LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA
Monday,
May 9, 1994
The House met at 1:30 p.m.
PRAYERS
ROUTINE
PROCEEDINGS
PRESENTING
PETITIONS
Thompson
General Hospital Patient Care
Mr. Steve Ashton (Thompson): Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of
Barbara McLeod, Maggie Hurtubise, Linda Perchaluk and others requesting the Legislative Assembly to
request the government of Manitoba to consider reviewing the impact of
reductions in patient care at the Thompson General Hospital with a view towards
restoring current levels of patient care and, further, to ask the provincial
government to implement real health care reform based on full participation of
patients, health care providers and the public, respect for the principles of
medicare and an understanding of the particular needs of northern Manitoba.
TABLING
OF REPORTS
Hon. Harry Enns (Minister of Agriculture): Mr. Speaker, I have the pleasure of
presenting several annual reports: the
Annual Report 1992‑93 of the Department of Agriculture; the Annual Report
1992‑93 of Manitoba Farm Mediation Board; and the Annual Report 1992‑93
of the Manitoba Agricultural Credit Corporation.
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 Warren Collegiate sixty Grade 11 students under the
direction of Mr. Wiebe and Mr. Smith.
This school is located in the consistency of the honourable Minister of
Agriculture (Mr. Enns).
Also this afternoon, from
the Children of the Earth High School, we have eight Grade 9 students under the
direction of Ms. Jan Orvis‑Cook.
This school is located in the constituency of the honourable member for
Point Douglas (Mr. Hickes).
Also this afternoon, from
Pinkham School, we have twenty Grade 5 students under the direction of Ms.
Siobhan Faulkner. This school is located
in the consistency of the honourable member for Burrows (Mr. Martindale).
From the Sisler High
School, we have twenty Grade 11 students under the direction of Mr. Bill
Harper. This school is located in the
consistency of the honourable member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux).
On behalf of all
honourable members, I would like to welcome you here this afternoon.
* (1335)
Speaker's
Ruling
Mr. Speaker: Prior to Oral Questions, I have a ruling for
the House.
After Prayers on May 3,
1994, the honourable member for Thompson (Mr. Ashton) rose on a matter of
privilege and moved: "THAT the
statements made by the Premier calling into question the impartiality of the
Speaker be referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections."
After receiving advice
from the honourable member for Thompson, the honourable First Minister (Mr.
Filmon) and the House leader of the Liberal Party (Mr. Lamoureux), I took the
matter under advisement.
As all honourable members
know, I view this as a very serious matter, and I would like to take some time
to review the main points in the argument put forward by the honourable member
for Thompson when he rose on this matter of privilege.
The member tabled a
transcript from a television interview with the First Minister just after the
votes had been taken on the budget. The
transcript quotes the Premier saying, and I quote: When the votes are taken, we have 29, they
have 28. You'll continue to see this
happen and I don't see it as being a lot different from other years.
The honourable member for
Thompson, if I may summarize what he said, interpreted those words of the First
Minister as meaning that he, the Premier, did not see me, the Speaker, as an
independent arbitrator of this House and that I was subject to the government
Whip.
The Premier, in speaking
to the matter of privilege on May 3, acknowledged he had said that there had
been six votes in the Chamber thus far in the session and that the results had
been 29 to 28. He went on to say, in
each case, and I quote: "I would
never, ever bring myself in a position to question your impartiality or your
right to rule in accordance with the precedents that have been long established
in the parliamentary tradition of this world."
The honourable member for
Thompson has fulfilled the first condition of privilege by raising the matter
at the first available opportunity. He
indicated that he had only received the transcript of the interview on May 3,
and I take his word for that.
Before ruling on whether
a prima facie case has been established, I would like to make some
observations.
Erskine May's
Parliamentary Practice, 20th edition, defines privilege as: "the sum of the peculiar rights enjoyed
by each House collectively . . . and by Members of each House individually,
without which they could not discharge their functions, and which exceed those
possessed by other bodies and individuals," or as Hatsell,
the great 18th Century authority said:
The privileges of Parliament are rights which are "absolutely
necessary for the due execution of its powers."
May, page 127, as well as
Beauchesne Citation 71 are clear that accusations of partiality of the Speaker
are reflections on the Chair, and Beauchesne Citation 168(6) indicates that
such reflections may be punished as breaches of privileges.
This is backed up by the
Australian House of Representatives Practice, edited by A.R. Browning, that
states: "Traditionally, a
reflection on the character or actions of the Speaker inside or outside the
House"‑‑and I want to come back to this point later‑‑"has
been punishable as a breach of privilege . . . ."
Another authority, The
Encyclopedia of Parliament, edited by Laundy and
Wilding, indicates that disrespect to the House collectively is the original
and fundamental form of breach of privilege, and includes libels on the House
at large and upon the Speaker.
I looked at the question
of whether the principle that statements made outside the House by a member
cannot form the basis of a matter of privilege is applicable to this case. In my opinion, it does not because the remarks
of the First Minister (Mr. Filmon) relate directly to proceedings in this
House. My opinion is reinforced by a
ruling of Speaker Lamoureux of the Canadian House of Commons given on May 10,
1966, where he indicated that in order to constitute a breach of privilege the
matter must be based on things arriving from the actual transaction of the
business of the House.
Maingot in his book
Parliamentary Privilege in Canada put it this way: "if one member speaking outside the
House reflects improperly on the conduct of another member's parliamentary
activities and the matter is raised as a matter of privilege in the House, the
Speaker certainly has jurisdiction to examine those same words and determine if
there is a prima facie case of privilege or contempt of the House." In our case, the issue does arise from my
casting votes on the budget which is definitely part of the actual transaction
of the business of the House.
A review of Manitoba
Speakers' rulings found nothing directly relevant to this particular matter of
privilege.
* (1340)
The Canadian House of
Commons does have some rulings that are of interest. On March 23, 1993, Speaker John Fraser ruled
a prima facie case of privilege existed when a member of Parliament was quoted
in a newspaper as alleging that the Deputy Speaker was in collusion to restrict
the right of members of the Bloc Quebecois to speak in the House.
On May 7, 1976, Speaker
Jerome ruled that accusations by a former M.P. that members of the House of
Commons had been in receipt of bribes was one of privilege.
Speaker Jerome also ruled
on July 25, 1975, that accusations by a newspaper about a member leaking budget
information were the basis of a prima facie question of privilege.
Now, to get back to the
case before us. My job now is to decide whether,
assuming that the facts are as stated, the conduct complained of can reasonably
be held to be a breach of privilege. In
my review of the actual words spoken by the Premier (Mr. Filmon), I find that
they do not in themselves reflect on the partiality of the Chair. They do not directly imply wrongdoing,
slander or partiality of a presiding officer such as were noted in the House of
Commons rulings I just cited. The interpretation
of the honourable member for Thompson (Mr. Ashton) of what the words spoken by
the First Minister is just that‑‑an interpretation. The explanation by the Premier of what he
meant is also just that‑‑an explanation. To paraphrase Beauchesne Citation 494, I must
accept statements by members respecting themselves and particularly within
their own knowledge.
In this case, what we
have are an interpretation and an explanation of the same incident. I doubt neither the intentions nor the
honesty of the honourable member for Thompson or the honourable First Minister. Therefore, I do not find that there is a
prima facie case of privilege.
Having said that, I would
like now to thank the honourable House leader of the Liberal Party for
something he said in his remarks on May 2.
He noted that members of the media as well as members of this House have
been saying that the government has a majority of one in this House. This has been a concern to me as well.
The government does not
have a majority. There are 28 government
members in this House and 28 opposition members, and there is one Speaker. What we have is a tied House. What we also have is a Speaker that has had
to and I am pretty sure will continue to have to cast deciding votes.
I appreciate the comments
of the Premier and of the honourable member for Thompson and indeed of many
members in acknowledging the difficult and delicate role the Chair is forced to
play in the upcoming weeks and months.
As a servant of the House, I will do my utmost to fulfill that role to
the best of my ability and in accordance with the best traditions of
parliament. That concludes the matter of
privilege.
ORAL
QUESTION PERIOD
Burns
Committee
Status
Report
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Premier.
Last week during the
Premier's Estimates there were at least three hours of questions by both
Leaders of the opposition dealing with the issue of the Jets and the Burns
report and the deadline and the viability of the hockey team and the issues of
public support and various options.
Again, there is media
speculation that there are various proposals being put forward just waiting for
the review of the existing private owner of the hockey team. Of course, this concerns all of us because
under the agreement that was signed by the Premier and the mayor of the City of
Winnipeg on November 12, 1991, as each committee keeps studying this issue and
studying this issue the taxpayers of the province of Manitoba are subject to
the partial operating losses of the hockey team.
I would like to ask the
Premier: What is the status of the Burns
report? Secondly, how much money are we
anticipating that the province will have to pay for the operating losses of the
hockey team for the fiscal year we are currently in, which is the next fiscal
year of the Winnipeg Jets hockey team?
Hon. Gary Filmon (Premier): Mr. Speaker, I have a couple of things to say
in response to that question. First, as
I understand, the information that was the basis of a newspaper article on the
weekend came from some briefing notes that were being prepared for the Burns
commission. The Burns commission has not
supplied me with any written report and recommendations, and it is my
assumption that no final report exists.
In fact, I am told that Mr. Burns issued a statement to the effect that
some of the material within that newspaper article was incorrect.
The member is correct in
saying that all of us ought to be interested in finding a solution as quickly
as possible so that we obviate the need for continued support of the losses of
the Jets hockey team. That is why both
the Mauro committee and now the Burns committee have been asked to give us
their best advice as to the solution to what is a very difficult issue. The issue of course is one in which we would
not like to have the ongoing support of the team require funding from the
taxpayer. On the other hand, there
appears to be still some question of viability without further commitments of
support from the private sector.
With respect to the final
aspect of the member's question, as I told him last Monday evening, until we
get the information from the interim steering committee on an approved budget
for the forthcoming year for the Jets hockey team‑‑and we do not
expect to get that for I believe it is at least a month‑‑we are not
in a position to give him any accurate estimate on what support we may have to
give vis‑à‑vis losses in the next season.
* (1345)
The
Winnipeg Jets
Operating
Losses
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, it is indeed alarming for all of
us to not know four weeks already into the current fiscal year what our
liabilities are going to be for the agreement signed by the Premier on November
of 1991.
It is also a great concern
for us, when the Premier and the mayor established this committee in November
of 1991, they asked that all these issues be dealt with: the issue of the new arena, the issue of public
support; the issue of viability to the team.
This, of course, was moved over to the Mauro report, or the Mauro
committee, then four or five months later it has been moved over into the Burns
committee.
Every time we drift along
and drift along and not make a decision, the taxpayers of Manitoba and the
taxpayers of the city of Winnipeg are liable for the operating loss of the
hockey team.
My question to the
Premier today is, and he has been briefed by members of the committee he
indicated in Estimates last week, members of the Burns committee, the Mauro
report indicated a $30‑million necessity of public support for a new
arena. There is speculation today that
it may well be $60 million of public support for a new facility.
Can the Premier tell us,
is the cost of this new facility doubling in terms of public support? Can the Premier tell us why we cannot get the
figure for the operating losses of the team?
Does the team not even have a draft budget, so that we would have some
information on the basis by which all Manitobans can start making an
intelligent decision about the various options?
Hon. Gary Filmon (Premier): Mr. Speaker, firstly, I would not put out
draft information when we are in a position to get firm information on which to
make that kind of‑‑I know it may be good fodder for the Leader of
the Opposition to try and make some political hay on it, but it is not the
basis on which to make good decisions.
Secondly, in our
discussion last Monday evening, he acknowledged that it would not be
appropriate for government to attempt to make decisions when they do not have
final indications of whether or not there will be a revenue‑sharing
agreement among the various teams in the NHL or a salary cap, both of which
were seen as essential to a decision in the Mauro commission report.
The Leader of the
Opposition and the Leader of the Liberal Party (Mr. Edwards), I believe, both
indicated their agreement with that approach to it. We do not have either one of those pieces of
the puzzle in place. So the question is,
do you take a precipitous decision and commit to a development and a
construction of a new arena, purchase of a team and all these things without
that information, or do you ensure that when you make the decision, that
critical long‑term decision that does involve taxpayer participation to
some degree, that you have all that information as much as possible?
We are taking the prudent
course by ensuring that we do have that information. The course that he is suggesting would be
imprudent, Mr. Speaker, and I do not accept it.
Mr. Doer:
Mr. Speaker, the Premier cannot talk about prudent courses when he
signed an agreement in 1991 that requires us to pay for the operating losses of
a hockey team and he cannot tell us four weeks before the budget of the Jets
what it is going to be. So let the
Premier not lecture any member of this Chamber about his agreement and his
operating loss of the team being covered by us.
The Premier has now
confirmed that the arena is not an option because we do not have a salary cap
as recommended in the Mauro report, and we do not have a revenue‑sharing
agreement from all the other NHL teams.
My question is to the
Premier. If we are going to cancel the
operating loss deal that he has signed for the team, what is the option that we
are looking at in six weeks in terms of the hockey team?
The government signed an
agreement. It has moved it from one blue‑chip
committee to another blue‑chip committee to another blue‑chip
committee, and we want to know six weeks ahead of time, what are the options
for the public of Manitoba.
Are we going to have all
the facts and figures on the table so that we can make an intelligent decision
on something that is very important to our province?‑‑but also so
are the losses that we have to cover very important to the people of this
province.
* (1350)
Mr. Filmon: You see, Mr. Speaker, this is why Manitobans
cannot put any trust in this Leader of the Opposition. Just Monday evening he said: I do not want to politicize this issue
because this is too important to Manitobans and there is a very fragile
situation.
Now, today, he is doing
exactly what he said he would not do, trying to make some cheap political
points. That is why Manitobans do not
trust him.
The fact of the matter is
that we signed an agreement that did include responsibility for sharing losses
with the City of Winnipeg, because such an agreement already existed with
Winnipeg Enterprises Corporation in which they were responsible for the losses
exceeding the first $400,000, I believe.
We took, in return for that, shares in the hockey club so that we would
then become covered for some degree for the losses that we would be incurring.
There are reasons behind
all of these, but the long‑term reason why we are spending the
appropriate time in trying to find a solution is that I believe most Manitobans
would like to see the continuance of an NHL hockey team in Winnipeg. I believe most Manitobans recognize that if
the team is to fold or be withdrawn from this city, it will not likely return
in our lifetimes. So most Manitobans
want the right decision to be made, and they want sufficient information
available at the time that the decision is being made.
We do not have all that
information. That is what the Burns
committee is saying; that is what everybody is saying. We do not know whether or not the NHL will
have a revenue‑sharing agreement.
That is one of the critical factors pointed to in the Mauro report. We do not know whether or not there will be a
salary cap at this point. That is one of
the requirements put forward in the Mauro committee.
So for him to try and
make some cheap political hay on this is irresponsible, and it goes absolutely
contrary to what he said on Monday‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
Points
of Order
Mr. Doer:
The Premier is imputing political motives in this Chamber about cheap
politics, when we are asking questions about the costs of the various options
that he signed. All we want is the
information, Mr. Speaker. Let us get the
rhetoric from the Premier out of the debate, and let us have an intelligent
debate about this issue.
Mr. Speaker: The honourable member does not have a point
of order.
*
* *
Mr. Filmon: On another point of order, I have said
repeatedly, when I have that information I will share it with him and other
members, so let him not try and put anything in my mouth.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable First Minister does not have a
point of order. That is clearly a
clarification of the facts. That is all
that was.
Connie
Curran
Contract
Cancellation
Mr. Dave Chomiak (Kildonan): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Premier,
and given the government's track record on the kind of deals that they have
entered into, the question by the Leader of the Opposition was quite
justifiable.
Mr. Speaker, the Premier
has staunchly defended the Connie Curran contract, the $4 million plus $800,000
of expenses, tax‑free, even going so far on radio to defend it. Since the Minister of Health has told us in
Estimates that not all of the money has been paid out to Connie Curran and that
some money is in trust, will the First Minister direct the Minister of Health
to not pay out that more than probably three‑quarters of a million
dollars in trust to Connie Curran and, instead, put that money back into health
care for the many programs that have been cut by this government and to
community services that are not in place?
Hon. James McCrae (Minister of Health): The honourable member will recall discussion
last week when it came to costs in health care systems, and I reminded him of
the cost to the Ontario health system of the salary and expenses of one Michael
Decter, with whom honourable members opposite are very familiar.
You know, even if they
withheld 20 percent of Mr. Decter's salary, he would
still be paid way more than Frank Maynard here in Manitoba. The honourable member ought to remember when
he is raising questions like this, the issue of hypocrisy does enter into the
debate from time to time. It usually
only happens when honourable members from the New Democratic Party get into the
debate.
When you are looking at
the performance of a contract, Mr. Speaker, you have to look at what you
contracted for and look at the deliverables, and that is precisely what has
been happening. As a result of looking
at the deliverables, the savings that were contracted for were arrived at
within the range contracted for. There
are no legal grounds by which the government of Manitoba or the hospitals
involved in the contract can hold back money indefinitely.
* (1355)
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Speaker, why, since the minister himself
said on November 3 that he could not justify Connie Curran's contract, can this
minister now say that he is going to pay another three‑quarters of a
million dollars to Connie Curran when everyone in Manitoba knows that this
contract and this project, the Connie Curran contract of $4 million plus
$800,000 in expenses, tax‑free, is a disgrace to the province of
Manitoba?
Mr. McCrae: Not unlike the previous set of questions, it
brings into the debate a fair amount of rhetoric. The honourable member brings into the
discussion a fair amount of rhetoric, as well as interpretation which certainly
is not accurate.
I remember the newspaper
article to which the honourable member refers very well, and it is very
difficult, Mr. Speaker, to tell the honourable member today, when his mind is
clearly made up that it does not matter that there is all this waste and
inefficiency in our hospitals. His mind
is made up; he wants to continue to defend that waste and inefficiency. I very, very clearly disagree with him and so
do the people who need the health system in the future.
Home
Care Program Review
Tabling
Request
Mr. Dave Chomiak (Kildonan): Mr. Speaker, we think a million dollars going
out of the health care system would be far better in the health care system
paying nurses than paying their American consultant.
My final supplementary to
the same minister: Since they are now
going to go ahead and pay the $750,000 more to Connie Curran, will they table
the home care contract and, at the same time, will the minister ask the
Department of Justice to view the legality and consider breach of contract
against Connie Curran, Mr. Speaker?
Hon. James McCrae (Minister of Health): Mr. Speaker, that is typical of the New
Democrats and is the reason why we need to make changes to our health system,
because he has just finished saying, if you have a million dollars just throw
it into the system. Do not ask how you
are going to spend it or anything, just throw a million dollars into the system
and that will make everything all better.
That is exactly what got us into the problems in the first place, that
kind of mentality.
Time for change is here,
and this government and governments right across this country, New Democratic
governments when they are in office, conduct appropriate reforms and do their
best. In some cases, it is too bad they
waited as long as they did, because they now have to go with the slash‑and‑burn
method of reform, which is not the system we are using here in Manitoba. What we are doing is, through a phased
approach, bringing about changes that will leave us with a health care system
for many generations to come.
National
Hockey League
Salary
Cap/Revenue Sharing
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, I listened with
interest to the response of the Premier to the Leader of the Opposition's
questions, and I wanted to follow up with the Premier on one of the comments he
made.
Clearly, according to Mr.
Mauro's committee and according to what we know of the Burns report and
according to all other people who have studied this, key to the determination
as to whether or not any public money should go into an arena or the Jets is
the issue of a salary cap or revenue‑sharing agreement. That is not new, and I do not think the Burns
committee is likely to give us further guidance on that. That seems fairly agreed to.
Mr. Speaker, my question
for the Premier: Given that it is only
he and Mayor Thompson that have met with Mr. Bettman
from the NHL, and there is no indication publicly as to whether or not this is
on a short‑term agenda for the NHL, whether or not it is a realistic
possibility, can the First Minister tell us whether or not all of this is in
fact moot or whether or not, according to his discussions with the NHL, there
is a reasonable possibility that either of those two things is going to happen
in the short term?
Hon. Gary Filmon (Premier): The Leader of the Liberal Party gave two
options in his preamble. One was whether
it is on the short‑term agenda and, two, whether or not it is
realistically possible.
Mr. Bettman
is very open in saying that it is on their short‑term agenda, that the
NHL governors believe that it is part of the solution to long‑term
stability for the league. The other side
of the coin, of course, cannot be answered until they are through their
discussions and negotiations with the players who are adamantly opposed, I
might say, to any salary cap. So, like
most sensitive negotiations, nothing will be known for a considerable period of
time.
They now have sort of
postponed their time frame till perhaps early fall, the beginning of the next
season. That is where it may reach a
head. At some point, the negotiations
between the players and the NHL, vis‑à‑vis a salary structure‑‑as
Mr. Bettman refers to it rather than "cap"
but referring to it perhaps I think in a similar context to what we believe is
necessary‑‑they now are saying that they will not bring that to a
head during the NHL playoffs.
They will leave it until
perhaps the start of the next season as the breakpoint for their
discussion. So we will not know that for
some time. It is pretty evident about
that, and that is what makes the decision that we have to make more
difficult. Whether or not we can make it
without that, as I said on Monday evening in my Estimates debate, I think it is
very difficult for us to make that decision without having these pieces of the
puzzle in place.
* (1400)
Mr. Edwards: Mr. Speaker, in those Estimates the Premier
specifically indicated, and I am quoting:
"When you look at it from a business point of view, there is not a
good reason why you would want to extend that any extended length of time
because you want to be able to get underway with a development decision,"
clearly indicating that if there was an extension it would be seen in a short‑term
sense. He compared it to the Abitibi‑Price
extension. Mr. Speaker, he has now used
the words "considerable period of time" according to his best
information being required to get a salary cap or revenue‑sharing
agreement in place.
Under the current
situation with current facts as they are, Mr. Speaker: Can the First Minister indicate whether or
not he believes there is any point in considering an extension, given that he
has used‑‑in his own words, he has tied it to a short period of
time he would be prepared to extend it, when in fact it looks like it is
"a considerable period of time," using his words, that is going to be
required to even look at a salary cap or revenue‑sharing agreement?
Mr. Filmon: I guess that is where we get into difficulty
with words, and I should apologize. I
did say "a considerable period of time," but I did talk about this
fall as being the potential breakpoint.
So I do not have any real assurance of any particular date. I do not think the NHL can give us any
particular date.
At this point, we are
hopeful and I think they are hopeful that this fall may bring a resolution to
the issue, but I cannot give him any assurance on that. What I can say is that we believe that we
need to have this part of the arrangement settled in order to make our decision
vis‑à‑vis the ownership of the team and a new arena.
The
Winnipeg Jets
Government
Ownership
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, finally, for the
First Minister on this issue.
Mr. Mauro talked in his
report about public majority ownership of the Winnipeg Jets hockey team. The First Minister in Estimates on Monday
talked about that as being a possible option, that the public would own the
majority in Winnipeg Jets hockey team, but the Premier indicated that only if
certain conditions were in place and on a temporary basis.
Mr. Speaker, I would ask
the First Minister: Under what
conditions would he be prepared to exercise the option and take government
ownership of the Winnipeg Jets hockey team?
Hon. Gary Filmon (Premier): Mr. Speaker, I believe we ought to be
prepared to take ownership on an interim basis if it facilitates putting
together the best package for long‑term viability of a team and arena
complex. That is the critical part of
it, that we would be doing it to facilitate a proper long‑term solution,
not doing it to become long‑term owner‑operators of the hockey
club.
Youth
Court
Backlog
Mr. Gord Mackintosh (St. Johns): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister
of Justice.
The minister has received
a letter from the mother of a young offender dated February 14 of this
year. In that letter, the mother talks
about charges being laid against her son in August of 1993 for car theft, among
other things. The mother now tells me
that nine months later this youth has yet to be sentenced. In fact, we are talking here about a guilty
plea. Meanwhile, this youth was involved
in eight additional car thefts, according to information received from the
mother. The mother says that this child
is laughing at the justice system.
My question to the
minister is: Given that this minister is
well aware of backlogs of up to nine months even on guilty pleas, will she
advise this House what plan she is going to put in place to deal with this
crisis in the court?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, the member
references a very specific case. I would
be willing to look into that particular case, but I would also want to be very
careful because obviously the case is still before the court. The member has said that there has not been a
sentencing.
I would like to make it
clear that any remarks I make today are unrelated to a specific case which the
member has tried to raise in this House and deal only in general terms with the
issues of the youth court to protect the fairness required for those people
within the justice system.
That member comes
dangerously close to ignoring due process of law, Mr. Speaker, when he raises
those issues, particularly in this House.
I will be very happy to
address the issue of how we are dealing with youth crime and justice in this
province, because the member knows very well we have taken a very strong stand
in the area of youth crime and justice.
Our stand is one‑‑and I was very happy to hear on Saturday‑‑in
which that member strongly endorsed one point of the nine‑point plan.
He gave his full support
to the youth justice committees, and I look forward to his continued support in
our plan to deal with youth crime and violence.
I will be pleased to
continue answering if the member‑‑[interjection]
Mr. Mackintosh: I never heard an answer, Mr. Speaker; I heard
some vague allegations about due process.
My question to the
minister is very straightforward. What
plan does she have to deal with the serious backlog in the youth court, a court
in crisis?
Mrs. Vodrey: Mr. Speaker, I reject totally the member's
allegations of court in crisis. I notice
that in this House, where he cannot be so irresponsible with the use of dates,
he has now changed the range of backlog that he has been speaking about. He has been quite irresponsible in lately
raising a period of time for backlog which is absolutely incorrect.
I can tell the member
today that for those youths in custody we are booking court dates for youth in
the youth court as early as June for those people who are in custody. We have no more than a five‑month
backlog or a five‑month waiting period.
Let me also say to the
member that, again, I will remind him he comes very close to ignoring due
process, because in due process of law there are two sides and cases must be
prepared.
Point
of Order
Mr. Steve Ashton (Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, the minister has
repeated an accusation made against the member for St. Johns. I would like to quote Beauchesne's
487(2): "Words may not be used
hypothetically or conditionally, if they are plainly intended to convey a
direct imputation."
The minister is
suggesting that somehow on this side of the House, for our Justice critic to be
raising questions about delay in the justice system that that is interfering in
the justice system. That is not only not
true, it is unparliamentary. The
minister should withdraw that and should just answer the questions raised by
the member.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member did not have a point of
order. I believe the honourable minister
was just actually quoting from the sub judice
convention.
*
* *
Mr. Mackintosh: The minister says there is no 11‑month
backlog. I bring in an example of a nine‑month
backlog and she says, do not bring it in.
My question for the
minister, once again, Mr. Speaker: Will
the minister consider putting together a committee of the Crown, of police, of defence, of administrators, of judges to try and deal with
this problem? Would she try and deal
with the crises‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member has put his question.
Mrs. Vodrey: Mr. Speaker, again I say the member
dangerously exaggerates the facts. He
again tries to ask the Attorney General of this province to speak about a case
which is before the courts, which he has brought forward to this House and
which, in all interest to fairness and respect for the position that I hold, he
knows that I will not speak publicly about a case before the courts.
However, I have said that
my comments are to be regarded generally.
I reject totally his accusation of 11 months. I have made it clear in this House today that
for those youths in custody we are booking court dates as soon as June.
I would remind the member
that he is not and nor am I able to speak about some of the reasons that a
specific case may now be before the courts.
As he knows, there is due process to law; there are two sides to prepare
a case.
* (1410)
Sex
Offenders
Release
Notification
Mr. Doug Martindale (Burrows): Mr. Speaker, parents and community members
are very concerned about the release of sex offenders into their neighbourhoods without any notification, and the police are
not even notified when a sex offender completes his sentence and is released
from jail.
Since the police are only
made aware of parole and probation orders, can the Minister of Justice create a
system so that the Winnipeg Police Department will be regularly informed as to
when sex offenders are being released into the community?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, the member speaks
about a system which we have for treatment specifically of sex offenders, which
is, I will tell the member, one of the leading programs both in terms of access
and in the content of that particular program across Canada. We work very carefully with that particular
program.
Also, Mr. Speaker, in
relation to treatment of sexual offenders and the community being aware of when
they are attending programs, he may like to know that I have worked with a
representative from that area to make sure that police are notified when sex
offenders are attending a group in that community.
Treatment
Programs
Mr. Doug Martindale (Burrows): Mr. Speaker, can the Minister of Justice
instruct the Crown to investigate the lengths and types of sentences being
granted to sex offenders in the Manitoba court system with a view to providing
greater treatment opportunities to these people, since part of the problem in
treating sex offenders is that they are not spending enough time in jail to be
treatable and many are receiving one‑year sentences, intermittent
sentences or probation? Will the
minister improve the existing programs, make them more effective and make sure
that people receive treatment before they are released?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, I am happy to
educate the member that sentences are imposed by the courts. That is part of the responsibility of judges
as they sentence individuals, and perhaps that member would like to step into
the issue of judicial independence and range of sentencing. However, if he is raising concerns about an
amount of time possible for sentencing, then we have to address that through
federal legislation.
I would also like to say
to the member then as well, in terms of treatment, we do have very active
treatments within our institution, within Headingley Jail, that within
Headingley those convicted sexual offenders receive individual
counselling. There is also group
counselling, but I will say to the member that group occurs on a regular
basis. It is not a come‑and‑go
group. It has a defined beginning and
end.
Sentencing
Reform
Mr. Doug Martindale (Burrows): Mr. Speaker, I am grateful the minister
referred to the federal government, because the previous Parliament had a bill
before it on sentencing reform.
Will this minister
contact the federal government and push them to do something about sentencing
reform, not just look at a bill, but do something proactive so that sentencing
is fair and consistent and fair to the public and the victims?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, the federal Liberal
government has a great deal to consider in terms of the legislation before it,
both legislation that deals with young offenders and other legislation of the
Criminal Code. I have presented to the
federal minister several suggestions from the people of Manitoba to deal
specifically with issues of the Criminal Code.
I look forward to some co‑operation from the federal government,
but I have not had any indication at this time that they are willing to make
changes.
Home
Renovation Program
Budget
Allocation
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin Flon): Mr. Speaker, one of the few bright spots in
the provincial budget was the Home Renovation Program. There is increasing evidence that this
particular program was an add‑on that was added on in the process without
any consultation with the Home Builders' Association, the housing industry or
the Department of Housing.
Mr. Speaker, my question
is to the Minister of Housing (Mrs. McIntosh).
Given the fact that there is no reference to the $10 million that is to
be expended in the special warrant that was passed on March 23, 1994, there is
no money available in the Estimates as printed and tabled in April, can the
Minister of Housing tell the people of Manitoba how the government is going to
pay for this program?
Hon. Eric Stefanson (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, the member for Flin Flon knows
parliamentary procedure full well in terms of when he refers to special
warrants and the dealing with the budgetary matters. There is an allocation within the '94‑95
budget, $10 million under Other Appropriations.
As he knows in terms of this particular program, there is an application
process that has to be substantiated by attached invoices, quotes to tenders on
any particular projects and so on, so there is a time provision in terms of as
these projects will be coming forward.
But provision will in fact be made to meet all payments as required.
Mr. Storie: Well, Mr. Speaker, first of all, there is no
authority for this particular kind of payment and it shows us the confusion
this government is in, even in a program that has the potential for a lot of
Manitobans.
My second question to the
Minister of Housing is: Given the fact
that there are no application forms available, there are no brochures available
and the department does not have the authority to pay, can the minister tell us
how long people are going to have to wait, given that they are already in some
cases finishing their projects, before they will receive the support that they
are entitled to from this particular program?
Mr. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, again, I think the member for
Flin Flon has served in previous governments.
He knows the issues of confidentiality when preparing a budget document,
and he knows that you cannot set the wheels in motion in many instances to
prepare all of the documentation because of that confidentiality, or at least I
hope he appreciates that aspect of preparing a budget on behalf of Manitobans.
Immediately, the wheels
were put in motion to prepare all the detailed documentation that is going out,
the kinds of brochures, the application forms.
I have outlined for him a detailed process in terms of how applications
will be dealt with. There is money
allocated in the '94‑95 budget.
There is provision to meet the payments.
I am not sure where he is heading with this questioning.
This is a program, Mr.
Speaker, that has been very well received by Manitobans, both in terms of the
construction industry because of the hundreds of jobs that it will create in
that industry and because we are doing something for people and families in
terms of improving their homes during this particular year.
Mr. Storie: Mr. Speaker, if there were application forms
in place so that people could find out the information they need and if the
program was restructured so that lower‑income families and families with
houses in the inner cities and in some rural communities could take access, it
would be a good program.
My final question to the
Minister of Housing (Mrs. McIntosh) or the Minister of Finance is: Can the minister tell the people of Manitoba,
if they have finished their project, when they might reasonably expect to receive
the support that they were promised?
Mr. Stefanson: Again, the member for Flin Flon I think
looked at the details of this program.
There are provisions to deal with the people in various income levels. There is a provision to deal with individuals
who qualify under the RRAP program, the Residential Rehabilitation Assistance
Program, which is lower than the $5,000 threshold, Mr. Speaker. There is a provision to deal with emergency
home repairs, again for individuals which are below the $5,000 threshold. So I want to remind the member of those
provisions that are in this particular program.
We are just in the
process that has to deal with renovations that were started after April 20,
1994. We are just in the process of
individuals. We are now three weeks from
budget day. Some individuals who might
have been quick off the mark are in the process of maybe starting to complete
their renovation programs. They will be
submitting their detailed information in terms of their cost. They will be providing the two quotes
required. That will be assessed by the
department, and refunds will be processed, as is provided under the program,
Mr. Speaker.
Maintenance
Enforcement
Public
Hearings
Ms. Norma McCormick (Osborne): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister
of Justice.
On Saturday I met with
about 30 people concerned with the effectiveness of Manitoba's Maintenance
Enforcement Program. They shared their
experiences and their common belief that the maintenance enforcement system is
not working as intended.
My question to the
minister is: Will the minister consider
acting on the priority recommendation of this group and hold a public inquiry
to examine the problems and deficiencies with this operation‑‑[interjection]
I am asking my question‑‑to hear the suggestions of those directly
affected for improving service and collection?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, as I stated in
answer to a question last week, my department is making sure that it is holding
meetings and is speaking with people who are concerned about maintenance
enforcement, representatives of women's groups in particular. We are gathering information.
As the member knows, a
great deal of our concern is to collect money owing from people who reside in
other provinces, so we are working with ministers across Canada and in the
territories to look at how we can revise the REMO act, but, of course, it will
take the co‑operation of the federal Liberal government.
* (1420)
Out‑of‑Province
Collection
Ms. Norma McCormick (Osborne): My supplementary, Mr. Speaker, in response to
both today's question and also to my question on May 5: The minister indicated that there was a large
amount of money owed to children from outside the jurisdiction. Will this minister put on record whether she
considers the $4 million of the $27 million to be the very large piece she was
referring to and what her department intends to do to collect the $23 million
owed to children by their parents who still live in Manitoba?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, the member has put
incorrect information on the record. No,
that is not the accurate amount.
However, I will tell the
member that we are working very hard. We
are working very carefully with people within Manitoba who are owing money and
who are required to pay that money. We
have done that through a number of enhancements within my department. We have added five new staff members. We are also working with counterparts across
the country.
Point
of Order
Ms. McCormick: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, the
information with respect to the $4 million has been received from the
minister's department.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member does not have a point
of order. That is a dispute over the
facts.
Sex
Offenders
Treatment
Programs
Mr. Gary Kowalski (The Maples): My question is for the Minister of Justice.
Mr. Speaker, it is
evident that the public is at risk when sex offenders do not receive treatment
they need to avoid reoffending. Sex
offenders who receive treatment reoffend at a much lower rate than those who do
not receive treatment.
Because of heightened
public concern for the demand for this service and the lack of resources, will
her government review the resources available to provincial treatment programs
for sex offenders?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, I just need to say
to the member that‑‑from the previous question‑‑she
does not have the total amount of money owing from across Canada.
However, to the member's
question, the third question in a series‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. I would remind the honourable minister to
deal with the matter raised. There was
no point of order on the member for Osborne.
Mrs. Vodrey: Mr. Speaker, in terms of treatment for
convicted sex offenders, first of all I think the member does need to know that
treatment is determined by the courts, No. 1, that is what is required when the
sentence is given. Full treatment is 160
hours of therapy and it does focus upon prevention, upon rehabilitation and
relapse prevention. The program does
come in two forms, a form of institutional programming and also a form of
programming in the probation area.
Mr. Kowalski: I have a supplementary, Mr. Speaker.
Why has this minister
decided that savings can be found in community and youth corrections? Has she thereby decided that treatment
programs are not necessary, or does she have an alternate plan and will she
share it with this House?
Mrs. Vodrey: Mr. Speaker, I reject those allegations
totally. Let me tell him that we do have
a very comprehensive series of treatment programs. As I said in an earlier question, we have a
comprehensive series of treatment programs within the institution. They involve both individualized therapy and
they also involve group therapy.
As I said in an earlier
answer, group therapy is not a sort of come‑and‑go kind of
group. The group therapy is one in which
there is a beginning and an end, and individuals would then go into the next
group as it has the spots available.
Point
of Order
Mr. Kowalski: On a point of order, the Estimates figures in
the budget show that there‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. I would like to remind the honourable member
for The Maples that points of order are used to show the Chair that there has
been a breach of the rules. This is
clearly a dispute over the facts, so the honourable member does not have a
point of order.
Louisiana‑Pacific
Co.
Treaty
Land Entitlements
Ms. Rosann Wowchuk (Swan River): Mr. Speaker, several times I have raised with
this House the concerns of the First Nations' communities of my constituency
with regard to the Louisiana‑Pacific deal.
This week I met with
chiefs, and I would like to quote a chief who said: We are not opposed to economic
development. No one is opposed to
economic development. What we want is to
be consulted. What we want to have is
input, and what we want is a fair piece of the pie. We want jobs.
In light of that
statement, Mr. Speaker, I want to ask the Minister responsible for Native
Affairs why he has not met with the First Nations to hear their concerns on
treaty land entitlement, on traditional land use, why he has not met with
them. Will he make a commitment today to
go up to the constituency and meet with these bands to address this concern so
that he does not put these jobs in jeopardy?
Hon. Darren Praznik (Minister responsible for Native Affairs): Mr. Speaker, I find it so
ironical that from the New Democratic Party benches we would have concerns
raised about job opportunities. The
question of how those jobs and economic opportunities are distributed is
certainly a very valid question, but it is coming from a member and from a party
who do not want the operation in the first place so that discussion becomes
very academic.
Point
of Order
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin Flon): Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, one of the
obligations of every member is to bring the truth to this House. The Minister of Labour‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please, right here. Hold it.
The honourable member for Flin Flon, you know full well, sir, that is
unparliamentary because in essence what you are saying, the honourable minister
is not telling the truth. Therefore,
that is unparliamentary. Right?
[interjection]
Order, please. The honourable member for Brandon East (Mr.
Leonard Evans), I am sure, does not want to reflect on the Chair.
What has happened here,
the honourable member for Flin Flon has said that the minister should bring
forward the truth. What you are saying,
sir, is that he has not been bringing the truth. Therefore, that is unparliamentary.
The honourable member for
Flin Flon, just to withdraw that, please.
Mr. Storie: I did imply that that may be entirely
possible in this instance, and if that is unparliamentary, Mr. Speaker, I will
withdraw it.
Mr. Speaker: I would like to thank the honourable member
for Flin Flon. There was not a point of
order, by the way, because that was a dispute over the facts.
*
* *
Mr. Speaker: Time for Oral Questions has expired.
NONPOLITICAL
STATEMENTS
Multicultural
Week
Mr. Jack Reimer (Niakwa): Mr. Speaker, I wonder if I may have leave for
a nonpolitical statement.
Mr. Speaker: Does the honourable member for Niakwa have
leave to make a nonpolitical statement? [agreed]
Mr. Reimer: Mr. Speaker, it is my pleasure to inform the
members of the House that this week, May 9 to 13, has been proclaimed
Multicultural Week in Manitoba.
Canada is a reflection of
the cultures of the world. Nowhere is
the fact more evident or proudly more celebrated than here in Manitoba. Manitobans have always been deeply committed
to maintaining their ethnocultural heritage and their traditions. The various celebrations, observations and
festivals held across the province throughout the year attest to the enthusiasm
and pride we feel about our origins.
We have become more aware
of how multicultural events are a positive force in our society. They provide economic stimulants, learning
experiences, a basis for understanding each other and countless opportunities
for bringing our ethnocultural communities closer together. Our dynamic multicultural community is a
vital factor in Manitoba's continuing growth and progress on every level. At a time when other nations are being torn
apart by their ethnocultural divisions, we are building for the future on the
strength of our ethnocultural diversity.
Multicultural Week is our
official recognition of Manitoba's multicultural reality of its roles in our
society and our day‑to‑day lives.
I ask all members of this House to join with me in recognizing and
celebrating Multicultural Week in Manitoba.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: Does the honourable member for Wellington
have leave to make a nonpolitical statement? [agreed]
Ms. Becky Barrett (Wellington): Mr. Speaker, I, too, would like to rise and
commend the people of Manitoba on the beginning of Multicultural Week in the
province of Manitoba and share, as the member for Niakwa (Mr. Reimer) has
stated, the positives that the people of Manitoba have experienced through the
richness and the variety of the ethnic groups that have graced our province
over the last 125 years.
Mr. Speaker, I also feel
that it is incumbent upon us, too, in this House to ensure that the programs
and the community be enriched by everything that we do in this Legislature, and
we, too, work and take account of all of our actions and the effect that all of
the deliberations that we undertake in this House have on all of our
communities, most particularly this week the multicultural community.
Again, Mr. Speaker, on
behalf of the NDP caucus we, too, share in the celebrations of Multicultural
Week.
Mr. Speaker: Does the honourable member for Inkster have
leave to make a nonpolitical statement? [agreed]
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): Mr. Speaker, it is with pleasure that I stand
up to give comment on Multicultural Week on behalf of the Liberal caucus.
Later this week, in fact,
I am going to be over at Meadows West School where there is going to be a
multicultural concert. This is a school
that has now sponsored a multicultural concert of sorts for the last number of
years. I have had other opportunities to
be able to attend it, and it is always a positive experience when you are able
to participate first‑hand in some of the different cultural events that
are out there.
I know over the last
weekend, for example, I was over at the Sikh temple on Mollard
and was able to participate in a Sikh wedding.
You get a better appreciation and a better understanding of the many
different cultures and heritages that are out there that help make up what we
are and is a part of the Canadian identity of being a multicultural society,
because far too often we hear the words of multiculturalism and we do not
necessarily see the sorts of actions from the public as a whole that reflect in
terms of what really and truly being a multicultural society is all about.
Hopefully, as we get
weeks of awareness such as this we will get more individuals participating and
experiencing first‑hand what multiculturalism is all about, thereby
getting a better appreciation and understanding of the many different cultures
and heritages that are out there.
Anything that goes to further promote multicultural harmony, whether it
is a heritage dance, whether it is barriers that are out there, can be a very
positive thing. It is with pleasure that
I say those few words. Thank you, Mr.
Speaker.
* (1430)
HEALTH
Madam Chairperson (Louise Dacquay): Order, please. Will the Committee of Supply please come to
order.
This section of the
Committee of Supply is dealing with the Estimates for the Department of
Health. We are on item 1.(b) Executive
Support (1) Salaries and Employee Benefits, page 81 of the Estimates manual.
Would the minister's
staff please enter the Chamber.
Item 1.(b)(1) Salaries
and Employee Benefits.
An Honourable Member: No.
Mr. Dave Chomiak (Kildonan): Madam Chairperson, I see that the minister
and his staff are ready to deal with the questions. I would like to ask the minister, does the
department maintain any kind of a central registry vis‑à‑vis lists
for any kinds of hospital surgery, or any other matters of a similar
nature? In other words, is there a
central registry for various aspects of surgery and/or other services offered
by the Department of Health overall?
* (1440)
Hon. James McCrae (Minister of Health): Madam Chairperson, the information the
honourable member asks about is something that is available, although not
compiled in the way the honourable member might have in his mind. We have in Manitoba the finest health data
base pretty well anywhere, and it is a question of whether the Department of
Health actually keeps those lists of each kind of surgery. The answer is no, we do not; however, in
certain areas where we feel that attention is required, we get involved and we
bring committees together, appropriate access committees and things of that
sort. We do not keep a central registry
of the various kinds of surgeries and how many and how many per month or week
or year. That information is not readily
available.
Mr. Chomiak: Does the minister have access to any
information that he can share with the committee that would show the breakdown
of surgery and the improvements and/or nonimprovements
that have occurred in the last little while with respect to surgery and surgery
waiting lists?
Mr. McCrae: Information like that in a form that is
readily usable is usually from the previous year, and that kind of information,
you will find some of it in the annual report, but information about past years
is more available than what is presently going on.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, the issue arose
approximately during this fiscal year concerning heart surgery. At that time there was an announcement from
the government, which I complimented the previous minister on, with respect to
a central registry for heart surgery in order to co‑ordinate
surgery. The government made an
announcement in that regard.
I am wondering if the
minister can at least provide that information to me as to the status of that
particular item that I went out of my way to compliment the previous Minister
of Health with regard to.
Mr. McCrae: I know the honourable member for Pembina (Mr.
Orchard) is busy taking a lot of advice from the honourable member for Elmwood
(Mr. Maloway) and is quite entranced with the information being imparted by the
member for Elmwood, so maybe he did not hear what the member for Kildonan had
to say. The member for Kildonan was
congratulating the member for Pembina, the Minister of Energy and Mines, for
the fine, fine job that he did in pulling together people with respect to
cardiac surgery‑‑
An Honourable Member: It is a trick question.
Mr. McCrae: We can see that the member for Pembina deeply
appreciates those sentiments.
Madam Chairperson,
through the auspices of the appropriate access committee which deals with
trouble areas such as cardiac where there is a perceived overimbalance
between the demand and the supply, we have the cardiac people in Manitoba
working together to ensure that patients are properly prioritized for
procedure, and we expect to have something in written form that we can share
with the honourable member by September.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, that matter is the subject
of the appropriate access committee. It
is still not formulated yet so at present there is not a central registry of
any sort that is existing with respect to cardiac surgery or other forms of
surgery for that matter?
Mr. McCrae: What I was referring to in my previous
response was a system to more appropriately co‑ordinate this function
will be in place by September. Of
course, the information that would go with such a system would then also be
available.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, when the health reform
document was introduced approximately two years ago, there was talk about the
various bed cuts. As I understand it,
there still have not been announcements with respect to 200 additional cuts to
take place in terms of beds. Can the
minister inform us as to the status of those cuts?
Mr. McCrae: The honourable member, I believe, in his
question referred to reform and moved immediately to the issue of closing
hospital beds. Unfortunately, that is
sometimes taken to be the only part of reform that is going on and that is
something that needs to be enlarged on.
It cannot be done in just a moment or two.
Certainly, we are looking
at it as a first issue with regard to this whole matter, the issue of
efficiency. I referred a little bit to
that a little earlier today during Question Period when the honourable member
was raising questions. We cannot
continue to keep inefficiency operating day in and day out in Manitoba, nor can
we deliberately go out and foster more inefficiency. That would be even worse than allowing the
inefficiencies that presently exist to continue to exist.
So the first part of this
matter, the first and most important issue has to do with efficiency. Efficiency deals with length‑of‑stay
issues, our ability to provide alternative care in the community, our ability
to take appropriate care of people safely in the community as opposed to in hospital
and certainly as opposed to high‑cost tertiary care hospital beds. This is an area where some people
deliberately misunderstand. Some people
just misunderstand and all kinds of people in Manitoba support what is going
on.
The reason they support
what is going on is that the nature of the care being provided in our
restructured system is more appropriate to the condition of people who find
themselves in need of assistance. So we
have to have acute care beds for people who need them, people who need
emergency services, people who need to recover from operative procedures. People hurt who are seriously ill need to be
placed in acute care beds and we have to have those beds available. We have to have them properly staffed with a
properly trained mix of staff people to look after the patients in those
circumstances.
* (1450)
So when we point out that
there have been beds closed, we also should remember to point out that many,
many beds have also been opened, alternate beds, long‑term beds, personal
care beds and, of course, a 93 percent increase in spending on home care‑‑93
percent. That has to be remembered when
we discuss the closing of hospital beds.
If you look back to
Quality Health for Manitobans: The
Action Plan, the plan set out in the spring of 1992, there was basically
universal support, although honourable members opposite set out on a path
immediately. Even though they gave
verbal support for the plan, they immediately began to be critical of each and
every move in furtherance of the plan.
That is something that needs to be brought forward, exposed. That is something that the members of the
public need to understand, just precisely what honourable members opposite have
been doing.
They need to understand
that there has not been just a closure of beds, there has been a redirection of
funding from acute to nonacute care. I refer, for example, to 60 personal care
beds established at Concordia general hospital.
That is 60.
Let us do a running total
as I discuss these. I think the
honourable member referred to some 240 bed cuts at acute care centres in Winnipeg, so we will write 240 down at the top
of my piece of paper here. Then we will
write down Concordia general hospital, 60 personal home care beds; and Deer
Lodge Centre 44 chronic and long‑term beds. Then there have been 23 long‑term care
transitional beds at Riverview Hospital, so that is 23 more there. Then when you include the 120 beds at
Kildonan personal care home, and we will add another 120 for River East‑‑I
am speaking of Winnipeg only at this time.
I do not know if I have
forgotten any beds we have opened up, but I am going to add up the ones that we
have. I see the honourable member for
Rossmere (Mr. Schellenberg) is here and was a witness at the opening of some of
these personal care home beds, so I am not alone in drawing attention to
these. So the 240 beds that the
honourable member has referred to as having been cut, if that is indeed the
correct number, have been replaced or there has been a redirection to the
extent, if my arithmetic is correct, to 367 beds opened versus the closed beds.
It sounds like more. I am not sure if the honourable member has
included all of the closed beds in his questions, so I want to be careful about
that. Basically the point I am trying to
make is that you have to count the beds open in the same equation, and then you
also have to remember length‑of‑stay changes. You also have to remember home care increased
by 93 percent over the last six years, and it is important to note that.
When we talk about length
of stay, let us remember that things like ophthalmology, in previous times,
meant a hospital stay of some significant length. Today it can mean almost immediate release
after a cataract operation. So when we
add up the 367 newly opened beds and put them beside those closed beds, it puts
a slightly different emphasis on the discussion. Let us remember that 360 new long‑term
beds require people to look after those residents in those beds. In personal care I think the ratio is about
one to one, so we are talking significant job creation in the community to
replace those acute care beds closed.
This is something that
needs to be stressed, I think, over and over again, Madam Chairperson, because
if you listened only to the honourable member, you would be left with the
impression that the only thing that happened was that beds were closed. I am here to acknowledge that beds have been
closed. That is a fact. That is something that has been planned, and it
is something that there has been support for.
I think the only issue is, are you doing a good enough job in the
community? We are able to show that we
are doing a job in the community that we believe offsets the changes in our
acute care centres.
There is a problem here
that maybe the honourable member can help us with because he has connections in
the union movement that I do not have. I
meet with representatives of organized labour. I work with them as closely as I can. I try to‑‑[interjection] I meet
with them, I work with them, I try. I
bend significant efforts to work with organized labour
and their members, and the honourable member is saying it will be a frosty
Friday or some such expression to suggest that I work with them.
Well, I do work with
them. I do not claim their support
because I will not go in lock step with them.
I will not be their mouthpiece as honourable members opposite will be. I will be the mouthpiece of the people of
Manitoba. I speak for the people of
Manitoba. I do not speak exclusively for
the union bosses in this province as the honourable member for Kildonan
does. That is why I can only claim to
work as closely as I can with organized labour and
their members in Manitoba to try to preserve the best of what we have in our
health care system and to promote improvements in our health care system.
Sometimes union bosses
have an agenda that is a little different from mine or that has a different
emphasis to it. I understand the role of
union leadership and that is to represent labour, to
represent workers either in our health system or whatever system they are
employed in. I respect their role. I know what they are there to do and why they
have to do it, but that should not include misleading the public. The public ought not to be misled into
thinking that hospital bed closures is the only game in town, because it is
not. There are a whole lot of other
things going on.
The other part of the
question the honourable member raises, and I will go back to that in a minute,
but when I raised the issue of the union bosses‑‑
Mr. Steve Ashton (Thompson): I hear you used to be a member, Jim.
Mr. McCrae: The member for Thompson points out I used to
be a union member, and he is absolutely right.
I was a card‑carrying member of the Manitoba Government Employees'
Union, and at that time the Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) was my union
boss. The only thing different about me
and the member for Concordia is that when I entered this House I put the needs
of the people ahead of everything else.
The member for Concordia‑‑[interjection] I did sign it. I signed my membership card in the MGEU
because if the opportunity arose I wanted to have a say. They were taking my money anyway, so I wanted
to have a say on how my money was being spent.
There are issues right
here in the Contemporary Manitoba about how peoples' union dollars are being
used, too. We may even get into
that. For example, I do not know what
some of these union bosses' wages are. I
do not know what their salaries and benefits are, some of those things. As I say, I met this morning with Peter
Olfert and representatives of some other unions, and I do not know if the
honourable member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) also met with any of those people
or heard from any of those people after our meeting today. It is possible that could have happened. In any event, I say to the honourable member
that all of these 367 beds that I referred to and the employment that
generates, I do not know if it generates employment for all of these places; I
do not know if they are all union shops or not.
Now that may have an
impact too, because we need the assistance of the unions with this shift that
is going on. We are creating the jobs
outside the acute care places, and we need the unions' co‑operation in
helping us place people who could otherwise be displaced without that help from
the unions and from people like the honourable member for Kildonan.
* (1500)
So I look for
support. Rather than always talking
about cuts and trying to disrupt, I would appreciate it if the honourable
member would go by his party's direction, which was basically to support health
reform, and basically to support health reform as laid out in the plan put
forward by my predecessor in the spring of 1992, but also to help real people
who are facing difficult times in their lives by job displacement because of
shifts in emphasis in health care. Help
us to deal with those shops that may not be all union shops. Help us to make that transition from acute
care employment to employment in community care, either long term or elsewhere.
Help us with those
things. If you want to argue about
closed hospital beds, do that, but at least round out the whole equation and
provide a service which you can do, honourable members opposite can do, unless
all they do is take orders from the unions.
Maybe they listen and talk too, and maybe the unions will take a little
leadership from the New Democrats. Now I
know there is an organic fusion between the New Democrats and the union
movement. That is what Professor Alan
Mills said, there is an organic fusion between the NDP and the union
movement. Well, why do we not use that
fusion in a constructive way? That
fusion could be used to help real people who need help out there in the job
market.
I think organic fusion
means there is a close kind of relationship.
This is what Professor Allen Mills said.
In spite of that fusion that exists, even that gets tested from time to
time.
I know that in Ontario
they tried to build a social contract, and as part of that‑‑we have
a New Democratic government in Ontario, and they tried to build a social
contract with the union movement in Ontario.
Michael Decter used to work here in Manitoba. Michael Decter was the clerk of the Executive
Council, the highest office of the civil service here in Manitoba under the
Pawley government. The member for
Kildonan sat around that table with Michael Decter and the member for Brandon
East and the member for Dauphin, the member for Flin Flon and maybe a few
others as well, sat around the table cheek by jowl, belly to belly, nose to
nose with Michael Decter, and they became very close associates.
In any event, after the
Pawley government left office in 1988, Mr. Decter went to work subsequently for
the Ontario government, ended up being Deputy Minister of Health. For a time he headed up the effort to build
this social contract with the union movement, and all accounts seemed to
demonstrate that that whole experiment failed.
In fact, they carry signs in Ontario that says: Decter is a four‑letter word. That is according to the news coming out of
Ontario.
It is different‑‑New
Democrats seem to conduct themselves differently when in opposition than when they
are in government, because all I do ask honourable members opposite and some of
their union friends is to look to the other New Democratic provinces. Do not stop there. Look to the Conservative province of Alberta
and the Liberal provinces of the remaining provinces to see what is happening
in the health care sector and every other sector. There is a restructuring going on worldwide,
industrially, commercially, politically, and that includes the health care systems
of many, many countries.
I do ask, plead even, for
the support of honourable members opposite, speak with their union boss friends
because those people can be helpful. I
have had very constructive discussions with them, and yet in fact they do not even
sound as menacing as the honourable member for Kildonan. So they do not have to overstate their case
to the unions. Let the unions state
their own cases. Why do the New Democrats
not just speak for the people who elected them?
That would be a good idea in my view, because the people who elected
them would say: Work with the
government, criticize them when they make mistakes, give them credit where
credit is due, and give them a good kick when they need that too. I think that is what the people of Manitoba
would say, and I am prepared to accept and acknowledge when my mistakes have
been brought to my attention.
I do not know when‑‑I
think, for example, the member for Brandon East (Mr. Leonard Evans), and I
think he has been in opposition for six years now. The last time he said something positive that
is on the record was when he and his colleagues were in government. That is the last time. Check it out.
You will not find anything positive that the member for Brandon East has
said. That is unfortunate, but that is
the way it works. [interjection] You want me to finish?
The honourable member for
Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) wants me to finish, but just before I do, the other
issue here, is the issue of restructuring.
I do not know where the honourable member stood on the issue of ophthalmology,
for example, and centres of excellence, but we can
see that by consolidating ophthalmological services to Misericordia Hospital,
we have been able to improve service vastly to Manitobans, such that when they
talk about the private clinics, the private cataract or ophthalmological
clinics, my response to that is, we are not terribly worried because we think
even our public system is able to compete successfully with those private
operators. It does not mean they are
bad. It just means that we are doing a
much better job through a consolidated and restructured ophthalmological unit
at Misericordia Hospital.
So we are looking also at
other disciplines. We are looking at
tertiary care through Bell‑Wade and having discussions there. We are looking at secondary care as
well. There are a number of things yet
to be done, and we simply look for support from the honourable member. I guess it is asking too much to ask him to be
reasonable, but, you know, do not overstate the case of those with whom you are
organically fused because‑‑
An Honourable Member: Why?
Mr. McCrae: Do not overstate their case. They do a pretty good job stating their own
case, and let not that fusion confuse you into thinking that you have to yell
louder even than the union bosses.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, the minister is clearly
following the route of his predecessor by attempting to blame, by attempting to
hide behind the facts. I had occasion to
speak recently with several groups who met with the minister, who said to me,
why does the minister say one thing to us and another thing somewhere else and
another thing publicly?
I will not imply what
they were saying about the minister's technique, but they said at least the
previous minister was consistent in what he said. He did not say one thing to one group and one
thing to another group to garner favour with
them. At least the previous minister did
as much. That is at least two groups who
have met with that minister recently.
Therein lies the tale because the present minister is so caught up in
his defensive maneuvers, because the present minister is so caught up in trying
to cover up for the mistakes.
Madam Chairperson, it is
not members on this side of the House who are sitting on three‑quarters
of a million dollars giving it to their American consultant. It is members opposite who are going to give
the hard‑earned tax dollars of the Manitoba public more to their American
consultant.
It is not members on this
side of the House who said, 1,500 more positions would be lost at St. Boniface,
at Health Sciences Centre. It is not
members on this side of the House; it is the government's own targets. It is the government's own guidelines. It is not members on this side of the House
who entered into that contract for $3.9 million plus $800,000 expenses. We gave them the opportunity, in fact, many
opportunities to get out of that contract, but they did not. It is not members on this side of the House
that gave the deputy minister an increase in salary while laying off nurses and
telling people they were not needed in the system.
* (1510)
It is not members on this
side of the House who did that, it is members opposite who will not take
responsibility and who attempt to deflect it and who attempt to categorize it
and to say that any criticism‑‑and I understand why the minister is
so sensitive to the criticism. I
understand the health reform undertaken by this government is in shambles. Everyone in the province of Manitoba knows
that this government has botched health reform miserably, Madam Chairperson,
miserably.
No matter how much the
present minister or the former minister will chant on with their rhetoric, the
truth is known by Manitobans. The truth
is known about January '93, St. Boniface closes 115 beds; St. Boniface cuts 140
positions April '93; Misericordia confirms 57 positions April '93; St. Boniface
announces another 39 hospitals, 230 beds April 30; May 18, Brandon General
Hospital announces 20 permanent positions; June 15, '93, St. Boniface lays off
148 nurses; all LPNs lose their jobs at St. Boniface; July '93, Grace General
Hospital closes 20 of their psych beds; July 30, '93, Grace announces it plans
to close its 25‑bed gynecology ward, and on and on and on.
That does not even deal‑‑on
top of that, they have the audacity, the former minister, to cut people off
home care, to force people off home care, to make people pay user fees for home
care equipment, to make people pay user fees for ostomy supplies. In the midst of it all, the saviour comes in from the United States to Americanize the
system, to make it like friends opposite want.
How do friends opposite
want it? They want to privatize major
aspects of our public health care system.
There is no question that is the goal, the end goal of members opposite,
to cut back the public system and to privatize.
We know because we see examples going on all over the system.
Mr. McCrae: Patients like it and the NDP hate it.
Mr. Chomiak: The minister says patients like it and we
hate it. I like that comment of the
minister's.
You know, it is funny,
Madam Chairperson, how sensitive the minister is in defending this particular
contract. The study is not completed,
but it is completed in his mind. Now he
will not do that with any of their other studies, Bell‑Wade, Frank
Manning, they are all on the shelf; oh, we are considering those. But when he is sensitive about privatizing to
We Care, no, the minister is defending it left, right and centre, going across
the province touting We Care when in fact the contract was not tendered.
In fact, it is not
completed, but the minister is saying the patients like it. Of course, patients are going to like it when
you have dismantled the system, when you have dismantled home care and you have
made it difficult. When you have done
nothing to improve home care to allow people to get access to that service, of
course, people are going to say yes.
Mr. McCrae: Tell us about self‑managed care.
Mr. Chomiak: The minister says, tell us about self‑managed
care as he goes on and on. He has had
his study for almost a year now calling for expanding self‑managed
care. They are waiting. I know what they are waiting for. They are waiting for some announcement. They are going to try to give big PR. The minister will get in front of the pool
lights and make another announcement to try to show somehow that they are
improving the system, and they are going to expand self‑managed care
another 30 in Winnipeg, another 30 in rural Manitoba, another 30 in northern
Manitoba. Everyone knows that, Madam
Chairperson. Everyone knows what is
coming, and everyone welcomes an expanded self‑managed care.
After they have studied
the heck out of it for year, after year, after year, this is going to be their
big initiative because I know how the minister operates. He takes something and he runs with it, and
he uses that as a front to say we are doing something in some areas.
He ran with the drunk
driving initiative in the Department of Justice for years. That was the only initiative undertaken in
that department, and every time the minister stands up he says, well, we have
the toughest drunk driving legislation.
Of course, we have. The minister
kept on and on and on because there were no other initiatives undertaken in the
department and the present minister, of course, is suffering, as a result of
that, from the backlog and the difficulties by the previous minister.
To return to the point,
the minister takes a few symbolic gestures, and the minister attempts to show
that is somehow moving us in the area of reform, Madam Chairperson.
I did not intend to go
this long, but the minister went on his usual 20‑25 minute dissertation
slamming union bosses and going all around attempting to criticize everyone
except accepting responsibility for the actions of the department, except
accepting the responsibility and saying, yes, perhaps we made a mistake here,
perhaps we made a mistake there. No, the
minister does not do that because the best defence
for the minister is an offence. You
simply attack and attack and attack.
Blame the union bosses. Blame the
opposition.
It is not us who put your
health care reform in the tatters it is.
It is the minister, or the predecessor.
It is that entire cabinet who sat around and said let us hack and slash
here. Let us cut money from the Home
Care program. Let us make people pay for
user fees. Let us give Connie Curran her
runaway money. That is who did it. It was not members of this side of the House
who suggested that.
So the minister ought not
to go on lecturing in terms of what we should be saying and doing. We are doing our job on behalf of the people
of Manitoba, trying to somehow get this health care system back to something
that people believe in, trying to get a health care system people have faith
in, trying to get a health care system where, when you go knocking on someone's
door, you do not fear for their health or fear for the well‑being of their
parents or their loved ones.
Because what your
initiatives have done in the health care field, Madam Chairperson, is raised
fear and caused doubt and caused‑‑[interjection] The member for
Pembina (Mr. Orchard) says, that is silly.
The minister still has not received the message. That is the sad part. Members on that side of the House have still
not heard the message.
Yes, they had the
minister doing ads in a nice sweater during the last by‑election, but,
no, they simply did not acknowledge or recognize the serious errors that were
made in the health care system, their lack of consultation, the blunders that
they had entered into, the bad contracts, the bad sense of priorities, and now
the minister is trying to put a face, trying to change the tone and somehow
blame the opposition.
If the minister is
seeking to blame the mess on all of us, let him do that, but he does a
disservice to both the opposition and to the province of Manitoba by only
seeking to blame.
My question to the
minister‑‑if the minister could outline for us what the status is
of the central purchasing plan that was undertaken by Miss Connie Curran, et
al?
Mr. McCrae: Some of the things the honourable member
says, Madam Chairperson, would have you believe that his alternative, there
being none other put forward, is that we keep people in hospitals, that we make
hotels out of our hospitals and staff them as if they were hospitals, but they
have well people in them or people who are well enough to be looked after
somewhere else, keep them in hospital anyway.
The member asked about
central processing. We are working
together with all of the hospitals in Winnipeg to make every effort to
streamline that process and make it efficient, always remembering that the
patient is the one that we want to look after, and if we do everything with the
focus on the patient instead of the focus on maybe some model of the way we
used to do things, if we put the patient first we will make improvements, and
that is where we are at.
Ms. Avis Gray (Crescentwood): Madam Chairperson, I am wondering if the
minister could indicate when we might be able to get a list of the grants to
the external agencies so that we have an opportunity to review them before we
ask questions.
Mr. McCrae: For purposes of planning we will make that
available tomorrow for the honourable member, and she could ask her questions
after that time.
* (1520)
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, I am wondering, in the area of salaries and employee
benefits, if the minister, if there is a salary indication of merit increments,
et cetera, for those senior management who are not part of the union, and if
the minister would be prepared to share that with us.
Mr. McCrae: As the honourable member knows, the salaries
of all civil servants is public information, and senior management of
departments is also public information.
It is not all set out in a nice list in contemplation of the honourable
member's question, but I am told that we can make that information available
for the honourable member. I point out
to the honourable member that every employee in the civil service is appointed
within a salary range. The honourable
member has a background like I do in the civil service, so understands how
there are classifications and steps within those classifications.
Just for the honourable
member's benefit and, maybe even more significantly, for the benefit of the
honourable member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak), when he suggests that people's
salary should be rolled back, he is suggesting that 106 clerks in the
Department of Health's salary be rolled back, because 106 people‑‑
Point
of Order
Mr. Chomiak: I have never ever suggested that all the
clerks' salaries be rolled back, only the deputy minister's salary.
Madam Chairperson: Order, please. The honourable member for Kildonan does not
have a point of order. It is clearly a
dispute over the facts.
*
* *
Mr. McCrae: I do not think it is fair to discriminate
against the Deputy Minister of Health. I
do not think discrimination like that is appropriate, for whatever reason. The honourable member wants to discriminate
against one individual, the Deputy Minister of Health, when there are 106
clerks in the Department of Health in exactly the same position in terms‑‑
Madam Chairperson: Order, please. The honourable member for Crescentwood (Ms.
Gray) posed a question, and the honourable Minister of Health is attempting to
respond to that question.
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, I did say to the
honourable member that the information she seeks will be put together for her
and made available for her, but the question does beg the question about
discrimination against one individual, like the honourable member for Kildonan
is perpetrating.
It is not fair to suggest
that one person ought to be singled out when a treatment is identical for that
person as with everyone else simply because that person is prominent by virtue
of being a deputy minister, after working many, many years in the Department of
Health, and working his way to that position.
It is not fair, I suggest, that the honourable member‑‑I
mean, what he has done is said, we will pick and choose who we do not like; we
will make sure that their salaries are rolled back; and if we do not like them
enough, maybe ultimately they will quit or some such thing like that. Now that is the kind of governing which this
country, I thought, put behind us years ago.
The fair and logical extension
of the honourable member's position is that he would roll back the wages of 106
clerks, union people who are paid in precisely the same manner as out‑of‑scope
people like deputy ministers. Forty‑three
secretaries would not get their increments if the honourable member had his
way, because I can tell you, if we are going to adopt that policy‑‑and
we will check with the unions and see if they think that is the right approach
as put forward by the member for Kildonan.
After all, it is his idea
that we roll back the wages of 106 clerks.
It is the honourable member's idea that we roll back the wages of 43
secretaries. The honourable member for
Kildonan wants us to roll back the wages of 65 service workers, and this is
just in the Department of Health. The
member wants us to roll back the wages of seven cooks. The member for Kildonan wants us to roll back‑‑the
Health critic for the New Democratic Party and the New Democratic Party and his
Leader and everybody over there want us to roll back the wages of 24 laboratory
technologists. They want us to roll back
the wages of 61 nurses.
When it comes to case co‑ordinators, public health nurses, mental health
workers and resource co‑ordinators, the
honourable member and his colleagues want us to roll back the wages of 243
people. It this is their position, this
is the position that we will be asking the unions whether they agree with the
member for Kildonan that we should roll back the wages of nine home economists.
Should we really be
rolling back the wages of two audiologists; 16 medical officers; one
occupational therapist; three psychologists; one pharmacists; two scientists;
three dietitians; eight planning analysts?
The honourable member wants us to roll back also the wages of four
consultants; 12 administrative officers. [interjection] Yes, the honourable
member has just confirmed that he wants us to roll back these wages. He wants us to roll back the wages of 12
administrative officers. The New
Democrats in Manitoba want us to roll back the wages of 11 finance officers and
three keypunch operators.
You see, Madam
Chairperson, these people are people too.
They earned their increments.
They are in a salary scale and have not reached the top yet. You see, if they had reached the top of their
scales, they would not get any further raises, but if you have not reached the
top, you get these increments in the civil service. The honourable member wants that stopped certainly
for the deputy minister. But if he is a
fair man and somebody who does not discriminate against just one person, then
his policy has it that 15 computer operators and programmers would have their
wages rolled back.
Remember, Madam
Chairperson, this is only in the Department of Health. You have to extend this argument that he
makes beyond the Department of Health to all the civil servants in Manitoba,
all the people who work under collective agreements in the public sector, all
the teachers‑‑[interjection] Was he a civil servant too? Oh, sure, he used to work as a political
person in one of the minister's offices, the member for Kildonan.
(Mr. Ben Sveinson, Acting
Chairperson, in the Chair)
The member for Kildonan
wants us to roll back the salaries of four equipment technicians, 13 activity
instructors. You know these activity
instructors, they do valuable work, and the honourable member wants to roll
their salaries back without any regard whatever for their contribution to the
health of their fellow Manitobans. He
wants to roll back the wages of five professional officers, four directors‑‑well,
now, maybe this is not so bad‑‑three assistant deputy
ministers. I guess the higher you go in
the hierarchy, the more of a target you are going to be for the honourable
member for Kildonan and his friends opposite, who did not mind at all loading
on the benefits and the salaries for senior people in Crown corporations and
perhaps in the government too when they were in office. They did not mind at all probably putting in
a good word for Michael Decter before he went off to Ontario to get his
$140,000 salary and $102,000 in benefits.
What about their dear,
dear friend Mark Eliesen? What has he
been doing lately? The New Democrats'
dear, dear friend Mark Eliesen is pulling off a salary in B.C. of $195,000‑‑if
he has not been fired by now‑‑and a bonus of $58,000. That is all defensible, but, oh, no, do not
work within a scale subject to all the rules of the Civil Service Commission
and pay a deputy minister a certain level in Manitoba and make sure he is
treated like other civil servants that he presides over.
Of course, the last one,
and this is the one out of the 716 people the honourable member would have us
believe, there is only one in that list whose salary he would roll back. Why does he want to do that? Symbolism.
Well, I can hark back to the symbolism of other leaders in this world of
ours in the past and what symbolism did and how symbolism resulted in a change
to our world. I say to the honourable
member that he gets himself onto a pretty slippery slope when he tries to play
around with a little bit of symbolism at the expense of one individual.
* (1530)
The honourable member
wants me to talk to them; I did talk to them.
I spent two hours talking to them on an open‑line radio show last
week, and when it became clear, the hypocrisy of the New Democratic Party, the
questions reverted to other things like diets in old folks homes, about the way
we run our hospitals, and support for health care reform initiatives going on in
Manitoba. The honourable member probably
monitored that program and knows as well as I what the public is saying and
what they are saying about the approach of the New Democratic Party to anything
resembling a nonhypocritical way to deliver services.
So much for the merit
program. That goes by the boards. Well, that is maybe kind of typical of the
New Democratic Party, where there is no merit in the first place; if they had any,
they would not want to reward it anyway, and that is why they do not have merit
in the New Democratic Party.
I still wonder what the
honourable member's colleagues in the union movement think of his proposal to
roll back everybody's merit increases or not to give them next year, but if the
whole idea of keeping people in hospital when they do not need to be there,
which is the policy of the New Democratic Party, I am sorry, I disagree with
it. I think that in order for me to
disagree appropriately with it, we do have to put in place appropriate supports
in the community.
I have tried to go over
some of those supports that we have put in.
I think the honourable member has forgotten altogether that this is not
20‑25 years ago. You do not stay
in hospital for a week for eye surgery anymore; it is usually done, and you go
home on the same day, but the honourable member forgets about that. If he had his way, we would have all this
capacity in our hotels, we would not need to have a Home Care program, we would
not need to have personal care, but we would have a lot of hospitals doubling
as hotels in our province, and that is not appropriate. That is not the proper way to use our
hospitals.
They are $800 a day in
some of them, $500 or $600 in others, and that is an inappropriate use of
scarce dollars. The honourable member is
not in government, so he does not have to respect that, but certainly when he
and his colleagues were in government in 1987, the first, and I will put this
in quotation marks, "health care reform" was in Brandon General
Hospital where they, without any regard for any supports in the community,
lopped off 42 beds in our hospital in Brandon.
I will tell you, the
people in Brandon were not very happy, especially when the member for Brandon
East (Mr. Leonard Evans), who represents the east end of town, went off and
hid. The honourable member for Brandon
East, when his colleagues were busy hacking and slashing and closing beds at
Brandon General Hospital and calling it health care reform, where was the
member for Brandon East? Hiding
somewhere.
How come we do not hear
any comment from the member for Kildonan when we know that 5,000 beds have
closed in Ontario? Who closed them? Michael Decter. Who is Michael Decter and, more to the point,
where is he now? Well, the member for
Kildonan mentioned Connie Curran as he heckled from his seat. Well, Michael Decter is now the chief
executive officer for the APM company, Connie Curran's company here in Canada.
Let us not get any
further in this debate until we uncover the crass hypocrisy of the New Democratic
Party and the honourable member for Kildonan.
Ms. Gray:
I have another question that relates to the overtime line under
Executive Support, 28.7. If the minister
could tell us who actually is racking up the overtime hours, is it professional/technical
staff, or what is generally the breakdown?
Mr. McCrae: I know the honourable member will not
sympathize, but I am putting in the overtime and I do not put in for it. But we will check and for those who are
getting paid for it, we will make the honourable member aware of that.
Within the office of the
deputy minister, there is an overtime amount.
During the time of‑‑well, the Health department is hard
enough to run, but we are in a transformation mode, and there have been
significantly higher levels of work to be done in the deputy's office.
Although the amount is
similar to what it was last year, it is still at fairly high levels of
overtime, and that is to take account of various initiatives that the deputy's
office is involved in. In terms of
specific information, I will make that available to the honourable member.
Ms. Gray:
Could the minister also perhaps get the information, if 28.7 is the
amount of dollars that are paid out in overtime, what the actual total amount
of dollars is, in other words, overtime hours which are not paid out but in
fact are used as time off in lieu of.
Mr. McCrae: We will obtain that information.
Mr. Chomiak: I would think that a considerable amount of
that overtime might be bought up by the photocopying of articles for the
minister from Ontario and other jurisdictions that have absolutely no relevance
to proceedings in this Chamber.
Point
of Order
Mr. McCrae: I would like to point out that any
information I have about Michael Decter has not been photocopied in my office.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): The honourable minister did not have a point
of order.
*
* *
Mr. Chomiak: The member for Pembina (Mr. Orchard) said
that he did the photocopying, and that would not surprise me. I mean, that would not surprise me, to see
them all huddled around the photocopy machine‑‑all huddled‑‑while
the public, while the health care system ticks along and is partially in the
state of disrepair as a result of the policies initiated by the previous
minister and carried on by the present minister. It would not surprise me to see all of the
members huddled around a photocopy machine photocopying the articles.
It is a pity that we have
to spend as much time as we do with the minister going off on tangents,
referring to matters that have absolutely no relevance to this discussion. Perhaps I feed into this by responding to the
minister. I prefer not to, but the
minister simply goes on and on and on, irrelevant factors, trying to justify
many of the decisions.
Mr. Acting Chairperson,
the minister gave probably the most complete answer he has given in this entire
Estimates process to the question that was not even asked when he started going
through the list of employees in the department and indicating somehow saying
what our position is. That is the
problem, the trap the minister falls into, because the minister likes to
accuse. He did that very well when he
was in opposition. He likes to accuse
and attack, but cannot defend his own position.
The minister only attacks and accuses and does not deal with the issue.
The minister would have a
tough time explaining to people in my constituency how the salary for the
deputy minister can increase by more than 10 percent in several years while
people are asked to take such massive cuts.
Whether the minister likes it or not, symbolically it is a very
difficult issue for Manitobans to understand.
I understand the minister's sensitivity.
I am sure I understand his sensitivity, because symbolically it is a
major problem, and the minister cannot deal with it.
* (1540)
The minister seeks to
hide around, and the minister says, one individual. The fact remains that out of this particular
branch is formed the whole strategy and the whole emphasis on health
reform. That is why it is
important. Because out of here is
launched the health reform initiative, out of here is the strategy behind the
health reform initiative, out of this particular appropriation is where the
direction comes, and it says here: strategic
direction in policy development, program determination and administration. Provides for the development and
implementation of health system renewal.
Develops strategies for the development of healthy public policy, policy
development in key areas. Provide
leadership to senior executive and management personnel.
It is significant. It is important to the people of Manitoba
that they know and they understand what has happened, Mr. Acting Chairperson,
and it is unfortunate that the minister does not accept that this is a major
difficulty. It is a pity the minister
does not understand that this is a problem as perceived by the public of
Manitoba, but nothing I say or do will convince the minister otherwise, since
he has got his own agenda with respect to defending this particular matter.
Mr. McCrae: Well, as I was saying, Mr. Acting
Chairperson, the honourable member has given us his views of the merit
principle and how it has no place in the civil service, and the merit principle
has no place anywhere else in there in his view. I am afraid I just disagree‑‑I am
not afraid. I disagree with that. I am proud of the fact that I disagree with
that.
There has got to be some
reward for people who do a good job. In
the civil service we often do not even call them merit increases, we call them
increments, which happens to you in the civil service as you near the top of
your classification. Sometimes there is
another classification that you can go to, but ultimately, if you are around in
a particular position long enough, you reach the top of your level, and your
salary does not go higher unless there is a reclassification process, which is
supervised by the Civil Service Commission.
I just want the
honourable members to have a bit of an overview of where all of this discussion
is taking us. Here we are, because the
honourable member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) raised it, spending an inordinate
amount of time on one particular person, one particular salary and so on, when
really what has been happening in Manitoba has been a phased approach to a
reformed health system which is taking longer than it has taken in other
provinces but will achieve the same result.
The reason we can afford
to take a little longer with this and use the phased approach and try to
cushion impacts is because we started earlier than most provinces and because
we started with a plan. Other provinces
came along, and with the stroke of a pen, reduced the number of hospital
districts, for example, in Saskatchewan from something like around 400 hospital
districts to about 30, at the stroke of a pen, literally, through the passage
of legislation. This happened in other
provinces, too, a very, very quick process. [interjection] The honourable member
for Kildonan wants to talk. He does not
want to listen so I will sit down and listen.
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Acting Chairperson, as I indicated to the
minister, I can read this particular speech in the Hansard because the minister
has delivered it on two or three separate occasions. I can simply read all of the comments that
the minister is putting in the record with regard to this, because the minister
has made it over and over again. Unless
the minister has new information he wishes to bring to this committee, we
should probably move on.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Item 1.(b)(1) Salaries and Employee Benefits
$608,600‑‑pass.
1.(b)(2) Other
Expenditures $163,600.
Ms. Gray:
Mr. Acting Chairperson, just a couple of questions under Other
Expenditures. The Communications, 37.6,
could the minister indicate what dollars are spent in that line?
Mr. McCrae: That line refers to costs from the office of
the deputy minister; telephone costs budgeted to reduce from $30,000 budgeted
last year to $26,700 this year. Postage
costs are expected to be the same at $7,400, and courier expenses are expected
to be at about the same at $3,500.
Ms. Gray:
Can the minister tell us where the advertising dollars come out of, for
instance, the current program against cigarettes and smuggling, or does it come
out of specific lines of the department?
Mr. McCrae: The officials tell me that the Department of
Health is not financing those, but the Department of Finance is.
Ms. Gray:
The Other Operating line, 52, could the minister give us a basic
breakdown of what the $52,000 are used for?
Mr. McCrae: The $52,000 under Other Operating, Mr. Acting
Chairperson, is the same as last year.
It accounts for hotels, meals, insurance, publications and other which
is not broken down further in the documents that I have in front of me‑‑hotels
$6,300; meals $15,100; insurance $500; publications $4,100; other $26,000.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Item 1.(b)(2) Other Expenditures $163,600‑‑pass.
1.(c) Evaluation and
Audit Secretariat (1) Salaries and Employee Benefits $340,200.
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Acting Chairperson, the nursing five‑year
resource plan, would it be under this particular appropriation, or would it be
under some other appropriation?
Mr. McCrae: It is not under this appropriation, but we
can talk about it if the honourable member wishes.
Mr. Chomiak: I will move it to the appropriate
appropriation just for purposes of expediency.
The other question that I
have with regard to this appropriation is, what is the status of the
legislation as it affects dental nurses?
* (1550)
Mr. McCrae: Mr. Acting Chairperson, with respect to
dental nurses and the services they provide working with other members of the
dental profession in Manitoba, certainly dental nurses' contribution to the
overall dental health of Manitobans is and has been significant for Manitobans.
With respect to
professional issues between dental nurses and other nursing professionals and
other professionals, there remain issues that are the subject of ongoing
discussion, perhaps sometimes debate, too.
Because of this, and not only in this area, but many other areas as
well, we have had and seen over the years of proliferation, of professional
organizations in Manitoba and other provinces as well. It raised enough issues for government in
Manitoba to prompt the government to ask the Law Reform Commission of Manitoba
to do some work on this subject.
Now the honourable member
may recall, this Law Reform Commission is a commission that was revived by our
government shortly after we took office in 1988. This project that the Law Reform Commission
is working on is, I am told, the biggest project it has ever been involved with
because of that proliferation of professions in Manitoba.
I am glad we did not
allow the Law Reform Commission to die, which was about to happen to it had we
not moved back in 1988 to restore to it its independence and its very
existence. Before I took office as
Attorney General, the previous Attorney Generals were in the process of winding
down the Law Reform Commission. I think
they were winding it down. In fact, they
replaced‑‑
Point
of Order
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Acting Chairperson, I believe that the
minister is to confine his responses at least to his own department. The minister is trying to play cheap politics
by justifying and dealing with decisions that occurred in a previous
department. If the minister would answer
the question, we could perhaps get on for the benefit of the public of
Manitoba, rather than have the minister play his political games by rehashing
and giving of history when he was Justice minister, perhaps when he was‑‑
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. I would encourage all members sitting here
today to try to stick to the lines in the department at hand. At this point, though, the honourable member
does not have a point of order.
*
* *
Mr. McCrae: Well, I certainly agree with you, Mr. Acting
Chairperson, and I do not propose to break any rules, certainly not on purpose
anyway.
What I am talking about,
the Law Reform Commission, is indeed very relevant to the issue raised by the
honourable member. I would not be
talking about this if the honourable member had not raised the question. It is very relevant that we have a Law Reform
Commission to help us sort out all these things.
Now unlike the honourable
Minister of Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard) who probably misses the honourable
member for Kildonan a lot, I do not have that problem because he was my critic
before when I was in the Justice department, and now he is still my
critic. I just cannot seem to shake him
off, Mr. Acting Chairperson.
Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. I am having trouble hearing the comments of
the honourable minister.
Mr. McCrae: Just to make sure there is no doubt about the
relevance of the services provided by the Law Reform Commission in relation to
this question about dental nurses, let me explain that if there was no Law
Reform Commission I do not know what independent agency we could have turned
this matter over to to look for advice, because many
of the issues involved in this are legal, many of them are regulatory in
nature.
There are many
overlapping issues between various professionals. If the NDP had their way and there was no Law
Reform Commission, I just do not know who we could have turned to, to seek
advice on this extremely important issue of the proliferation of professional
organizations in Manitoba.
You know we went so far
as to restore the very same commissioners to the commission. The NDP politicized the commission by turning
over the commissionerships to senior civil servants. Much as I enjoyed working with those senior
civil servants when I was Justice minister, they were not appropriate people to
head up a Law Reform Commission which, by its very nature, should‑‑
Mr. Chomiak: You are living in the past.
Mr. McCrae: I am living in the future, as a matter of
fact.
Mr. Chomiak: I support the Law Reform Commission. I support it.
Mr. McCrae: Okay, so the honourable member has said he
supports the Law Reform Commission. He
admits that trying to do away with it was a terrible, terrible mistake on the
part of he and his predecessors, because you see the honourable member cannot
escape responsibility totally. He was
very much bound up with that infestation of New Democrats that we‑‑
Points
of Order
Mr. Chomiak: I believe you should admonish the minister
and all members of this Chamber to try to stick to the department in
question. The minister is reliving his
tenure as Justice minister, perhaps happier days, but the point is, he is
dealing with‑‑
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. The honourable member does not have a point
of order.
*
* *
Mr. McCrae: On a new point of order, I wonder if you
would consider admonishing the honourable member for Kildonan, who drives me to
distraction by raising so many points of order all the time.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): The honourable minister does not have a point
of order.
*
* *
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): The honourable minister, to finish his
comments.
Mr. McCrae: Very briefly then, the honourable member has
admitted the failure of the previous government and possibly the failure of any
future NDP government as well by extension, so that is not something we should
be worrying about very much.
The Law Reform
Commission, with respect to the question raised about dental nurses, released a
discussion paper in November of 1993 and has requested comments from all
interested groups before March 1 of this year.
The final report and recommendations we expect will be prepared
hopefully later this year.
Those interested in
professional status or regulation for dental nurses, as well as the Manitoba
Dental Association itself, may submit comments to the Law Reform
Commission. I am not sure if they have
or not, but on other issues I have been involved in discussions, and one or
other of these groups may well have done that already, made their views known
to the Law Reform Commission, so that the commission in all its deliberations
and using all of the skill that it has at its disposal, because of the
excellence of the commissioners that we restored to office back in 1988 after
the New Democrats tried to wind down that commission, I am sure they will come
forward‑‑
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. The honourable member for Kildonan, were you
up on a point of order or not?
Mr. Chomiak: I am just anticipating finally the end of the
minister's long‑‑
* (1600)
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Order, please. The honourable Minister of Health to finish
his comments.
Mr. McCrae: Well, I lost my place now, Mr. Acting
Chairperson.
An Honourable Member: When in doubt, ask Frank.
Mr. McCrae: I do, I do.
The Acting Chairperson (Mr. Sveinson): Perhaps we are ready to move on.
Mr. McCrae: Except I lost my place and I will finish up
really quick.
The Law Reform Commission
is working on this question, and I expect that later this year they will make
their report‑‑I hope it is later this year‑‑and that
will be released. Then we will have the
benefit of that advice, and we will be able to proceed further. Until then, we encourage groups interested in
dental health of Manitobans to continue their dialogue and to continue working
together, making the patient the focus of all of their efforts. That is my wish. I have said that to all of the people who I
have come in contact with. The
honourable member earlier accused me of being inconsistent and saying‑‑[interjection]
Oh, he said other people have accused me of being inconsistent, and I would
like other people to say that to my face.
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Acting Chairperson, I am happy to hear
the minister says that he is working on behalf of patients.
Can I take from the
minister's long response therefore that the government is not planning to
change or amend the regulations as it affects professionals for dental nurses,
dental hygienists or any of those other professionals pending the release of
this study and/or report from the Law Reform Commission? Can we give assurances to the public out
there that given what the minister said, and it is fairly clear, we can expect
no changes to that legislation or the ensuing regulations pending the report of
the Law Reform Commission?
Mr. McCrae: I am glad the honourable member was able,
after that last response of mine which I do acknowledge, Mr. Acting
Chairperson, was a little longer than you might have expected, because it was a
very important question‑‑I did not mean for it to be longer or I
did not even mean for it to be irrelevant in any way.
With regard to people
involved in dental care, the answer is no.
We do not have any legislation coming this session with respect to that
area. The Law Reform Commission work is
not designed to put totally everything on hold.
There may be some already recognized, statutorily recognized groups that
may require change. I do not preclude
that, although I do not have anything else immediately in my mind at this
point. But certainly this session, the
answer would be no.
Ms. Gray:
Mr. Acting Chairperson, could the minister indicate for us what program
evaluations have been conducted in the past year by this section?
Mr. McCrae: During 1993‑94 the evaluation unit of
our department has been very busy actually according to the note I have in
front of me.
With respect to the
Mental Health Division, there has been a base‑line survey for mental
health reform for Winnipeg. They
brokered requests for proposal for impact evaluation for mental health reform
in Winnipeg. They project‑managed
evaluation with respect to the Continuing Care Division. There was a medication administration program
review. That was a data collection
tool. There was work done with respect
to evaluation and monitoring of home support worker activities. There was work done with respect to Winnipeg
hospitals and personal care home waiting lists.
There was data collection and work done on methodology and analysis.
With respect to the
Health Services Development Fund, proposals come in and somebody has to assess
and evaluate those proposals based on some specific data that exists out there
so that we can make judgments about whether proposals ought to be
supported. That is considering the
nature of the things we fund from that fund.
This is very important work.
There has been relevance
ratings of all proposals to Health Canada through their national Health
Development Fund. There has been
analysis with respect to health professions and employers and resources. There has been work done with respect to
patient access to medical records. Those
are the kinds of projects that we have been involved in in 1993‑94.
Ms. Gray:
Mr. Acting Chairperson, could the minister tell us, what was the result
of the evaluation that was done or the report or review on the evaluation of
monitoring of home support work?
Mr. McCrae: Mr. Acting Chairperson, with respect to home
support programs, the data developed, the data discovered as a result of this
work was simply turned over to the Home Care program. This branch, one of its functions is the
collection of data. That data was made
available to Home Care. When we get to
Home Care, we can answer specifically questions raised by the member or,
depending on how we want to run these Estimates, we can get information sooner.
Ms. Gray:
Could the minister provide us with terms of reference as to exactly what
this data collection involved, some written information on what they were
looking at and what they were trying to collect?
Mr. McCrae: Mr. Acting Chairperson, we can supply that
and will supply that for the honourable member.
Ms. Gray:
The criteria for the health reform proposals, is there a certain
criteria that the evaluation and audit secretariat refers to when they are
accepting proposals and judging as to whether they would be viable or not? I am sure there are a number of things they
would look at in terms of good proposal writing, but is there also a set of
criteria that this government has in regard to what they consider as priorities
or important for looking at accepting proposals?
* (1610)
Mr. McCrae: I would like to just put a couple of very
brief things on the record for the honourable member. The health reform initiatives that have been
embarked on, and that will be embarked on, will be evaluated not by our
internal government branch as funded by the Health Services Development Fund,
which funds such agencies as the Centre for Health Policy and Evaluation, which
gives us I think what would be perceived as a more independent look, more
independent evaluation of things we would do.
For example, I do not
think the honourable member for Kildonan is interested in this, but the Centre
for Health Policy and Evaluation has demonstrated to me that the results of the
bed closures about which the honourable member asked‑‑he did not
ask about results, he just talked about closures. The results we have been shown of the bed
closures have been no impact on patient care, no impact on condition of
patients, no impact with respect to readmission, no impact with respect to
death after discharge from hospital.
All of those indicators,
that kind of information has been shared with me by the Centre for Health
Policy and Evaluation, which is funded from the Health Services Development
Fund.
Our department itself has
certain evaluation protocols. These
people are professionals, and the work that they do is based on professional
criteria, but I think the kinds of questions the member is asking about have to
do with health reform which is being evaluated more by more independent
evaluators.
Ms. Gray:
Mr. Acting Chairperson, my question was not who is evaluating proposals,
because I did not understand that it was Evaluation and Audit Secretariat. The minister mentioned that there was an
involvement of this secretariat in looking at the health reform proposal, so I
was assuming that they were involved in, or participating in, looking at the
proposals as they came in and perhaps assisting in the determination as to
which proposals would be actually funded through health reform.
Is that correct? If that is the case, is there a set of
criteria that the secretariat uses in terms of evaluating those proposals to
decide if they should be funded?
Mr. McCrae: Mr. Acting Chairperson, maybe it is me doing
the misunderstanding. The honourable
member is correct about that.
Ms. Gray:
Is there written criteria that the secretariat uses in terms of looking
at those proposals and judging whether they should be funded?
Mr. McCrae: We can provide the honourable member with the
criteria used by our audit secretariat in evaluating proposals and will do so.
Ms. Gray:
Mr. Acting Chairperson, I thank the minister for being willing to
provide that information.
Could the minister tell
us, the medication administration review committee, could he give us a bit more
information as to what that committee looked at?
(Madam Chairperson in the
Chair)
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, I will give now to the
honourable member the terms of reference for the medication management
committee, and then at a subsequent occasion I will give the results because I
do not have those in front of me.
By the way, there were 12
members of the committee, and the terms of reference were to review current
issues and practice regarding medication management and the delivery of
community care for the Home Care program.
Secondly, to review
information on practice and standards Canada‑wide and make
recommendations for change in medication management.
Thirdly, to participate
in the development of standards and protocols for the Home Care program
according to existing legislation and the provincial standard‑setting
bodies. Those were the terms of
reference.
Also, for the member's
information, with respect to the committee, the medication management committee
was composed of 12 members. Two of them
were physicians, three of them were nurses.
We had one more nurse than doctor on that committee. There were four from Manitoba Health and a
pharmacist and two from the Victorian Order of Nurses. That is five nurses and two physicians on
that particular committee.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, the optometrist association, I understand, is
interested in some changes to the legislation affecting their practice. Have they met with the minister? Could he bring us up to date as to what his
position is on their potential changes?
Mr. McCrae: Yes, Madam Chairperson, I have met with
representatives of the optometrists.
Their issue, the one they raised with me I do not believe has been
resolved to date. Their issue is one
where, I believe, there is still a point of view to be shared. The issue is one of some parity among
ophthalmologists and optometrists, and the honourable member understands how
those issues work I think.
I have been asking the
optometrists and the others to resolve as much of those issues amongst
themselves, bring solutions to me, and I will do what is necessary by way of
legislative amendment. It is so much
easier and appropriate, for the most part, to resolve these things amicably and
without resorting to the government taking a position which ultimately appears
to be taking a side, which is one of the last things I want to do if there are
other options available to me.
To this point, I do not
believe the professionals involved have resolved all of the issues. I guess it will depend next on what the
patient needs. If we can encourage the
ophthalmologists and optometrists to work out whatever differences there are,
as I say, we can move forward. However,
I am interested in getting these things resolved, especially if their resolution
can mean improved services for the people who need eye care services.
* (1620)
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, does the minister know if the ophthalmologists are
prepared to sit down with the optometrists and look at these issues?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, presently I am not able to
say. We have encouraged both sides to
get together. The honourable member's
question reminds me to check to see what the present status is. Perhaps, an update later on in the Estimates
can be brought forward.
Madam Chairperson: Item 1.(c) Evaluation and Audit Secretariat
(1) Salaries and Employee Benefits $340,200‑‑pass; (2) Other
Expenditures $207,500‑‑pass.
1.(d) Finance and
Administration (1) Salaries and Employee Benefits.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, I am wondering if the
minister could outline what the $511,000 Communications budget is spent on,
just generally.
Mr. McCrae: Yes, as the honourable member points out
there is $511,600 budgeted here for communication functions, which is down
about 2.4 percent I guess from last budget.
The telephone bill was $96,200 for '94‑95, down from $108,700 in
'93‑94. The postage bill is the
same for each of the two fiscal years as per the budget, $291,700; the same for
public communications, $43,600; the same for courier service at $80,100.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, can the minister indicate
whether or not any of the functions undertaken by this particular branch or
this department in this appropriation are being contemplated to be contracted
out or are in the process of being contracted out or, in fact, have been
contracted out in the last little while?
Mr. McCrae: We are talking about the payroll function,
finance, personnel administration functions.
No, we do not contract any of that out.
The honourable member may be suggesting maybe we should, and maybe we
could review that.
Mr. Chomiak: The minister has a curious habit of implying
a response or a policy initiative from a question that is asked. If the minister had carried that consistently
through, then he would have cancelled the Connie Curran contract a long time
ago, because I asked that question so often.
The minister is
indicating that no function in this area is contemplated to be contracted out or
privatized in any way, shape or form.
Mr. McCrae: I am sorry.
I think I lumped Human Resources in with this and that is a separate
area.
No, this has not been the
subject of contracting out. I mean if
the honourable member is interested in discussing that further‑‑I
just want to serve the taxpayers better.
That is all I am here to do.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, don't we all? Can the minister just name who the two
managers are by name in this particular area?
Mr. McCrae: Tim Duprey is the assistant
deputy minister, and Susan Murphy is the director.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, under the reduction in the line
Professional/Technical, where there is an annotation about workforce
adjustment, can the minister indicate how many positions were lost through
workforce adjustment, if that is what that means when one reads the line?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chair, in that area where there were
once 27.42 staff years, there are now 24.42, which is a reduction of three, one
of them being a financial officer, one of them being a chief power engineer and
another being a power engineer class 5.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, the financial officer, can the minister indicate why
that position was deleted? Was there a reorganization,
or‑‑why was that position deleted, the financial officer? Was there a reorganization, or was it felt
that position was redundant? What was
the purpose for that?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chair, there has been a reorganization
of the department. There has been an
amalgamation or a consolidation of what used to be known as the Manitoba Health
Services Commission in Manitoba Health.
No, there was a retirement involved, as well, which assisted in making
sure that there was a minimal impact on people.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, this section is the section that deals with space for
the Department of Health. I am wondering
if the minister could indicate the temporary space for staff from the St.
Boniface district and the East Kildonan district, which is now downtown. It was there to be a temporary space, as
indicated by the former minister, and our concerns at that time were that the
temporary space would end up being permanent space.
We still have a situation
where staff who service the St. Boniface area are actually working downtown,
out of their community, as well as staff working in East Kildonan are working
outside of their community.
Can the minister give us
an update on whether there is a move to return those individuals to their
communities so they can provide the community‑based service?
* (1630)
Mr. McCrae: These services have been temporarily brought
under this downtown route. I think the
honourable member is asking, will the field offices or whatever be moved back
out? That is presently being examined
between the Health department and the Government Services department. It is our hope, however, that the staff will
be on the job outside a central location most of the time, though we need, I
take it, some kind of field office‑‑I call it field office‑‑situation.
The member is talking
about a place to report to, to have you hang your hat and have a desk. I think that there might be some need for
that, but for the most part these are public health people, and their function
has them outside the office for the most part.
But the final resolution as to where they are going to be physically
located has not been resolved.
Ms. Gray:
I think it has been over two years in these temporary quarters. Is there actually any move to move them back
to their communities where not only do they have an office to report to but I
understand they provide community services as well, such as prenatal classes,
other kinds of educational programs?
Is there really a move to
actually get them back to the community, or is it at a standstill? If it is not, what possibly could we be
discussing for two years that would make us not able to make a decision?
Mr. McCrae: I think the honourable member is engaging me
in a discussion that has to do with internal matters related to where staff of
a department are housed as opposed to service delivery to the community. Service delivery, as I understand it, has not
been interrupted by any of this. The
public health education issues that the people are engaged in carries on and
will carry on whether it has been two years or whatever length of time it
is. It is the service to the public and
proper treatment accorded to our employees of course.
I was a little confused
at the beginning because I thought the honourable member was talking about
service to the public. Public service
goes on, and the issue whether it has been two years or however long it has
been is an internal issue to the department and to our staff. So I too, having been shunted around a little
bit in my day when I was in government, understand how it must feel. On the other hand, the clients of the service
are the ones who were not interrupted when it was happening to me, and I do not
think it is happening now either. We
have pretty fine people working for us.
I too would like to see it resolved for their purposes, but service
delivery is where I was getting confused.
I do not think there has been any interruption in service delivery.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, the reason I am asking the question is that at the
time the staff were moved downtown, there were a number of community
organizations and groups, particularly in the St. Boniface area, who
specifically wrote the former Minister of Health and expressed concern about
service delivery and less access to the health professionals. There was a commitment made at that time by
the former Minister of Health that it was an interim measure and that the
preference was that staff be housed in a particular geographical community
area. That is why I am asking the
question, so that I can get back to these groups and see if there has been any
progress.
I am just wondering, is
that still the commitment of this Minister of Health, that the staff be located
in the community of St. Boniface as opposed to downtown?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, yes, I am just getting a
little history on this for myself as to what commitments were made and so
on. The issue, I guess, for me is, has
there been any impairment of service delivery?
If the honourable member knows of that, if she would not mind sharing
with me from the consumer's point of view any withdrawal or reduction or impact
on service delivery while we continue to wrestle with this problem of where our
staff should be located. Sometimes there
is a symbolic thing here too that may be part of it. I do not know.
I am quite prepared to
look with an open mind at where the staff physically ought to hang their hats
when they go to the office, but do they deliver their services at the office or
do they deliver their services in the community? I am willing to be brought up to date by the
honourable member on that.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, I will actually get some more information for the
minister from the member for St. Boniface (Mr. Gaudry) who probably has an up‑to‑date
status, and we will share that with the minister. Thank you.
Madam Chairperson: Item 1.(d) Finance and Administration (1)
Salaries and Employee Benefits $2,408,100‑‑pass; (2) Other
Expenditures $1,573,400‑‑pass.
1.(e) Human Resources (1)
Salaries and Employee Benefits $1,061,800.
* (1640)
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, I wonder if the minister
might just table the one brief question what the targets are 1994‑95
affirmative action plan.
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, we do not have a target
set yet for 1994‑95, but I will tell the honourable member where we are
as at March 1994 which is a couple of months ago. We had total employees at that time, and this
includes term employees, of 3,045 people.
Of that 3,045 people, 77 percent or 2,348 were female persons; 4 percent
or 148 were aboriginal persons; 3 percent or 97 persons were disabled; 3
percent‑‑there must be rounding going on here, because the number
is not exactly the same‑‑or 107 people represent visible minority
groups. That is where we were as of
March 1994. I take it through the Civil
Service Commission and working in conjunction with them, we address targets and
we do not have a target to report today.
The other point to be made
is that these numbers that I have just put on the record do not always reflect
the whole picture, because a lot of people do not always declare that they are
a member of a particular target representation group.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, the 77 percent that the minister referenced who were
women, that is really women who are within the Department of Health. I would imagine that the real statistic would
be, however, how many women are actually in positions where those positions
have been targeted that Affirmative Action would assist with women.
For instance, we have a
lot of clerical staff in the Department of Health, and because most clerical
positions are filled by women, those are not considered targeted
positions. So really the 77 percent gives
us an overall figure. Can the minister
tell us how many women, as an example, are in targeted positions?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chair, I do not think this answer goes
precisely to the honourable member's question, but this is broken down a little
more now for the honourable member.
I should not start with
Administrative Support because it is overrepresented‑‑I should not
say that. It is very much represented by
female persons. That is a traditional
thing that Affirmative Action, I think, may or may not be helping to address.
In Administrative Support
positions, female persons represent 92.3 percent. Well, now wait a minute. In that same group, 7.03 percent are
aboriginal, 7.18 percent are disabled and 6.73 percent are visible
minorities. The reason this adds up to
more than 100 is some of these people are the same people.
In the professional
group, 75 percent are female, 2.3 percent are aboriginal, 2.1 percent are
disabled, 2.7 percent represent visible minorities.
In managerial positions,
I do not know what this used to be, but I assume it is getting better: 46 percent are women, 2 percent are
aboriginal, 2 percent are disabled, 3.9 percent are visible minorities.
In the technical areas,
female persons account for 72.6 percent, 2.5 percent are aboriginal, 1.7
percent are disabled individuals, 2.2 percent are visible minorities.
Then the service
area: 74.3 percent are female persons,
14.6 percent are aboriginal, 3.5 percent are disabled people, 2.3 percent are
from visible minorities. I will leave it
at that for the moment.
Madam Chairperson: 1.(e) Human Resources (1) Salaries and
Employee Benefits $1,061,800‑‑pass; (2) Other Expenditures $193,300‑‑pass.
1.(f)(1) Salaries and
Employee Benefits.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, I wonder if the minister
could outline for me what the status is of not the PHIN card, but of the
evolution towards the Smart Card or that entire concept.
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chair, I am pleased to do that. A lot of work has been done in the last year
or so, a little more maybe with respect to health information issues. I think that a lot of people maybe did not
know that until recently when we began to talk about the Drug Program
Information Network and the potential extension of that network to include a
whole health information system which some people might in the future refer to
as Smart Health or Smart Card or some such expression.
Even Tim Sale was‑‑[interjection]
Well, he immediately said great. [interjection] He has been described as a lot
of things, but right away when he heard about a potential‑‑[interjection]
You can ask him yourself. He is a friend
of health care. However, I am not
referring now to Tim Sale, I am referring to somebody else. Tim Sale responded immediately when he was
asked, great idea. I think it was the
first he heard of it, and he was supportive.
Right there and then I began to wonder if everything was okay, but I
think it is.
We are within a few weeks
of going live. We are already providing Pharmacard services on a pilot basis. The reason for that is that I think we are up
around a hundred or so pharmacies in Manitoba on the system, in that range and
growing. If we get everybody on it then
we will call that going live. I look forward
to going live on the DPIN. However, the
honourable member asked about an expanded health information system which
everybody agrees is certainly the way to go.
We have the technology available, and we ought to be using it to the
benefit of Manitobans.
(1650)
I am very, very excited,
Madam Chair, to say that what began as a drug products information network for
pharmacy will now be moving and expanding into something that will include all
aspects, hopefully, in the long‑term future of our health care system.
I think today we can only
imagine, and probably our imaginations do not take us far enough, how valuable
smart‑health automated system will be in the future, how useful it will
be, how it will save lives, how it will improve the quality of our lives. Manitobans are certainly ready. All they need is a government that is ready
to catch up to the expectations of Manitobans, and they have that in the
present government. This government is
partnering and working closely with all kinds of health care partners to put
into place a system that will automate information systems that allow
professionals from the medical profession, pharmaceutical profession, people
involved in delivery of laboratory services, hospital emergency rooms,
ambulance services. The whole continuum
can be included. All it takes is the
will to be included, and the technology is there. We have the will, and how quickly we can move
is really only limited by our ability to put in place a system that will serve
us all so well. We have to make sure we
respect people's rights, and I am a firm believer of that, people's rights as
guaranteed under our Charter and under our privacy laws. Relationships between patients and their care
providers have a special, special attribute involved, and that has to be
respected by an automated system.
As one who does not know
very much about computerized systems, I am pleased to know that there are so
many partners in the health system who are willing to work with us to ensure
all of the good things are derived from a card system and those things that
ought to be protected are indeed protected.
Mr. Chomiak: Madam Chairperson, the minister did not
outline any sort of a time frame with respect to his answer. Is there a target or a general time frame
with respect to the movement towards the smart card, or not?
Mr. McCrae: Madam Chairperson, I do not know how to
respond specifically to a time line question when we are dealing with,
certainly on the DPIN side of it, as I say, within weeks. The health card, well, let us complete some
discussions that we are presently having so we can get a better idea of
approximately. I know the honourable
member is not asking for a specific date but something within the
ballpark. I accept that, and I think
that I would ask to allow a little bit more discussion to go on before we get
into ballparks.
I know there is very
little now, in terms of decision making, to stand in the way of moving
forward. In other words, the decision to
move towards a totally integrated card system has in principle been made so
that we will be moving forward to bring this technology to all Manitobans. I still think, when we do this, we will be at
the forefront in all of Canada.
Mr. Chomiak: The technological cost of $300,000, the subnote says technology investment to support the
restructured organization. Can the
minister perhaps elaborate on what that $300,000 expended on a restructured
organization refers to?
Mr. McCrae: The line to which the honourable member
refers is to improve our ability to communicate with the hospitals in Manitoba
with respect to our communications relationship with the hospitals. The line he is looking at refers partly to
that; it refers to hardware and software costs particularly.
Mr. Chomiak: Is that part of the technology and the
hardware and software utilized in the, dare I say, Connie Curran project?
Mr. McCrae: This did not have anything to do with
that. The honourable member‑‑well,
I will leave it. He was going to try to
link something negative here and there really is not something negative to do
with the APM contract and so on. You
will not find something under every rock.
The honourable member keeps turning them over and over again. He can keep doing that. All he is going to find everywhere he goes
are improvements. He is going to find
quality care, appropriate care, for people where they need it and when they
want it, too. That is what is
happening. That is exactly what is
happening.
An Honourable Member: We were waiting for that.
Mr. McCrae: The honourable member says he is waiting for
it. It is happening. All he has to do is open his eyes.
Ms. Gray:
Madam Chairperson, can the minister tell us, utilizing computers within
the department, is it proven that if this software I suppose is appropriate
that in fact the use of computers can actually save staff time, save staff
resources? Have we directly linked those
two?
Mr. McCrae: Some would say that is supposed to be the way
it works out, but if you look over the years, the growth in computer technology
and the growth in the size of the civil service or the health care community,
they have all grown at the same time, so the facts do not always bear out the
principle. However, the object is not
always just to decrease, decrease or reduce; it is to improve, improve and that
is what is happening. We can prove it
and we are proud of it. We will continue
to work in that direction.
Ms. Gray:
The reason I asked the question is because it seems like every year the
Department of Health only gets so many dollars that are used to purchase
computers, and it seems like we are still feeling antiquated in the department
in terms of our computerized system. I
am wondering why we cannot go ahead and get the equipment that we need, because
I would think in the long run there could be a saving of staff time, overtime,
term time if we actually were computerized, because we are not as a department
and far from it.
Mr. McCrae: I think I can agree with the honourable
member. It may in the past have looked
like we were not moving very well with regard to an automated, integrated
health system and that includes communications, information sharing and
information systems.
We are in a position to
make vast improvements to our automated system, and if I could venture into the
home care area and say I cannot‑‑I mean I do not know how computers
work in every application, but I do know that we can make huge improvements in
the home care area through the use of automation, and that does not just
automatically replace people, but it does automatically, through this
information system, make vast improvements to people. That is what we need to do, and that is what
we are poised to do.
Madam Chairperson: Order, please. The hour being 5 p.m. and time for private
members' hour, I am leaving the Chair and will return at 8 p.m. this evening.
* (1700)
PRIVATE
MEMBERS' BUSINESS
Mr. Speaker: The hour being 5 p.m., time for Private
Members' Business.
PROPOSED
RESOLUTIONS
Res.
4‑‑Drug Patent Legislation
Mr. Dave Chomiak (Kildonan): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the member
for Wellington (Ms. Barrett), that
WHEREAS the proportion of
health care expenditures on drugs and medicines is 16.8 percent according to a
recent study by the Canadian Medical Association; and
WHEREAS profit margins of
around 30 percent of sales are not unusual in the pharmaceutical industry; and
WHEREAS the Patented
Medicine Prices Review Board found that introductory prices for most new drugs
are much higher in Canada than in other countries, exceeding the median
international prices by 21 percent and leading to an overcharging of Canadian
consumers by approximately $3 million in 1992; and
WHEREAS with the passage
of Bill C‑22 in 1987 and Bill C‑91 in 1993, price competition for
medicines in Canada has been severely limited; and
WHEREAS the Canadian
Medical Association's report concluded, "With respect to spending on drugs,
system pressures have been exacerbated recently by the federal government's
decision to extend full patent protection on pharmaceuticals to 20 years with
Bill C‑91"; and
WHEREAS it has been
estimated that Bill C‑91 will cost Canada's health care system $4 billion
to $7 billion over the next 20 years; and
WHEREAS during the 1993
federal election, the Liberal Party promised to immediately review the
provisions of Bill C‑91, legislation which extends drug patent
protection.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED
that the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba urge the provincial government to
pressure the federal government to live up to its election promise to review
the drug patent laws and seriously consider repealing this unfair legislation.
Motion presented.
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Speaker, I rise with great anticipation
in this Chamber, great anticipation because I expect that given the effect that
this legislation can have on our health care system, and given the effect that
the previous legislation has had on our health care system, that members of
this Chamber unanimously will join with us to urge the federal Liberal
government to do something about this difficulty.
Mr. Speaker, I do not
have to cite a good deal of statistics because they have already been cited, and
pointed out dramatically far better than I can in my speech, about the effects
that these acts have had on not only the drug industry but on the health
industry both in Canada and in Manitoba.
(Mr. Ben Sveinson, Acting
Speaker, in the Chair)
I expect to receive
support from members on all sides of this Chamber, and I expect it for very
good reason, because the federal Liberal government was elected with a promise,
Mr. Acting Speaker, to deal with this matter.
The federal Liberal government was elected with a promise, and I expect
the federal Liberal government to live up to this promise.
I quote from a pamphlet
handed out during the election campaign of one Lloyd Axworthy, the Honourable
Lloyd Axworthy, who said, quote: Lloyd
Axworthy strongly opposed the changes to the Drug Patents Act which will
increase the cost of prescription medication by over half a billion dollars
each year.
I expect that that member
who now has a key place in the federal Liberal government will live up to his
promise. I expect he will do that.
Further, the Member of
Parliament for Winnipeg North, July 2, 1993, said, and I quote: My Liberal colleagues and I all oppose Bill C‑91. It extended patents to brand‑name drug
companies and removed the system of compulsory licensing which has permitted
generic Canadian‑based drug companies to produce quality drugs at
competitive prices.
Later on, the member for
Winnipeg North, who I anticipate will live up to this pledge, says and I
quote: For a Liberal government,
unnecessary costs like those created by Bill C‑91 will be the first items
on the agenda to overcome the problems created by the Tories over their years
in office. Mr. Acting Speaker, we are
now in a situation where we are wondering how long that agenda of items is. We are wondering how long the first extends,
because I take at their word what those members now government are saying now
in cabinet. This will be their first
item on the agenda.
(Mr. Speaker in the
Chair)
Well, Mr. Speaker, I
anticipate that all members of this House, and particularly my colleagues in
the Liberal opposition, will join with us in urging those colleagues to do
something on the first item of business on their agenda to deal with Bill C‑91
and the effects of Bill C‑22. I am
certain that I do not have to spend a good deal of time outlining to members of
the Liberal Party the effects this legislation has had on the Canadian health
care industry and will have in the future on the Canadian health care industry.
Mr. Speaker, at one time,
prior to the passage of Bill C‑22, our success at delivering drugs was
recognized worldwide. In fact, the New
York Times said that, quote: Canada's
success at delivering drugs at costs lower than those in the United States is
an important feature in its medical system, which has been a model for many
health policy experts seeking to contain soaring costs. It said at that time, at one time, Canada's
medical costs were 28 percent lower per capita than in the United States. A lot of that effect has been removed and
affected by Bill C‑22.
Mr. Speaker, what has
happened with Bill C‑22, as a result, those lower drug costs helped all
Canadians receive just as good quality prescriptions at lower prices. The effect has been quite dramatic on the
Canadian situation. In fact, as a result
of Bill C‑22, we have seen drug prices go up 13.4 percent a year, and
that was prior to Bill C‑91, which further enhanced the protection of the
big companies to receive drug protection.
So we saw drug prices go up almost, according in fact to the Winnipeg
Free Press, 13.4 percent a year as a result of C‑22.
Then we had C‑91,
Mr. Speaker, which further gave the multinational large drug companies a grip
on the system, and we saw C‑91, which allowed them to increase their
profits, not by one billion, estimated, not by two billion, not by three
billion, but estimated to increase from $4 billion to $7 billion.
* (1710)
In return, these large
multinational drug companies promised many things. They promised jobs; they promised investment,
but the track record does not demonstrate that they have delivered. In fact the record shows, after the 1987 bill
was passed, they had promised 3,000 new jobs to be created. Did 2,000 jobs materialize? No, Mr. Speaker. Did 1,500 jobs materialize? No, only a fraction of those jobs
materialized after the 1987 bill.
Then the disaster. Following an increase in prices of 13.4
percent per year, following a failure to invest in R and D, following a failure
to create the jobs, we saw C‑91 foisted upon us, and again, we see the
drug companies potentially gaining $4 billion to $7 billion in profits.
Now this money does not
go into Canadians' pockets generally. It
goes into the dividends‑‑they do not clip coupons anymore‑‑but
goes into the pockets of investors outside of this country. It goes into the profits of the large
multinationals. Whose pockets does it
come out of? It comes out of our
pockets, Mr. Speaker. It comes out of
the consumer's pocket. It comes out of
the health consumer's pocket, those people in our society who require drugs to
assist them in keeping out of hospital and maintaining a semblance of order in
their daily lives or treating their health condition.
Mr. Speaker, this is a
tragedy that a country that had stable drug costs, that had an access to lower,
cheaper brand generic costs, would give itself away, sign on the dotted line
and sign away the opportunity to provide lower costs and quality health care.
You know, Mr. Speaker, it
goes without saying that all members of this House want to see better health
care and cheaper health care for all our citizens. I know, given the commitment from the
Honourable Lloyd Axworthy and given the commitment from Dr. Rey Pagtakhan, surely all members of this House, including the
member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux), will support this measure, will support us
in sending a message to the federal government‑‑proceed on your
agenda, yes, we do want lower drug costs.
Mr. Speaker, it goes even
further, I might add, then simply lower drug costs and better quality
drugs. It deals with Manitoba. We have generic drug manufacturers in this
province, in this jurisdiction. They
would like to expand; they would like to create jobs here. They would like to see R and D done here, but
they are held back by this legislation which took away the opportunity for
expansion in Manitoba.
It is not just a case of
providing cheaper cost, high quality drugs.
It is not just a case of the principle of $4 billion to $7 billion going
in a siphon into the pockets of the large multinational companies. It is more than that. It is more than the R and D jobs. It has to do with investment, millions of
dollars in investment, millions of dollars in job creation right here in
Manitoba‑‑right here in Manitoba, which is something that we need
desperately in this province.
That is something all
members of this Chamber, I know, are in favour
of. All members of this Chamber are in favour of job creation.
All members of this Chamber are in favour of
expansion to provide jobs for our children to stay in this province, so I fail
to see how any member in this Chamber would wish to vote against a resolution
as positive as this one.
You know, Mr. Speaker, we
often get criticized in this Chamber and in this forum for not bringing forward
positive legislation or positive resolutions.
But what better and what more positive resolution could be brought
forward then a resolution unanimously passed by all members of this Chamber
urging the federal government not to do something that they were necessarily
responsible for, not to do something they did not promise for they did promise,
but to simply live up to their promise to help lower drug costs for all of our
citizens, to live up to their promise to help create jobs in R and D in
Manitoba and to create jobs for those people in Manitoba that would see the
expansion of processing for generic drug manufacturers?
Mr. Speaker, this clearly
is one of those rare opportunities in this Chamber, not rare I should say, but
one of those positive opportunities in this Chamber, for we have a chance to
stand together as Manitobans, to urge on the federal government to live up to
their promise. Nothing destroys the
credibility of a government as quickly or the credibility of a politician then back‑pedalling from commitments and back‑pedalling from promises that were made.
Mr. Speaker, I know that
the Liberal Party made these commitments recognizing they had the possibility
of forming government. I know that the
Liberal Party made these commitments in the hope that they could form the
federal government. Well, now they are
there. Now they can join us.
As the former Minister of
Health, the member for Pembina (Mr. Orchard) went off to Ottawa to try to plea
against the imposition of Bill C‑91, I am sure the present Minister of
Health (Mr. McCrae) will agree with the former minister to plead of the federal
government that they recognize that they must live up to their promise. They must ensure that changes occur so that the
effects of Bill C‑22 and the effects of Bill 91 are eliminated so that
the generic drug manufacturers, many located in Manitoba, will have an
opportunity to expand and to provide safer and better quality drugs for our
citizens.
It is identified in the
government's health reform plan 1992 about the effect of soaring drug
costs. The minister cited it this year
when the minister increased the deductible and lowered the opportunity for
individuals to obtain rebates for Pharmacare.
He indicated that it was the cost of drugs, the rapidly escalating cost
of drugs.
So, Mr. Speaker, it is
recognized by all in this jurisdiction, in this Chamber, what the effects
are. So I certainly will ask, and I
certainly recognize that my friends will join us in urging the federal
government to take these steps that they promised to take.
Further, I know that
there is a good deal of talk that somehow this issue is tied up in NAFTA or
GATT. But I think that it is not a
question of GATT, something could be negotiated, and it certainly was not a
question of NAFTA. It is really a
question of political will. The question
is, does the federal government have the political will to live up to its promise
to assist us to try to lower drug costs, to try to improve the quality of life
for Manitobans?
I am sure that members of
this Chamber, like the member for Pembina (Mr. Orchard) who flew off to Ottawa
to plead against the imposition of Bill C‑91, members of this Chamber and
the Liberal Party will join us in imploring‑‑it will have a
dramatic effect, I would suggest, if the Liberal caucus would stand up on this
issue to urge their federal Liberal colleagues to go along, to follow their
promise, to not break their promise, to not raise the level of cynicism against
politicians, but to live up to their commitment that they made, the commitment
that they made not just during the election campaign, but prior, to try to
repeal C‑91 and C‑22, to try to decrease drug costs to all
citizens, to try to improve the quality of health.
Often I have stated,
drugs are a preventative measure. They
keep people out of higher‑priced institutions. They are an aspect of health reform, and we
should lower drug costs. We had lower
drug costs before C‑22 and C‑91.
We can get back to having lower drug costs, and at the same time, we can
expand jobs in Manitoba and assist in the welfare of all Manitobans.
Thank you very much, Mr.
Speaker.
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): Mr. Speaker, I am somewhat interested in this
particular resolution and somewhat pleased that the minister or the minister‑wannabe
would in fact introduce a resolution of this nature.
I can recall the New
Democrats coming into the Chamber and they talked about Pharmacare. They like to believe that they themselves are
the saviour of medicare, that they are the
individuals who are going to be there to protect the cost of drugs.
Mr. Speaker, the NDP
should be well aware of the fact that it was their government that increased
the deductibles for Pharmacare, made it harder for seniors, individuals on
fixed income to be able to get access to the medication that they required in
order to better their circumstances or their health so that we do not have to
be as concerned about the seniors and those on the fixed income in terms of
having some problems.
The member for Wellington
(Ms. Barrett) talks about honesty from government. For Pete's sake, look in the mirror. Look what the New Democratic Party has done
across this country or not further than the east from the province of Ontario.
* (1720)
The member for Kildonan
(Mr. Chomiak) talks about a fine Member of Parliament, Rey Pagtakhan. I wanted to quote so that the member for
Kildonan knows that his interests are well looked after in Ottawa. This is something that the member for
Winnipeg North said in the House of Commons knowing full well how important
pharmaceuticals are to the country, not only pharmaceuticals but in fact health
care. This is something that he himself
had pointed out.
This is what the Member
of Parliament from Winnipeg North says:
Now, Mr. Speaker, through you to my colleague from the New Democratic
Party who would like to pontificate and would care to forget the lessons of
history, I am glad that today he did not say that the NDP started
medicare. Once before he did say
that. Finally he has learned the lesson
that it was the Liberal Party in 1919, Liberal convention, that made the
commitment to Canada to introduce medicare.
After we conceived the idea, the member for Winnipeg North said, unlike
the NDP, we put action into it. We gave
birth to it. After having given birth to
medicare, we would like to continue to nurture it like a good parent of any
child.
This is in fact what the Member
of Parliament from Winnipeg North‑‑the man I am sure that the
member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) gave serious consideration in terms of when
he went to the ballot box. Mr. Speaker,
I would like to indicate to the member for Kildonan that when it comes to the
preservation of medicare‑‑and the pharmaceutical industry is a very
important aspect to medicare making sure that the drugs are in fact available
to us, very, very important.
I would like to ensure
him that his concerns will in fact be brought to his Member of Parliament and
hopefully as a commitment that was given.
I believe the industry minister, current industry minister, announced on
April 29 that he has undertaken a monitoring process of this new legislation to
ensure that drug companies do materialize.
In addition, Minister Manley is monitoring the regulations and will make
changes to the regulations if there are problems.
You know what I think it
is? I believe that the New Democrats are
a very desperate group of individuals.
They sit here, and they are concerned because Manitobans are not going
to be fooled like Canadians were not fooled last fall when they saw that the
individual, the party that best represents them when it comes to health care is
not the New Democratic Party.
If you believe it is the
New Democratic Party, take a look at what is happening in B.C. where they are
charging user fees like no other province across Canada. Take a look at what is happening in Ontario
where they are closing down health care beds, where they are laying off
thousands of health care workers. Mr.
Speaker, take a look at what is happening in Saskatchewan where they are
closing down more hospitals in that province than any other province in Canada. What hypocrisy this New Democratic Party has
in this Chamber to stand up and pretend that they are trying to give a serious
attempt at defending medicare in the province of Manitoba. It is a simple resolution. Of course, it is a simple resolution‑‑look
at where it is coming from.
I am amazed that the New
Democratic Party would not take a strong policy stand in terms of where they
would like to see pharmaceuticals in the province of Manitoba.
What about the
deductibles? Why do you not change your
mind on what you did when you were in government and start reducing it? Maybe that is what we should be talking about
in the Chamber. Why do we not talk about
the deductible? That is the whole
question of affordability for our seniors, individuals that are on a fixed
income. If you lower the deductible,
they are going to be able to purchase, they are going to be able to have better
access to it.
An Honourable Member: How about the resolution? Talk about the resolution, Kevin.
Mr. Lamoureux: That is the resolution. The New Democratic Party is concerned about
affordability of medication. The higher
you raise the deductible, the more unaffordable it is going to be for our
seniors and people on a fixed income.
But this party knew that in 1988; they knew it before then when they
increased the pharmaceutical deductibles.
Did the member from Wellington (Ms. Barrett) support Howard Pawley, the
former Premier, when he raised the deductibles?
Of course, she did, but now, when a party is desperate, they like to
believe that they can overtalk, they can say: No, no, we would not have done that. No, we are going to disown what we have done
in the past.
Well, you cannot do
that. You have to live up to the things
that you have made commitments to and stop being so hypocritical of the
positions that you take here, Mr. Speaker.
Point
of Order
Mr. Steve Ashton (Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, Mr. Speaker,
Beauchesne's Citation 489 states very clearly that "hypocritical" is
unparliamentary. Quite frankly, the New
Democratic Party, we have some difficulty with Liberals in lecturing anyone on
hypocrisy. I would like to ask that you
have the member withdraw that unparliamentary and inaccurate remark.
Mr. Speaker: On the point of order raised, I did rule in
1989‑1990, Beauchesne's, page 1046, that the word
"hypocritical" indeed is unparliamentary. Therefore, the honourable opposition House
leader does have a point of order, and I would ask the honourable member for
Inkster to withdraw that word, please.
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, out of appreciation of the rule
book‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Unqualified.
Order, please. The honourable
member for Inkster, please, to withdraw the word "hypocritical."
Mr. Lamoureux: I withdraw the word "hypocritical."
Mr. Speaker: I would like to thank the honourable member
for Inkster.
*
* *
Mr. Lamoureux: Yes, Mr. Speaker, I would like to see the
official opposition taking more of a responsible approach in terms of what it
is that they are in fact saying and to reflect on some of the things that they
have done in the past. There is a lot of
productivity that can come out of private members' hour, a lot of very good,
detailed debate.
What I would have
preferred to stand up and talk about is, in fact, the deductibles on
something. Something that we have a bit
more influence on. [interjection] Well, it is not quite as simple as that, to
the member from Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak).
He knows that there is a draw process that is in place, and I know this
is their first priority‑‑is that what he is saying in terms of
dealing with the whole health care issue?
But I want to make it very clear, very clear, that the critic for the
health care brings in a resolution that deals with the importance of
understanding the direct costs and potential increases in cost to pharmaceuticals
and tries to imply that there is going to be that much more of an increased
burden on those individuals that can least afford it. [interjection]
The member for Kildonan
asked me: How am I defending that? Well, I believe that the member for Kildonan
does not understand how the system works.
If the Health critic for
the New Democratic Party realized that the deductible has more of a real impact
on affordability for the seniors and individuals on fixed incomes or
individuals that rely on prescription drugs, if they realized that that is what
the real impact is on, then this is what we should have heard from the New Democractic Party, even though this might have been just by
the luck of the draw that they got this particular resolution up. I did not hear the critic for Health comment
on that whatsoever. And that is equally
as important as this when you are talking about the prices of prescription
drugs. [interjection]
The member for Kildonan
(Mr. Chomiak) says: I thought you were
going to support it. And he is trying
desperately to get me on the record as saying:
I am going to support, or I am not going to support it. He is trying desperately to do that. I think the member for Kildonan has selective
hearing. I do not believe that the
member for Kildonan heard, in fact, what I had alluded to earlier; I do not
think he ever heard it, that the Minister of Industry and Trade has in fact
undertaken some of the responsibilities.
In the resolution he says
monitor‑‑in the resolution it says:
"Therefore be it resolved that the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba
urge the provincial government to pressure the federal government to live up to
its election promise to review . . . "
To review, Mr. Speaker. Well, the
minister is monitoring, reviewing, and we are going to continue to play on
those. [interjection] Well, I think that the members of the New Democratic
Party have got to start questioning some of the resolutions that are in fact
coming into their caucus. [interjection] Well, the member for Wellington (Ms.
Barrett) says it is a very simple resolution.
If I look at Question Periods, I guess all questions will be very
simple. I know you are very hurt by the
fact that the Liberals are in government in Ottawa, and we see that every day
when they stand up: It is the federal
Liberals that are doing this. It is the
federal Liberals that are doing that.
* (1730)
They are finally
applauding all the wonderful things the federal Liberals are doing. But, Mr. Speaker, there are a number of
things which the New Democratic caucus should in fact be addressing inside the
Chamber, and I do not want to belittle the importance of this very serious
issue. I concur that the federal government
does need to review it; there is no doubt about that. You know, it was indicated to me, unless the
critic for health care is otherwise to establish that it is not true, that the
federal government is reviewing it, and the critic for Health does not say
anything in terms of, no, the federal minister is not reviewing it. So he knows that they are reviewing it. So what is he asking the minister in fact to
do?
Is he trying to score
some political cheap shots so that he can try to make it once again the
connection of the federal Liberals and the provincial Liberals and if whatever
the federal Liberals do not do right we are going to bring down the provincial
Liberals? I guess I cannot blame
them. If I were in the same situation, I
would probably be inclined to look at doing the same thing, but I would be more
cognizant of the fact that if I were in their shoes you have got to realize you
were in government. At least on the
things that you are going to take shots at the federal government, make sure
you are not so inconsistent with what it is that you are preaching that it
makes you look like that you are being somewhat‑‑and it was ruled
out of order, the word "hypocritical," so I cannot use that word‑‑but
be very careful in terms of what it is that you are suggesting that we should
be doing.
So I would like to
conclude my remarks by commenting, Mr. Speaker, because I know that the member
for Osborne (Ms. McCormick) also wants to be able to speak on this resolution
which is in, I would put it, a bit more detail on the record so that the member‑‑
An Honourable Member: A bit more detail. That is an understatement.
Mr. Lamoureux: A bit more detail, well, unfortunately we
have a limited amount of time and my light is flashing. I would be more than happy, I am sure, if
they want to give leave to continue talking on it, Mr. Speaker.
An Honourable Member: Question.
Mr. Lamoureux: Well, again you see the NDP asking for the
question. I guess they do not
necessarily want to hear the truth because of what is actually going on, Mr.
Speaker. They are somewhat fearful in
terms of knowing exactly what it is that they are voting on. I have tried, the best way I know how, to be
able to point out to my colleagues on the right‑hand side of me, but on
the political spectrum very far to the left, some of the inherent problems that
they have, and hopefully they will gain that appreciation. Whether or not this resolution happens to
come to a vote today or not, we do not want to limit individuals to have input. I am interested in knowing what the member
for Wellington (Ms. Barrett) has to say about Howard Pawley, the former
Premier, and what he has done, not necessarily to the pharmaceutical companies‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member's time has expired.
Ms. Norma McCormick (Osborne): Mr. Speaker, I too would like to put some
comments on the record with respect to this resolution. Again, I recognize the significant argument
here seems to be that the quote from the Liberal Party red book appears to say
that there will be an immediate review of the provisions of Bill C‑91. What we need to do is to examine what has in
fact been transpiring in the federal House with respect to this regulation.
(Mr. Marcel Laurendeau,
Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
The record that I have
from Oral Question Period makes it very clear, Mr. Acting Speaker, that this is
a very complicated issue. The two
largest regions of Canada, Quebec and Ontario, appear to be pitted against one
another with respect to their preference.
Quebec, of course, supports this patent protection legislation as many
of the drug companies who stand to benefit from this exist in Quebec. So in April 29, 1994, Mr. Yvan
Loubier of Saint‑Hyacinthe‑Bagot stood up in the House of Commons to ask a question to
the Minister of Industry. His question
basically contained a complaint that in fact the minister's intention to reopen
Bill C‑91, the drug patent legislation, was holding off a $50 million
investment in Quebec.
I note that in responding
to this it became apparent that the Industry minister did indicate that he was
undertaking a monitoring process of this new legislation to ensure that the
drug companies were living up to their promises to invest in Canadian research
and development, and to ensure that Canadian drug prices were not allowed to go
out of line. In doing so, it is apparent
that the Industry minister was at the same time trying to be sensitive to the
member from Quebec, but wanting to hold the drug industry accountable for the
commitments that had been made throughout the negotiation of C‑91.
C‑91, which was
passed by the Mulroney government, had extracted a commitment from the
pharmaceutical industry to invest in the development of this industry. It was a sort of quid pro quo exchange.
The other thing that has
to go on the record here is that this is an international as well as a national
issue. The U.S. government will be
watching these developments with interest as well. Many of the drug companies that are going to
be affected are in fact U.S. based, and these U.S. companies stand to benefit
from the patent protection extension. I
am sure that they would do everything in their power to get Canada to up the
protection from 10 to 20 years, as it strengthens their hand in dealing with
other international markets, such as Japan and Asia, who also are trying to
move in on the patent protection of U.S. drug companies. Now the good news is that the Mulroney
legislation put in place, provided for a recall provision which indicates that
this regulation must come back for review in 1997.
* (1740)
If we look at the
commitments that had been made in the passage of Bill C‑91, they were
basically twofold. One was to invest in
the Canadian economy, and the second commitment was in fact to hold the prices
and to ward off any untoward increase in drug price costs.
Again, I think that one
of the things we have to recognize here is that this is not just a national
issue in fact, but it is also an issue of international significance. I think it is important to recognize too that
the provincial government in Ontario is going to be impacted by whatever
decision is made, given that the generic drug industry appears to be clustered
around Toronto.
I guess I really have to
question, whose agenda are we debating here?
It appears that the provincial NDP might be fearing the same descent
into oblivion that has been experienced by their federal colleagues at the hand
of the Liberal government in Ottawa, and perhaps the same fear is being
experienced by the provincial government in Ontario.
So what is at issue here
is whether or not there is sufficient protection offered to the Canadian public
by a 1997 review of the legislation. As
well, what is at issue is whether or not Mulroney was in fact correct when he
passed the regulation or the law indicating that there would be a substantial
investment in research and development.
What is at question here
is whether or not we are prepared to let the regulation or the law play out
until 1997 and go for the mandatory review which was called for, or in fact pre‑empt
the process and allow the generic companies to take expired patents and sell
drugs for less.
There is a fundamental
issue here, as I see it. One of the
things is how much we ought to encourage the research and development by
private companies. This is one of the
things that has been troubling me with respect to many of the initiatives that
I have seen by this government in Manitoba.
It seems that we really have an obligation to encourage industry to do
its own research and development and that we ought not always be looking at
this as something that is to be done on the ticket of the taxpayer.
If in fact this
legislation does‑‑[interjection] I do not know whose principles we
are talking about here. Perhaps it is
NDP principles that we are debating and not Liberal ones, but I do want to go
on the record that I do believe that industry and business have an obligation
to do their own research and development, that we ought to be encouraging and
not‑‑[interjection] Right, yes.
I think, though, what we
want to do is to look at this in the perspective of whether or not we want to
encourage investment in the Canadian economy by Canadian business. If the effect of allowing this bill to run out
until 1997 does result in substantial investment in research and development in
Canada, then maybe in exchange your protection is a reasonable thing.
The other thing that we
need to examine is whether or not there are other ways of ensuring that we do
gain control and find ways of saving money on drug costs. Maritime governments were brought up by a
previous speaker. In fact, the bulk
purchase of drugs through the Maritime health care initiatives are‑‑joint
purchasing is in fact something that we in Manitoba could explore.
Just in conclusion, Mr.
Acting Speaker, I want to say I suspect that we are not debating something
which is seriously of primary concern to this Legislature. It appears simply to be a ploy to try and
drive a wedge between our provincial and our federal party.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Laurendeau): Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the
motion?
Hon. James McCrae (Minister of Health): Mr. Acting Speaker, I am pleased to join in
the discussion this afternoon. Although
I am tempted to just continue to sit and enjoy the discussion going on between
our New Democratic friends and our Liberal friends here in the Manitoba
Legislature on the issue of drug patent legislation and to watch the two
parties try to argue for the higher ground, the higher ground unfortunately
eludes both parties here in Manitoba.
Such ground can exist and does exist in the delivery of pharmaceutical
services.
I want to use the
opportunity this debate accords me as a provincial Minister of Health whose concern
is to maintain viable programming, to maintain as affordable programming as we
can make our programming, perhaps to point out that red books do not always
live up to their expectations or promises.
I do not know, maybe some
of my friends in the Liberal Party here in Manitoba can confirm. Has there been a revised red book produced
since the election? I cannot think of
anything more cynical than printing up a red book for the purpose of getting
yourself elected and immediately after the successful election campaign to
revise the red book. It strikes me as‑‑I
am looking at a couple of quotations here from federal Liberals with respect to
the promise made in the red book that everybody is so familiar with now.
I have a quotation from
senior Quebec cabinet minister Andre Ouellet who has
said that even though the Liberals found the drug patent legislation repugnant
or objectionable when they were in opposition, they will not change it
now. This is what Monsieur Ouellet has said, quote:
It will not be changed, because we cannot change it.
Well, last time I
checked, the Liberal Party has a fairly healthy majority in the House of
Commons. To say that they cannot do
anything is more or less saying, well, what did you elect us for? We cannot understand how it is we went out,
we ran for election, we achieved a majority government, and now we do not want
to do anything about that. We do not
want to follow up on our promises.
Ouellet
said this to the Canadian press: We
fought the law and tried to amend it, but now it is on the books, and we have
to respect it. We are not flip‑flopping. Does it mean that because we are against the
law and do not like a law, we should disobey this law? I have a little trouble with Monsieur Ouellet's thinking here.
He also said it would not be changed when it comes up for compulsory
review in 1997. That is my
information. It cannot be changed
because we cannot change it.
* (1750)
I know the drug patent
issue is a very important issue to Canadians on all sides of the issue, but
this debate has more to do with hypocrisy than it has to do with drug patent
legislation. I learned early in my
career, as a member of the government with a government of the same name
operating in Ottawa, that when that government messes up, you should call
attention to it. When something is wrong
or something is inconsistent or something is hypocritical‑‑and I
think in this context, Mr. Acting Speaker, I can use that word‑‑when
that happens, something should be said about it so that people can understand
precisely your position.
One of the flaws, if I
may be so bold, in the strategy of our provincial friends in the Liberal Party
is that they have decided that no matter how good or bad the federal
government, no matter how many times they transgress their own rules as laid
out in the red book, they will be supportive of the federal government. It is a policy. You have to be darn confident that wherever
this federal government is going to go, you want to go there, because if you
are going to make that as your policy, come hell or high water, we are going to
do what the Prime Minister and his colleagues want us to do. If it is in the area, the honourable member
will do it.
The honourable member the
House leader for the Liberal Party (Mr. Lamoureux) today referred to Dr. Pagtakhan. Now he is
a nice man. I agree with the honourable
member. But I had to do a little
debating with him one day on the radio with regard to tobacco taxes, and as a
medical doctor, I was having a little trouble following the man's
reasoning. He was talking something
about side effects and some very, very circumlocutous
argument with respect to how ultimately the changes in taxation brought on by
the federal government in response to the Province of Quebec's demands was the
right thing to do. Frankly, he lost me.
Maybe it is my own
density of thinking here, but I had to observe on the air that what I was
hearing from the good doctor was gobbledegook because
there is no way on God's green earth that a medical doctor can go on the radio
and defend, in that case being a card carrying Liberal and a Member of
Parliament representing the Liberal Party and all that. I guess it was his duty that day, but better
strategy would have been to get somebody other than Dr. Pagtakhan
to try to defend that, because first of all, it is indefensible, and for a
doctor to do it is absolutely ridiculous.
I guess they could have used Dr. Jon Gerrard, but they did not use him
either.
This kind of strategy
will only last for so long, I suggest. I
think the federal Liberals, granted all governments get a little honeymoon
period, but if they keep this kind of stuff up, showing their inability to make
a decision and stick with it and go with it, or their inability to lead, are
going to find themselves in trouble.
Provincial Liberal Parties that want to follow that particular approach
and defend it are going to get into some trouble. That is just some words of experience on this
particular point, because I happen to know what happened to the last federal
government, and I know what might happen to this federal government if it does
not smarten up.
An Honourable Member: Boy, do you know what happened to the last
federal government?
Mr. McCrae: Boy, do I ever know what happened to the last
federal government, and I know what will happen to this provincial Liberal
Party if they tie their future onto a wagon that is going very‑‑well,
maybe not too quickly yet but may speed up down that hill to oblivion,
too. If it happened to that once
powerful Progressive Conservative Party, which is the party of Confederation,
and they have been humiliated to the extent they have, do not think it cannot
happen to a Liberal government and has in the past. It could happen in the future.
I remember as an employee
in the House of Commons observing some of these Liberal people who are
presently back in government and some of them were there then and are now,
people like Andre Ouellet, Lloyd Axworthy and others,
they have not really changed.
They promised change, but
I have noticed in the past six or so months‑‑[interjection] The
honourable member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux) says I am biased. He is absolutely right. Let me put my credentials on the table. I have never been a Liberal. I thought about it once or twice.
[interjection] Sure, over the years we all do these things, and each and every
time, because of the performance of the Liberals in my generation, I just could
not do it. It was not there for me. What is distressing sometimes is to see that
so many of them are back and so little has changed that it is a little bit
distressing.
Before I finish, and I
did not want to spend all my time just observing my experience with watching
Liberals over the last number of years, honourable members in the New
Democratic Party already know some of my feelings about some of their
philosophies and will no doubt have further opportunity in Estimates and
elsewhere to discuss those things further.
I did want to talk a
little bit about the patent legislation itself.
You see, this may be an area where the New Democrats and we part
company, and it has to do with Bill C‑22.
We recognize there has to be a fair kind of a balance in relation to
patent protection and the property of people, and that balance has to be the
right kind of balance.
Bill C‑22 was a
balance that we think brought the balance that was needed. Bill C‑91 brought in a further
protection that was not necessarily conducive to maintaining an appropriate
balance. So it is the reference to Bill
C‑22 in the honourable member's motion that causes a little concern, and
if the honourable member would agree to delete that reference, I could see my
way clear to‑‑if the honourable members opposite would agree to
that, I could see my way clear to supporting the amendment. I see the honourable member for Kildonan (Mr.
Chomiak) stating his agreement, and that is being done as I speak.
In the meantime though‑‑now
I have gone and given my colleague my speaking notes which is not a good idea
to do when you are making one of your better contributions. While I am at it, I just wanted to say a word
about the efforts we are making here in Manitoba to preserve a very good program. There are some honourable members who have
been critical of our approach, and I just want to say that we have worked very
hard to maintain a program that will last us for many, many years. Some people have called in to question our
commitment to Pharmacare, and they should not do that because we brought in the
Drug Program Information Network, which I believe will be up and running very
shortly and will demonstrate our commitment to a quality Pharmacare program
that will be sustainable for many, many years to come.
Having said that about
our own commitment to Pharmacare, I would like to move an amendment to the
honourable member's resolution as follows:
I move, seconded by the
honourable member for Portage la Prairie (Mr. Pallister),
THAT the resolution be
amended by deleting the words "Bill C‑22 in 1987 and" as it
appears in the fourth WHEREAS of the resolution.
Motion presented.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Laurendeau): Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the
amendment?
Some Honourable Members: Agreed.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Laurendeau): Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the
motion as amended?
Some Honourable Members: Agreed.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Laurendeau): Agreed and so ordered.
The hour being 6 p.m., I am
interrupting the proceedings. We will
resume at 8 p.m. in Committee of Supply.