resources and dilute them and reduce our effectiveness as individuals. It is doubly important, of course, that
governments learn that lesson themselves.
I believe this government understands that.
Based
on the opposition remarks thus far, I am not convinced that they do, however,
Mr. Speaker. I believe that many of the
comments indicate a support of and a belief in big government and a return to
such big government as we had during the NDP term in the 1980s.
Mr.
Speaker, my father was a farmer. He
farmed for 50 years. He put in a lot of
crops. He was a good farmer, and he
understood the importance of knowing your role and your responsibilities when
you farm. My father never once claimed
to create a good crop, yet governments of all political stripes would claim
that they create jobs. Nothing could be
further from the truth.
Mr.
Speaker, a good farmer is responsible for creating an environment where good
crops can grow, and a good government understands that, and this is a good
government. We have the third highest
job creation in '93, the second best employment record consistently over the
last two and a half years in this country, and even the most partisan of
observers would understand and realize that what we are doing is beginning to
work. It is working. Through such key measures as reintroducing
sanity to the Workers Compensation Board, reducing the payroll tax to over 90
percent of
I
do not believe that Liberal and New Democrat members have illustrated their
understanding of the correct role of government in terms of job creation. I believe they lack the wisdom to know the
difference. I do not believe that they
have a full understanding or appreciation of the power of the private sector in
our society. A recent example would be
the federal Liberals. The federal
Liberal red book proposed a $6‑billion infrastructure program that would
create 20,000 jobs in the first year and 60,000 jobs over a three‑year
period. However, Mr. Speaker, before one
shovel hit the ground, in March of 1994, Statistics Canada tells us that
employment jumped 62,000 in construction and manufacturing in Canada‑‑62,000
in one month. What the quick‑fix
strategy would purportedly have accomplished over a three‑year period,
the private sector did in one month and all of that without the aid of dollars
stolen from the future.
Our
government's framework for economic development and economic growth accepts the
importance of strong public sector leadership, but we understand that the bulk
of new jobs and investment will be the creation of the private sector. I was formerly employed in a private
business, Mr. Speaker, one of my own, as I believe you were. A number of my colleagues on this side of the
House have owned and operated small businesses.
I
understand the challenges of running a small business very well. I understand them first‑hand, because I
have faced those challenges in my own life.
I understand the day‑to‑day stresses of running a small
business. I understand the
insecurities. I understand that there is
no guaranteed pay cheque. I understand
that there is no negotiated specific job description to which I can adhere in
my small business, and I understand that if I work very hard and I work very
smart and I satisfy my customers' every need, I might get paid.
Over
the 12 years prior to entering politics, Mr. Speaker, my little one‑person
company started out of my house grew to have seven employees. I created jobs. I had no assistance from government
whatsoever. I had no grants. I asked for no handouts, nor did I receive
any. Never a dollar went from the
taxpayer to government and some pennies back to me.
I
remember, however, my first experience in dealing with government. After four years in private business, I made
the major decision to risk some cash and hire someone to work with me, to
create a job. This is a difficult
decision when one realizes that there is no way to resell that asset to recoup
some of your investment. Certainly, I
chose, after some long deliberations, to hire an employee and did so. My employee is a single mother with two
children to support, and in exchange for her skills in my business, I was able
to give her some economic self‑sufficiency. We both benefited from that exchange, and
that is the way job creation works.
So,
after the first four months of us working together in our little business, Mr.
Speaker, I was quite surprised to receive a letter from the government of the
day. It was with some excitement that my
assistant and I opened this letter, thinking perhaps that it might be a letter
of congratulations for creating a job. I
was wrong. When I opened it, it was not
a letter of congratulations. In fact,
what it was was a notice from the Finance department of Eugene Kostyra, I
believe, saying that I should pay a tax.
Because I created a job, I should pay a tax.
Mr.
Speaker, I must say this disappointed me, as I am sure it did disappoint many
in the private sector, whom now today all parties in this House recognize as
being the key to job creation. This was
the New Democratic Party's method of encouraging small business, to give the
real creators of wealth a bill when they hired someone. No wonder people refer to it as a dying
movement.
This
particular dynasty, a short‑term duration fortunate for the people of
Someone
who should know said, in September of 1993, that the New Democratic Party
suffers from not enough people who bring with them a business sense. That was someone who should know, Mr.
Speaker. That was former Premier Howard
Pawley. Unfortunately, there is all too
much evidence of that contention in this House on a day‑to‑day
basis.
This
government has an understanding of the importance of private sector investment
and trade. It understands where our jobs
are going to be coming from in future.
The policies of this government are beginning to work. They are working, and it is nowhere more
clear than in my home town of
It
has been said that tough times make for better managers, and we certainly have
improved management skills in
But
for many reasons, because of the agricultural diversity of our area perhaps,
because of our willingness to be innovative, because of our willingness to face
up to the fears we have and respond to the opportunities that we see, because
of our location perhaps as a transportation centre on the main rail lines, both
CN and CP and on the Trans‑Canada Highway and the junction with the
Yellowhead route, we are well positioned for business development.
I
can tell you, Mr. Speaker, with some pride, that I obtained last week the
employment figures from Canada Employment for our community of
*
(1630)
Now
the good news, Mr. Speaker. The number
of private sector businesses that have created jobs is many, over 40 new small
businesses in my community in the last three years. The total number of jobs, according to Canada
Employment, that have been created in
Mr.
Speaker, I have a list here of all the small businesses that have opened, the
businesses that have expanded. I tell
you I am very thankful and very impressed and very honoured to represent a
constituency that responds so well to the employment challenges that our
community has faced. We have responded
well as a community. Our community
leadership deserves congratulations for their planning initiatives, for their
willingness to co‑operate with one another so that we could more capably
use our resources.
Also
I think we, as a government, deserve some credit as well, because it is in the
environment that this government has created and allowed to perpetuate that
this community and area that I make my home in has been able to create these
many jobs. I am very thankful that we
did not have an antibusiness NDP government in power when we were faced with
these challenges.
Churchill
said nothing recalls the past so potently as a smell. When I think of the NDP I think of the odour
of burning bridges, bridges burned between private enterprise and their
movement. There are many in my
constituency who recall the things that happened during that term of office
that preceded our own. They will not
soon forget it, Mr. Speaker.
Not
only is my constituency the most attractive and diverse in this province, but
we are without a doubt the best hosts.
This summer, once again, we will be home to the Portage Strawberry
Festival, which I believe many members of this House have had the privilege of
attending. I am reminded that the former
member did bring strawberries in an attempt to quash perhaps some of the vocal
opposition of members opposite.
This
summer, however, we have a very exciting event, and I want to inform the
members opposite and my colleagues of this event. For this summer, we have already gotten
together over 400 volunteers to organize the centennial of the Portage Collegiate
Institute, my old school. I am very
pleased to tell the members opposite and my colleagues that we expect over
5,000 people in
People
are going to be coming from all across
My
community is a great community, but we have our problems and we know that. This is a great province, but this province
has problems, as well. We are reminded
of that frequently in this House, and we are reminded of it as we meet with our
constituents, but the way to deal with our problems is not to ignore them and
focus on the fears that they produce in us.
The way to deal with them is through intelligent action. That is the kind of action this throne speech
alludes to.
I
am pleased to see initiatives underway to deal with the problems of youth
violence and youth crime. Too many
Manitobans have been victimized by crime and particularly the crimes of
youth. The youth violence summit was a
valuable process for allowing a productive outlet for the concerns that
Manitobans have and that we all share around this very, very vital and
important issue.
It
was a useful process, not just because of the input that it allowed, but
because of the action plans that were developed as a consequence of that youth
violence summit. So I think we are all
pleased to see this nine‑point plan of attack developed by the Minister
of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey), and she is to be complimented for her initiative, I
think, in that area.
I
am pleased to see commitments made to proceed with wilderness camps. I think that many of us recognize that over
the last 15 to 20 years in our society there has been a direct inverse
relationship between the degree to which we have been willing to use deterrents
and discipline in our society and the incidence of youth crime and violence.
Restrictions
on access to drivers' licences is a good common sense, positive step in my
estimation, but I wonder about the degree of recognition that members opposite
give to this serious problem when I hear people say things like, when a young
person commits a crime, they themselves are the victim. When I hear a statement like that made, I
think it is quite possible that we are ignoring the real victim.
The
real victim that concerns me and that should concern all of us is not the
perpetrator of a violent act, it is the victim who is on the receiving end of
that violent act. Law abiding society
deserves protection, Mr. Speaker, our seniors especially, who helped build this
country, who gave us many of the institutions and the benefits that we
experience today.
When
I travel around my constituency and meet with them, many of them actually live
in fear within their own homes. That is
a shame, and we must make every effort to make sure that when someone becomes
the victim of a violent crime, of a crime on their property, that it does not
happen again.
Some
say we are ignoring prevention. Some say
we are focusing on punishment, not treatment.
Mr. Speaker, in my family where I grew up, the punishment was the
prevention. It is indelibly linked in my
backside that the punishment is the prevention.
I do believe that anyone who suggests that suitable punishment is not a
form of prevention is living in some kind of psychological fantasyland.
I
have been pleased to see initiatives taken in my own
I
have asked young people in my community and my constituency what their feelings
are about this issue of youth violence and crime. I can tell you that in listening to their
answers two very important statements that are consistent with many that I
talked to emerged. Number 1, young
people in Portage la Prairie tell me that they want to know the rules, and,
secondly, they tell me, they want the rules enforced.
Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to see the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey) listening to
Manitobans. She has had community
input. When she speaks, she speaks with
the voice of concerned Manitobans, concerned Manitobans who are tired of lip
service. Plato said some years ago that
liberalism will flourish in society until chaos reigns supreme. I would suggest that chaos is very close to
reigning supreme today in
I
would like to make reference, if I could, to some of the comments by the Leader
of the Second Opposition (Mr. Edwards) in his response to the Speech from the
Throne. In the serenity prayer which I
alluded to earlier it talks about the courage to change. I think one of the things that we must do is
change the image of politicians in the minds of Manitobans in terms of our
willingness to play havoc with the full and complete truth in our statements.
(Mr.
Ben Sveinson, Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
When
the member for St. James (Mr. Edwards) says, for example, that his solution to
the fiscal problems of this province would be that we achieve revenue growth of
4 percent, and suggests that this government has not responded well because we
have not achieved a 4 percent level of growth, I must remind him that there is
only one jurisdiction not only in Canada but in North America that has achieved
4 percent revenue growth over the last six years, and that is B.C. They have done it by selling their province
out to the
As
well, when the Leader of the Liberal Party says that we are not listening, I
would suggest to him that misrepresents the truth and the facts. The fact is that we have had in my
constituency alone 17 different members of this government in attendance and
all of them ready to listen and, according to many of my constituents, acting
on many of those suggestions they have heard.
*
(1640)
A
recent example, the Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship (Mr.
Gilleshammer) visited on Friday. The
Finance minister came to
The
Health minister, the Honourable Jim McCrae visited
Suggesting
that we are not listening especially to people who are trying to pay their
mortgage is just a terminological inexactitude, Mr. Acting Speaker. The fact is, I have listened to many people
in recent days who have renewed their mortgages. Unfortunately for them, the rates have gone
up considerably due to the inappropriate remarks made by the federal Finance
minister, and I suggest to the Leader of the Second Opposition that if he were
listening to the people who were renewing their mortgages, such as I have been
doing, he would find they are exceedingly displeased with some of those
inappropriate comments.
I
suggest that it is important to try to be completely truthful at all times, and
when I listen to some of the statements, specific statements that the Leader of
the Second Opposition makes in regard to cuts he would not have made, I would
question whether the comments are genuine or not. I must question that because frankly, when
you add up all the things that the Liberal Leader would not have done that this
government has done, such as Civil Service days off, staff reductions in the
Civil Service, health care spending reductions, various grants to various
special interest groups, would not have cut education funding. We have to remember that with all of these
promises there is no election yet. I can
hardly wait to see how much it is going to cost us when an election is called,
when the Leader of the Liberal Party begins to make even further promises in an
effort to buy support.
The
education portion of property tax, he says the other day, he will not collect
that from the farm people. VLTs to local
communities, VLT monies will go totally to local communities. That is not to mention the programs that the
Liberal Leader would introduce. To his
credit, he has put some of those on record, and I applaud that, but he should
also when he puts that on record talk about what they will cost and who will
pay for them.
Now,
training initiatives‑‑we are talking tax breaks here; upping
funding to community colleges; guaranteed annual income: you know, these are really nice sounding
things, and I am sure that many people who do not understand the financial nature
of what a government is trying to do and do not understand the nature of
scarcity of resources in our province will be very excited by a lot of these
comments, but when you add these up, in my estimation, you are talking about so
far over $600 million.
I
learned a new phrase when I came here, Mr. Acting Speaker. It is a phrase that apparently is used by all
political people. It says something like
this: when you rob Peter to pay Paul,
you can count on the support of Paul.
Well, I would suggest there is going to be a lot of robbing Peter to pay
Paul under this jurisdiction. This is
not fully and completely honest or fair in my estimation. When one talks about spending $600 million,
one should explain where that is going to come from. I suggest most Manitobans understand where it
will come from. It will come from tax
increases; that is where it will come from.
I think it is contingent upon the Liberal Leader to explain that aspect
of things in a responsible way when he offers to benefit various special
interest groups in our province.
Another
challenge we all face is to be consistent in our policy positions. I think it is important to recognize that the
Liberal Leader has not done that in his comments. In Hansard, on page 137, he makes it very
clear that he is against market‑driven education.
He
says, and I quote: all forms of post‑secondary
education should not be market driven.
That seems to be the attitude of this government, and that is wrong.
Great. Now we understand where the Liberal Leader
stands on that important issue‑‑firmly with the New Democratic
Party. However, that is just for a
while, because if you read on to page 145, you find the Leader of the Second
Opposition (Mr. Edwards) making this statement, and I quote: Training must be relevant and market driven.
Okay,
now we have got it: The single biggest
challenge that we face is not just‑‑and I quote‑‑the
training itself but channelling the training so that it is relevant to the
needs of the marketplace.
Well,
this is wonderful. Now we are on both sides
of that issue. Yes, you see Manitobans
want more than Liberal flip‑flops all the time. They want more than a weather‑vane
leader that just goes every which way the wind blows. When I hear the Liberal Leader talk, I get
this vision in my mind of a little fellow running after a crowd of people
saying: Wait for me, I am your Leader,
wait for me.
You
know, if the Liberal policies were written down, I would suggest they would be
written in pencil, and they would come with an eraser or copious amounts of
wite‑out, because there is very little consistency in what the Liberal
Party presents to the people of Manitoba on any issue.
All
too often in recent days in this House, the Liberal Leader reminds me and many
other people in this Chamber of a marionette, and Ottawa is pulling all the
strings. It is not something that
Manitobans want or deserve in the leadership; that is followership.
I
am reminded of a TV program when I was a boy.
It was a very popular show, and many of you may have watched it. It involved a little fellow named Archie
Wood. Archie Wood sat on Uncle Bob's
knee. I think Uncle Bob could be played
very well by Lloyd Axworthy in recent days.
Even though Uncle Bob's lips did not move that much, you knew that when
Archie talked, it was Uncle Bob doing the talking. Now, there is a difference. The difference is, even Archie once in a
while talked back to Uncle Bob.
If
one wanted to sum up the Liberal's position thus far expressed, they would use
one word, and it would be "spending."
That is what this party stands for, and they have made it eminently
clear. This is the party who will buy
votes at any cost, with fuzzy rhetoric.
They will buy votes with catering to special interest groups. They will try to use an old tactic that is
now very outdated. They will try to buy
popularity, and they will do it with borrowed money. Manitobans are not on with that old
tactic. They are not in the mood. The Liberal Party may try very hard to buy
popularity, they may try very hard to buy votes, but Manitobans are not
selling.
The
other night my two‑year‑old daughter woke up in the night. She was having a bad dream, and the world is
full of fearful things for a little two‑year‑old‑‑boogeymen
and so on, a lot of unknowns. I went into
the bedroom and I comforted her and I held her and told her, honey, there is
nothing to be afraid of, and she gradually went back to sleep. But as she did that, I realized that I had
not told her the complete truth, because as surely as there is nothing to fear
in her little bed, there is a lot to fear out in the real world, a lot to be
concerned with, and we know that. We are
trying very hard to recognize that. I
think the members opposite recognize it, too.
I
realized my responsibility as a parent, one of the greatest responsibilities I
might ever have in my life, was to teach her how to stand up and face her fears
head on and not turn and walk away from them but face them and challenge them
and gather together her resources and do the best she could for personal
betterment, to teach her not to make excuses, not to back down, not to blame
somebody else, but to accept the responsibility that she has as a young person
in her life and as an adult to strive for betterment with every ounce of her
strength.
Any
of you here in this House with me who have children, I am sure, would want
exactly the same thing for your child.
You would want them to have courage.
This Speech from the Throne is about courage. It is about recognizing the real fears that
Manitobans have, the real fears that they have about their future security,
about their health care system, their education system, the relevance of their
education system, about employment prospects, the real concerns that Manitobans
have about the futures of their families and of their businesses and of their
farms.
*
(1650)
Each
of us has fears, but each of us must make a personal decision as to how we
respond, how we act on those fears.
Being afraid is an irrational emotion.
Catering to fear is catering to an irrational and unproductive emotion
in human beings. I remember as a boy I
woke up in the middle of the night one night and I was frightened, I was
paralyzed with fear. I was sure that
there was something under my bed, and I lay there quivering in the darkness,
perspiring, listening to every sound, not knowing what to do. I lay there for what seemed like an hour‑‑it
was probably just a minute‑‑and finally it hit me. I have to do something if I am going to get
out of this predicament. I have to take
some action. I have to take some steps
here. So slowly and carefully I took the
sheets off, and gingerly I stepped down off the bed and I looked under the bed,
and what was there? A big slimy
monster? The member for Transcona? There was nothing there.
Now
I am not suggesting Manitobans have no basis for their fears, but I am
suggesting the only way we can overcome those fears is through intelligent
action. So catering to inaction,
catering to indecision and to blind irrational fear would be the least
productive thing that we could do as a government or that the members opposite
could do in opposition. Yet every day in
this House we hear a constant catering to blind irrational fears.
The
people of my community were afraid. When
we lost over 400 jobs within a six‑month period, we were desperately
afraid, but we did not stop there. We
acted. We acted with courage. We were not too afraid to act, and because of
that we have rebuilt a community that was on the verge of destruction.
You
know, I am afraid that members opposite all too often are willing to cater to
the lowest in people and that is disappointing, because there are positive
things. It is tougher to build. We know that.
It is tougher to build. It is
easy to knock, and it is easy to criticize.
I
share this poem with the members opposite, and I do it in the spirit of
friendship: Am I a builder? I watched them tearing a building down, a
gang of men in a busy town. With a ho
heave ho and a lusty yell they swung a beam and the side wall fell. I asked the foreman, are these men skilled
and the men you'd hire if you had to build?
He gave a laugh, he said no indeed, just common labour is all I need. I can easily wreck in a day or two what
builders have taken a year to do. And I
thought to myself as I went away, which of these roles have I tried to
play? Am I a builder who works with
care, measuring life by the rule and square?
Am I shaping my deeds to a well‑made plan, patiently doing the
best I can? Or am I a wrecker who walks
the town content with the labour of tearing down?
The
New Democrats are content, I believe they are all too often content, to try to
wrestle the fears from each and every Manitoban, and it takes no skill. I believe all too often the members of the
Liberal caucus do the same thing, and I look forward to the comments of the two
new members in that caucus. I hope they
can bring a refreshing change to the Liberal caucus.
I
can tell you this, that people in
The
trouble with we socialists, said Tommy Douglas, is we think with our hearts not
our heads. Mr. Acting Speaker, with all
due respect to Mr. Douglas who accomplished great things as an individual in
this country and in its history, he is not on on that statement, because you
see, when someone does not think with their head they are thoughtless, and when
someone is thoughtless they are heartless.
It is not on to say that someone who does not think with their head is
compassionate. The members opposite
would like to claim that they are the soul of compassion.
Let
me tell you that when someone mismanages their resources in their own home,
trying to spend to such a degree that they give their children every single
thing and cannot look after their own children the next year, that is
mismanagement and that is not compassionate.
When someone in business overspends excessively, then goes out of
business, that is no happy day for the employees of that company or for the
customers of that company.
(Mr.
Speaker in the Chair)
The
member for
Mismanagement
is not compassionate. Mismanagement is
thoughtless and nothing else, and when a party that tripled the provincial debt
in just six years of incredible mismanagement claims to be compassionate, I
would have to dispute that as a basic mutancy of the facts.
In
conclusion, Mr. Speaker‑‑
Point
of Order
Ms.
Becky Barrett (
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. I would remind the honourable
member that she does not have a point of order.
That is clearly a dispute over the facts.
*
* *
Mr.
Pallister: . . . deeply
and totally ashamed therefore for the mismanagement of the NDP government of
which many members opposite were a part.
The throne speech and the responses of the opposition leaders to it
offer us insight into the differing directions we may choose as Manitobans.
We
may choose to go different ways. The NDP
way would be the way of big government, turning your back on the future and
going back to the ways of big government.
The NDP way would be to return to the days of high taxes and an
antibusiness mentality, of incompetence and mismanagement.
What
would the Liberal way be? Well, the
Liberal way would be to go around buying popularity with borrowed money, a
chicken in every pot, or pothole for that matter, contradictory positions,
spending their way to electoral success, trying to be all things to all people,
being nothing to anyone. Both parties
catering to their fears and the fears of Manitobans, ignorant of the serenity
prayer, which says to have the wisdom to know the difference, lacking the
wisdom to know their role.
Our
way, this government's way, would be to understand the concerns, to understand
the goals and the strengths of Manitobans, willing to listen and willing to
lead, not practising the politics of pessimism or of fear. That is not the
This
throne speech and this government recognize and reflect what is best in the
Thank
you.
*
(1700)
Ms.
Norma McCormick (Osborne):
Mr. Speaker, it is truly an honour and a privilege to rise to speak in
this Chamber today.
This
is my first speech, as I was elected in the by‑election of September 21,
1993. I note that you have kept your
commitment to us as newly elected members to be present when we first address
the House, and I am honoured that I am addressing my first remarks to you.
I
thank you and the other members of the House for your words of welcome and, in
turn, my welcome and congratulations to the members for The Maples (Mr.
Kowalski), Rupertsland (Mr. Robinson), Rossmere (Mr. Schellenberg) and St.
Johns (Mr. Mackintosh), who were elected at the same time that I was.
As
is customary, I would like to begin by expressing my thanks to the voters of
Osborne constituency who have placed their confidence in me. I have given them my commitment that I will
work hard to ensure that they are well represented.
I
am deeply indebted to the members of my family, my friends and the members of
my constituency association, who worked so hard to get me elected. Among these friends I count many former
members of this House‑‑the Honourable Lloyd Axworthy, Reg Alcock,
who held this seat prior to his move to Parliament, Dr. Laurie Evans, Dr. Allan
Patterson, and two members of my constituency association executive, Mark
Minenko and June Westbury.
It
is of particular significance to me that the place that I have been assigned
here in this Chamber was once occupied by June Westbury, my supporter, mentor
and friend, who is here in the Chamber today.
Last
September was an interesting time in the political history, with the direction
of health care reform resulting in cutbacks to home care services and fee
increases for nursing home residents. It
became apparent as we campaigned door to door in the constituency that these
decisions were having a profound impact on many members in our constituency. Many people I spoke to were either directly
affected because they had been deprived of much needed service or were the
husbands and wives, sons and daughters and relatives of seniors who are being
affected and who are now anticipating that they would have to fill the gaps in
service. The shuffling of the provincial
cabinet and the calling of the federal election only added to the excitement
and anticipation.
Since
becoming a member of the Legislature, I have benefited from the kindness and
generosity of many who are here today, especially the members of my own caucus
and the women on both sides of the House, both government and opposition, who
have listened and sympathized with me as I expressed my frustration in the
conduct of members of this House.
No
sooner had the final note of God Save the Queen faded away than it became
apparent that the knives were out and the insults and accusations began. The excitement and awe with which I watched
the opening on April 7 was quickly replaced by a range of other less welcome emotion. These included anger and disgust and then,
worst of all, embarrassment.
Each
day, Mr. Speaker, you introduced between 75 and 100 students in the
gallery. For many this is their first
introduction to politics and to the Legislature. Undoubtedly, prior to their arrival in the
gallery, they have been told of the significance of the events which occur in
this Chamber, how important is our work, and cautioned by their teachers to
maintain a standard of ordered behaviour while they watch us go about the
business of Question Period. We all know
that first impressions are lasting. At a
time when politicians are held in almost universal low esteem by a majority of
the public, we can ill afford to reinforce this negative stereotype in these
students who will be voters in about five years.
For
three days of the last week it was Grade 9 students from Churchill who took in
these performances. I went to greet and
speak to them after Question Period and answered questions as to why adults
would behave like this. Mr. Speaker, I
am ill prepared to defend the indefensible.
What is added to my despair is that many members I have spoken to have
said the same thing: I felt the same way
you do when I was first elected. What is
the message here, that given a bit more exposure to this conduct I too will
find it tolerable, even to the point of eager participation? If so, this will be the first situation of my
personal, academic or professional life in which I am expected to behave in a
rude and unco‑operative way.
Mr.
Speaker, I have thought long and hard about what I was going to say here today,
and this is why this matter bothers me to the point that I am compelled to take
up some of my valuable 40 minutes of the time I have to speak. Then I came upon something written by Liberal
M.P. Paul Martin which I want to read into the record as I observe that the
women in this Chamber have a higher standard of conduct than do the men:
Once
you join the Commons fraternity, you begin to understand why there are so few
women here. It is not just the lack of
money to finance their campaigns, it becomes apparent that women find less
reward from trying to win elected office than from working in the advocacy
groups that attempt to influence Parliament, groups that are often not only
mostly staffed by women, but headed by women.
They watch the antics in Question Period and conclude that party
politics is a joke. The way to get more
women into politics is to make it more relevant. We can only do this by getting rid of the
unproductive partnerships and the image of parliamentarians as useless
ciphers. Watching the male‑dominated
activities of Parliament in contrast to the female‑dominated groups
working on poverty, child care and environmental issues convinces you of
something, that men parade and women accomplish.
Mr.
Speaker, I have made myself two promises as I go on the record today to express
my disillusionment with the conduct in our Chamber. The first is that I will not participate in
it and that I will actively discourage it among other members of my
caucus. I am calling on the women on
both the government and opposition sides of the House to do likewise.
My
second commitment is that I will never criticize the House without offering
what I believe to be positive suggestions or alternatives. In keeping with this spirit, I have four
suggestions, Mr. Speaker, one or more of which could be implemented to improve
the decorum in the House and which are likely to make your job easier.
The
first comes from my experience of more than 20 years in children's
services. If I learned nothing more from
these years, I learned this, that little people who do not have enough activity
to keep themselves busy find ways of getting into trouble. I therefore have brought packages of crayons
to keep the honourable members purposefully busy while others are trying to
speak.
The
second suggestion is that we introduce a tradition that comes from native
culture. This came from the suggestion
of the daughter of the member for The Maples (Mr. Kowalski). The tradition coming from native culture is
that of grandfather. Grandfather
represents wisdom and is symbolized by the rock, held in the hand of the
speaker, indicating that the speaker is offering wise counsel. The rock is passed from person to
person. Only the person holding the rock
is entitled to speak. Of course, it
would be up to you, Mr. Speaker, to determine which of the honourable members
in this House can be trusted with a rock.
The
third suggestion comes from my own experience of last Monday. My mother was in the gallery the day I asked
my first question in the House. I knew
this was a proud day for both of us, and I wanted her to approve of my
presentation. Mr. Speaker, could we
consider renaming the Speaker's Gallery to the mothers' gallery? Certainly the watchful presence of mothers in
the gallery could improve the conduct in this House.
My
last alternative would be powerful but would have the net effect of slowing
down the proceedings in the House‑‑a simple change to calculate the
speaking time of the members not as running time, but as speaking time, with
members compensated with extra minutes for the time robbed by others by
interruption, heckling, catcalls, accusations and insults. Members might think twice about interrupting
if the net effect was only to prolong the speaking time of the member who has
the floor.
Now,
Mr. Speaker, I want to briefly talk to you about my reactions to those areas in
the throne speech which are of particular interest to me in the context of my
personal and professional experience, and these are the areas for which I have
assumed critic responsibilities for our Liberal caucus.
A
central theme in the throne speech is our important responsibility to our
children, to provide security in their lives and to build confidence in the
future. The claim is made that the
government has made this responsibility a fundamental guiding principle and has
worked hard to renew the social programs which we value so highly. There are certain inconsistencies between
words and action. The throne speech
references the intention to renew its commitment in this Year of the Family to
support families and the importance of family responsibility, but let us
examine the record.
*
(1710)
This
is the government responsible for daycare cutbacks, who reduced the access of
low‑income parents to daycare services by capping the number of subsidy‑eligible
child care spaces at 9,600 when the economic conditions are putting many
families in greater need for subsidized care.
Home
care cutbacks have eliminated housecleaning, laundry and meal preparation
support to many seniors and have pushed this burden back onto the adult
children of seniors, often at the expense of time spent with their own
children.
The
Child and Family Services agencies are being squeezed and the consequence is
low priority being given to 16‑ and 17‑year‑olds who require
intervention and support. As these
children and their parents have little access to other service options, the consequence
is a serious service gap, and many children are showing up in the youth justice
system.
This
is the government which disbanded the SKY program, which provided a valuable
service and support to displaced adolescents.
This is the government that tried to silence the voices of those who
advocate on behalf of children, young people and their families and for those
who served them: the foster parents
association, the Family Day Care Association, the Manitoba Child Care
Association, the Manitoba Anti‑Poverty association.
All
those who spoke for the vulnerable, the poor and the disadvantaged and who have
challenged this government to act with wisdom and humanity have been denied
funding support. The educational,
health, employment and social ramifications of these actions are complex and
important enough to justify serious attention.
But
what is the cost of speaking out? What
price has been paid by these organizations for biting the hand that feeds you?
The
International Year of the Family has resulted in many promotional initiatives
coming to the attention of our caucus.
We have taken exception to this public relations exercise, and in doing
so we have requested input from other members of our community.
In
preparation for my inaugural speech and consistent with my stated commitment to
myself and others never to criticize without offering a better alternative, I
contacted many agencies and organizations who serve children and families in
order to seek their input in the preparation of a top 10 list: Ways in which the Year of Family budget could
be better spent. I have some ideas of my
own, but I found many useful ideas that had come in from other organizations.
Here
are their suggestions: $240,000 could
provide training and work experience for 32 single parents and provide them
with enough money to leave welfare for six months, actually a lot more if the
reduction in welfare is factored in; the monies could provide an excellent
television campaign with the goal of ensuring that all children are born
planned and wanted; $240,000 could provide 20 young people with $12,000 to
attend university or college for a year; the monies could pay tuition for 100
single parents who could be supported by welfare to attend university; $240,000
could provide daycare at $2.40 a day and monthly bus passes for 400 single
parents for six months to seek employment or attend school; the money could be
better spent on accessible remedial education programs for young mothers,
possibly an in‑home kind of program; the money could be spent on
parenting programs for young mothers in high‑risk areas or categories;
the money could be spent to provide family support programs for families with
child welfare concerns; $240,000 could provide seed funding for a family self‑help
initiative in high‑risk areas such as some of the subsidized housing
projects that make up a high percentage of single parent, female‑headed
families; the money could be spent on modifying school curriculum dealing with
the family, sexuality and changing roles; the money could be used to develop
awareness or education about new families such as single parents, gay parents
and interracial families; $240,000 could be better spent on supporting family
resource centres that offer a tangible service to families or promoting or
supporting creative initiatives that would strengthen the family unit.
There
are many, many more suggestions, Mr. Speaker.
These suggestions came forward from a variety of organizations.
I
want to now turn to the subject of education.
I have four children, all of whom have benefited from the public
education system here in
Any
educational reform must address the ways in which our educational system is
held accountable for educational attainment and that education maximizes a
student's potential for employment. But
we must be very careful to recognize that our educational system cannot be held
solely responsible for broader social policy failures. Research shows us that children from poor
families are twice as likely to drop out of school before the age of 18,
perpetuating the cycle of disadvantage passed down by their parents and which
will likely be passed on to their children.
Neighbourhoods
and communities of residents tend to affect the structure of opportunities and
incentives available to families to raise their incomes. A study of
Poor
children have a higher incidence of illiteracy, grade failures, inadequate
recreation skills and development than children coming from families that are
not poor. The risk is especially true
for native children. As school divisions
contemplate doing more with less it is expected that education administrators will
make educational activities a priority for expenditure. This means that we can expect school‑base
nutrition and recreation programs to be sacrificed. But as this occurs we will be forced to
consider the possible consequence of the cuts and the effects on the children
who will lose out.
Hungry
children cannot learn, and children with poor relationship and life skills with
no opportunity for the development of recreational interests and abilities will
find other, less socially acceptable ways to occupy their time. No one should be surprised when this results
in increased vandalism, substance abuse, violence and crime. We will perpetuate the crime and poverty
industry which consumes so much of our society's resources: more judges and probation officers, more jail
cells, more boot camps, more family breakdowns, more unemployed persons and
more people on social assistance. We
must be vigilant in protecting our post‑secondary education as well. Increasing costs and cutbacks in student
support deny many talented young people access to university and other post‑secondary
education because of cost and not because of ability, yet a strong and growing
economy depends on maintaining a skilled workforce.
This
government has exploited public fear with respect to issues of personal and
community safety by attempting to deflect attention away from its own social
policy failures and onto young people who are the primary victims of their
failure. In addition to the link between
poverty and health, education and job opportunities, there is mounting evidence
documenting the connection between poverty and criminal offences. The consequence of poverty is that people are
unable to meet their social, educational and employment potential.
When
poor people are denied the enjoyment of healthy and productive lives, they are
unable to make a full contribution to society.
Incarceration of a growing population of young people is doubly costly
through the inherent costs and through lost tax revenues, forgone opportunities
for employment and a mounting burden on social assistance rolls. The proposed get‑tough solutions are
not solutions at all, but only compound the failure. The common vernacular is "blame the
victim."
The
throne speech speaks of Manitoba's health care system as our largest and most
important social program, one which ought to unite Manitobans in a commitment
to health and well‑being, but, again, the failure of this government to
show leadership has caused the debate to pit health care providers against
their employers and unions, and patients against the government and
professionals responsible for providing care.
*
(1720)
There
is no question that reform, including expenditure control, is necessary. It became apparent in the early 1980s that if
the exponential growth of health care spending was allowed to continue, then
the one in four tax dollars spent on our illness care system would grow to one
in two tax dollars by the end of the century.
This means fewer dollars to be spent on roads, schools, daycare,
servicing the public debt and everything else the public money is collected to
do. The problem was apparent then, but
no action was taken. Only when we hit
the crisis of 1990 with falling revenues and increasing expenditures did the
action begin. Depending on which side of
the House you listen to, it is either too little, too late or too much, too
soon.
Our
caucus has identified options which are not being effectively pursued to reduce
demands on our health care system and to save money.
The
consequence of this planning failure in the area of health care reform will
have the biggest impact on the poor and the vulnerable: poor people, elderly people and
children. We must recognize that health
reform to be successful must move us away from making a priority for health
care expenditures which are reactive and toward expenditures on health
promotion and prevention. In the short
term, hungry or impoverished children become interactive, hyperactive or
restless. There is abundant evidence to
establish an enduring link between economic disadvantage in children and the
prevalence of physical and mental illness, developmental disorders, accidental
and premature death.
Inadequate
nutrition compromises a child's cognitive development and their ability to
learn. Malnutrition also affects the
child's ability to modulate activity level in different situations,
appropriately express affection, be socially involved with other children,
respond effectively to stressful problems and to explore new situations and
persist in group activities. There is
increasing evidence that children born in poor families are disadvantaged. In a country where public health standards
rank among the best in the world, our poor children have a higher incidence of
birth weight, a factor which places them at higher risk for perinatal mortality
and mental handicap.
One
of the most creative and worthwhile ideas for addressing this problem was the
Healthy Parent, Healthy Child project, which began and ended in the 1980s and
allowed to die for want of ongoing support.
It was when this tragedy first occurred that I first recognized what I
now call the poverty industry. How much
money do we spend keeping people poor and dependent, and how many people are
employed to achieve this end? We know so
much, but we do so little with what we know.
The legacy of social policy failures of this government and the NDP
government before it are abundantly evident.
Family and child poverty leads to multiple, unnecessary and expensive
limitations on human potential and productivity.
The
throne speech speaks of the importance of access to secure and satisfying
jobs. This government has acknowledged
that unemployment in
Members
of the government would have us believe that the real problem is the state of
the economy. When the economy is in a
recession or depression, unemployment increases, and this necessarily leads to
poverty. The poverty experienced by
This
approach fails to recognize that the most recent economic downturn represents a
more permanent restructuring of the economy, that this government and its
federal counterpart under the Mulroney regime did not anticipate as they might
have done, did not plan for nor respond to in an appropriate way. As a result, many workers were displaced and
found themselves with little support to adjust to the changes.
Job
creation in
Between
1982 and 1989, 44 percent of all jobs created in
Minimum
wage earners are our province's best consumers.
Every cent they earn is pumped back into
These
are significant factors that limit individual and family income. I will be bringing to this House clear
evidence that discrimination against women and the work that they do is
reflected in the unequal distribution of earned income between men and
women. Similarly, we have clear evidence
that discrimination against aboriginal people manifests in their
underrepresentation in the labour force.
How
can we accept that the work of young people, women and our aboriginal citizens
is worth so little? Until we recognize
that if minimum‑wage jobs are all that people can expect by way of
employment and society expects that they will support themselves and support or
contribute to their family's economic survival through minimum‑wage
employment, then a fair living wage for these jobs is a reasonable expectation.
We
also have an obligation to look at what happens when employment income cannot
support the individual and family. We
have a growing number of people who are characterized as the working poor,
earning wages that are inadequate for survival.
This trend became apparent with the growth of food banks, once viewed as
a temporary measure that was expected to disappear after the country recovered
from the 1981‑82 recession. Yet
Winnipeg Harvest estimates that approximately 33,000 people now rely on
emergency food banks each month and over 40 percent are children.
As
an advocate for child care and child welfare, I have worked to bring attention
to the lifelong consequences of child poverty, abuse and neglect. Mr. Speaker, I know the importance of
supporting families to nurture and protect children. In 1991, about 72,000
*
(1730)
I
have received many worthwhile ideas put forward to address the poverty and
despair which characterizes the life of many families and children. More important than the general trends are
the figures which reveal the type of families who are at greatest risk of
living in poverty. There was a time when
the experience of poverty was expected to be temporary or cyclical with
families' incomes changing and with the changing economy. Now, however, a significant minority of
families face continuing circumstances which will make it inadequate for them
to earn an income over the long term.
In
Manitoba the risk of being poor is greatest for children who are six years old
or younger who are supported by single parents, single mothers who have less
than a high school education working part time or not working at all. The risk of poverty is elevated when the head
of a household is an aboriginal person caring for two or more children. Also at risk are families where death of a
partner or marriage breakdown through separation and divorce and families in
which the parents have a physical, mental or emotional problem which affects
their ability to support their family.
I
want to talk specifically about Maintenance Enforcement. The throne speech gave passing mention to
initiatives to improve the Maintenance Enforcement system. This is timely and critically important as
the number of active cases in
We
are led to believe that the Maintenance Enforcement office is currently redesigning
workflow, developing a computer program and doing other things to improve
efficiency and to reduce paper work.
They also hope to hire more case workers. This is one area of government in which the
application of the Filmon Friday concept has slowed down the processing of
maintenance cheques with immediate and serious consequence to families who rely
on that money to support their day‑to‑day needs.
The
breakdown of families with children is a strong predictor for families dropping
below the poverty line. About 40 percent
of marriages end in divorce. After
divorce, children are far more likely to remain with their mothers than with
their fathers. Family breakup therefore
means that the family usually learns that the person loses the earning of the
person who has the largest salary but the family loses none of the
dependents. I know from personal
experience that a divorced woman with minor children in their household
experiences a substantial decline in their standard of living while their former
husbands experience a substantial rise in theirs.
I
am the parent of four children and became a single parent when my youngest son
was four. Through this experience, I
learned about maintenance enforcement.
Average amounts awarded in Canadian courts constitute about 20 percent
of the net income of fathers.
The
inadequacy and noncompliance of court orders for child support by noncustodial
parents play a significant role in the poverty of mothers and children. Three out of four court‑ordered
maintenance orders are not paid in full, not paid on time or not paid at all.
As
families break up, a mother's earning capacity is the single most important
factor in determining her and her children's economic status. Unfortunately, women's pay is still only about
two‑thirds of that of men.
The
low earning capacity of mothers on their own and women's poverty in general is
a reflection of the limited availability of well‑paying jobs for
women. Women continue to be concentrated
in the type of jobs that are particularly vulnerable to boom‑and‑bust
cycles and are overrepresented in part‑time and low‑skilled
occupations.
Women's
economic vulnerability is only exacerbated by motherhood. The trend toward dual‑income earning in
two‑parent families only magnifies the financial hardship of female lone‑parent
families.
The
prevalence of family and child poverty is a gender issue, the structural causes
of which are to be found in assigning women the primary responsibility for the
care of children without giving them the economic support to do so.
Following
graduation from university in 1967, I found my niche working in the human
services field. Within a couple of
years, I began to work in day care in an era when people did not even know what
the term meant. It was at a time when
day care was a welfare alternative, part of the war on poverty, where it was
believed that day care was all that was necessary to get a woman with kids off
welfare and into employment.
The
problem with this thinking was that while many women got off welfare, few
escaped poverty. In fact, a minimum‑wage
job, which is all most women could claim, did little to improve her economic
circumstance. Day care was a luxury of
the working poor.
I
worked in that system for 14 years from 1969 to 1982, during which time we
fought hard to achieve a service which would provide for the meeting of
developmental needs of children and one which did not ghettoize the children of
the poor and one which did not exploit the women who provided the care.
When
I left that system in 1982, there were still many child care workers who could
not afford to have their own kids in the program they worked in.
Children
are our future citizens and the next generation of taxpayers, productive
workers and parents. Raising children is
a vital contribution which makes parents important to the general
community. The care and nurturing of
Before
closing, Mr. Speaker, I want to conclude by talking about environmental
security. We must be very concerned
about the ways in which this government is abandoning its declared principles
of sustainable development by fuelling the jobs‑versus‑the‑economy
debate.
It
is irresponsible for a government to pit its own citizens against one another
by taking positions that indicate a commitment to development at all costs,
particularly in the rural areas. This government
has attempted to discredit as antidevelopmental anyone who promotes or insists
on the environmental review process. It
is neither healthy nor right for environmentalists and concerned citizens to be
lined up against their own government on the issues of siting pig farms in
sensitive areas where the combination of geophysical conditions and the
questionable technology of sewage lagoons indicate that there is a clear risk
for environmental damage.
The
proposals by Louisiana‑Pacific, which has a poor track record in the
What
company would even contemplate the construction of a physical plant without
secure access to timber supply? Does
this mean that the government has given the company assurance that they will be
granted cutting rights prior to an environmental review, or does it mean that
they intend to transfer rights already granted to Repap over to Louisiana‑Pacific?
These
illustrations are particularly ironic, as this is the government which struts
on the international stage pretending to be a leader in sustainable
development. Unfortunately, time does
not permit me to list the other forestry management and natural resources
concerns I have, but this will not be the only opportunity to speak in this
House.
There
are solutions, and they are many and varied.
We need to break out of our old way of addressing problems which operate
on the belief that the poor are always with us.
It will cost money to do things, but it will cost more money not
to. We can no longer pretend that the
improvement will have to wait until we find our way out of a time of financial
restraint.
Mr.
Speaker, thank you.
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(1740)
Hon.
Donald Orchard (Minister of Energy and Mines): Mr. Speaker, might I offer to you my
congratulations in your continuing service as the officiating officer of this
fine Chamber. I want to offer my
congratulations to the mover and seconder of the throne speech. They both did marvelous jobs. Certainly I would be remiss, Sir, if I did
not welcome the five new members to the House who have already participated in
throne speech question period. I welcome
them to the House and may they enjoy whatever time they spend as elected
representatives in this House.
I
just listened with some interest to the preceding speaker. I know that some of us, myself particularly,
would be especially proud to have my mother here to watch some of the
proceedings, but unfortunately, my mother is unable to sit in the Speaker's
Gallery. She has been watching my career
as an elected politician from God's gallery for a number of years. That is regrettable that not every one of us
can have the privilege of having one's mother in attendance for one's
initiation to this House.
Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to be here today, responsible for the Department of
Energy and Mines and the Crown corporation, Manitoba Hydro. I want to thank my honourable friends in the
opposition parties for their many well wishes in the last few days as to the
time I spent as Minister of Health for the
I
suppose if I were to take one of their pieces of advice, I suppose I would have
worn a sweater more often. But I want to
seriously indicate to members of the House that as a Minister of Health for
five and a half or so years, I want to tell you that I enjoyed the advice, the
input from many, many very professional Manitobans, both as caregivers, be they
nurses, doctors, therapists and other professionals who were involved in the
health care system, and administrators, boards of trustees responsible for the
maintenance and preservation of our health care system.
There
are a number of milestones that I will generously recall in my tenure as
Minister of Health. Along those
milestones you cannot help but reflect back on the integrity of some of the
people who participated in much‑needed changes that we are embarking upon
in the province of Manitoba, individuals that now lead our thinking and our
research into the effectiveness of health care, for instance, as those who are
part of the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation.
On
the national scene, Mr. Speaker, I recommend to all members, should they have
the opportunity, to avail themselves of some of the thinking of the Canadian
Institute for Advanced Research. Dr.
Fraser Mustard is something of a growing household personage right now. He has received a lot of recognition for some
of his thinking, and I want to simply say that I enjoyed the input and the wise
and sagacious approach of Dr. Mustard for the better part of four years when
most Canadians were unaware of his organization and its import to public policy
formation in
Mr.
Speaker, the whole health care debate is one in which there are no easy
solutions, and when challenged, opposition parties‑‑and I will openly
admit that this is part of the political forum that my honourable friend finds
so objectionable, the previous speaker, when in opposition, members of the
House will decry policies of government and then, should they ever grace the
offices of government, will carry them on or advance them.
I
mean, that is the record, Sir, in every single province across
It
is only from the luxury, Sir, of opposition benches that one has the comfort of
criticism without providing any of the alternatives or taking any of the
responsibility for weighty decisions.
(Mr.
Ben Sveinson, Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
I
have to say, I listened intently to the last speaker in her maiden address to
this Chamber indicating that never would she mention a problem without
proffering a solution. The speech, Sir,
a fine one it was, was rich on problems and very, very narrow on solutions.
Mr.
Acting Speaker, that will be a traditional problem that members in the Liberal
Party have and that members in the New Democratic Party will have, and it is
traditional in this House. I do not
decry that because that is the way it is, but you cannot on the one hand decry
what happens in this House and then in the very first presentation to the House
be fully part of it, as the previous speaker just did.
So,
Mr. Acting Speaker, I want to indicate that I find with some amusement some of
the reflections that currently are going on.
You might have recalled some of the clamour there was, particularly in
one editorial page in this great province of ours, this clamour to have the
House reconvened because there was an eight‑month hiatus where government
was not held accountable and this was almost a tragedy in the democratic system. Now, mind you, maybe the individual who was
writing those editorials was trying to do something that he failed to achieve
as a member of this august assembly.
Be
that as it may, I can close my eyes today, and I can believe I was in this
Chamber eight months ago. There have
been no new issues. There have been no
new great issues brought forward to hold this government accountable. There have been no new revelations, just a
tired rehash of all of the issues that were brought forward eight months ago.
So
I simply say to my honourable friends in the opposition and to the
editorialists who were clamouring for a resumption of this House, have you
analyzed what has gone on in the first‑‑what?‑‑10 days
or so of this and asked yourself, is this worth the dollars the taxpayers are
spending to be here? I think if there
was some honest analysis by those editorial writers, they might say that we
could have stayed out for another couple of months yet and not impinged upon the
democracy of this great province.
Now,
mind you, sometimes that editorial board has a goal other than informing
Manitobans. Sometimes, and I say this
with regret, they might wish to advance the political fortunes of a certain
political party. [interjection] The question from my honourable friend the
opposition House leader is: Which
party? Well, I cannot speak for which
party. Only Manitobans can make that
judgment in the longer haul.
Mr.
Acting Speaker, I want to offer some cautions to my honourable friends the new
members, because this is indeed a very important session. This may well be the last throne speech that
Manitobans debate with this government before the next provincial
election. It may well be the last
budget. So this is the time in which all
members of the House can proffer those alternatives to the current government's
policies and processes.
It
is no longer sufficient for honourable members in opposition to decry the
policies of this government and say, well, you know, in general, for instance,
we agree that we need to reform the health care system, that we cannot spend
our way to prosperity, and we agree that we have to make changes, but it is the
method with which the government is approaching‑‑well, that will
not work.
*
(1750)
With
all due respect, Sir, when you go to the people of Manitoba saying, well, we
agree that we need to change health care, we agree that there is a global
economy, we agree that we have to restructure, we agree that we have to
retrain, we agree with everything the government is doing, but it is the way
they are doing it that we do not agree with, you cannot sell that, Mr. Acting
Speaker, to the citizens of Manitoba because, if you agree with everything that
is going on, why would Manitobans want to change the government then?
So
that puts a very interesting proposition to my honourable friends in the
opposition to create and articulate the alternatives, and the alternatives are
going to guide Manitobans as to where the spending priorities would be of New
Democrats and Liberals should they be government, where their taxation policy
will be should they be government, and where, Sir, their deficit and debt
policy will be should they be government.
Because,
fundamental in each of those three categories is the whole key to the job
creation issue that everyone, everyone, regardless of political affiliation or
location in Canada, is deeply concerned that we create jobs for the future of
this country and for the future of our citizens.
Mr.
Acting Speaker, I want to caution my honourable friends in opposition. Do not raise the expectations of Manitobans
that you can do something different, something better, something that will
magically create solutions, because, let me assure you, those magic solutions
do not exist. Those 30‑second
quick solutions do not exist. One‑line
solutions are out. Long‑term
steady policy is in.
Now,
let us talk about some of the quandaries that opposition parties find
themselves in. Let us consider the
recent federal election. If I recall
correctly, the Liberal red book from opposition said they were against NAFTA
without significant change, which they signed without changing a jot, a tittle
or comma, and that jot, tittle and comma is not my original phraseology, that
is the honourable John Crosbie from
Mr.
Acting Speaker, my honourable friends, the Liberals in opposition, said they
would not test cruise missiles, which they are doing. Overhead fly cruise missiles. My honourable friends in the Liberal red book
promised jobs, and one of the first major decisions they did was to torpedo
something like 3,000 high‑technology jobs in an export industry of
helicopter fabrication.
Mr.
Acting Speaker, my honourable friends in the red book, the Liberals, said they
believed in the environment, and they believed so much in the environment that
they moved the Environment office for NAFTA, which they did not believe we were
going to pass, to Montreal, one of the most offending cities in all of North
America as far as the environment goes.
Of course, that Liberal Party, federally and nationally, also said, this
day and age of pure politics, crass patronage and all those things are over.
It
has nothing to do with an election in
I
only mention those small things to caution my honourable friends in the Liberal
Party first not to get too caught up in being pious and self‑righteous in
their statements because what happened today is an example of when you so
piously decry gambling and casinos and lotteries and VLTs, leaving the
impression that you were against them, ergo you would eliminate them, but at
the same time run unregistered lotteries out of your caucus rooms.
That,
Mr. Acting Speaker, will not work.
Mr.
Kevin Lamoureux (
Point
of Order
Mr.
Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): On a point of order, Mr. Acting Speaker, I
believe I heard the word "dishonest" raised in the Chamber, and I
believe that is unparliamentary. In
fact, I was actually told that here as early as this afternoon myself.
The
Acting Speaker (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. The honourable Leader of the Opposition has
brought up a point of order, saying that the word "dishonest" was
used. I cannot say that I did hear the
word "dishonest." However, I
will take it under advisement and peruse Hansard and bring back a ruling.
Mr.
Lamoureux: Mr. Acting
Speaker, on the same point of order, not wanting to waste your time in perusing
Hansard, I did use the word "dishonest," and if there is offence
taken to it, I withdraw that comment.
*
* *
(Mr.
Speaker in the Chair)
Mr.
Speaker: I would like
to thank the honourable member for
Mr.
Orchard: Mr. Speaker,
and not wanting to say that saying one thing in opposition and doing the exact
opposite in government is a tradition of the Liberal Party alone, even though
in Nova Scotia the new government promised no tax increases and no layoffs and
in their first budget undertook significant of both.
Mr.
Speaker, I have to say that my honourable friends the New Democrats have their
own crosses to bear as well, if one could indicate that. Back in the good old days of approximately
circa 1990, my honourable friends' colleagues the Bob Rae New Democrats in
Ontario did believe that they could spend their way to prosperity and, approaching
$17‑billion deficits later, they decided they could not.
My
honourable friends the New Democrats in opposition from the comfort of
opposition also said they were going to cancel the
Mr.
Speaker, the reason I say that is the reality of government today requires that
you make decisions based on the financial situation and the tolerance of the
economy to take any more government.
Whether you are a New Democrat in
Mr.
Speaker, I want to offer my honourable friends some interesting examples from
the past‑‑would that be the right way to say it?‑‑because
my honourable friends are talking jobs.
I do not know how many times we have heard jobs. My honourable friends the New Democrats‑‑and
some of us will remember this very well, because in 1981 we had a government
that came in that promised jobs, jobs, jobs. [interjection] Yes, I will openly
admit they defeated Premier Lyon and many of us on this side of the House in
1981.
Mr.
Speaker, I want to remind my honourable friend the New Democrat that when we
were defeated, the annual interest bill of 111 years of government as of 1981
was less than $90 million per year, on the entire debt of the Province of
Manitoba through two world wars, the Great Depression, the Korean War, through
111 years of government of every political stripe, less than $90 million. Six and a half years under Howard Pawley and
the NDP, that annualized interest bill had grown to $560 million.
That
is a small $470 million per year increase in interest costs which deny services
in hospitals, which deny services to children in schools, which deny us roads,
which deny us all of the amenities of government.
Mr.
Speaker: Order,
please. The hour being 6 p.m., in
accordance with the rules, I am leaving the Chair and will return at 8 p.m., at
which time the honourable minister will have 22 minutes remaining.