LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA
Wednesday, June 15, 1994
The House met at 1:30
p.m.
PRAYERS
MATTER OF PRIVILEGE
Minister's Comments
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson): Mr. Speaker, I rise this afternoon on a
matter of privilege.
Mr. Speaker, I want to begin by clarifying why I am raising
this matter today and not yesterday, because it did occur on Monday. The first reason is that we were in Estimates
on Monday until 12:30, and I did not have an opportunity for a number of
activities I thought were important to do before I brought this matter to the
House. I needed to discuss it with my
caucus. I wanted to discuss it with the
Hansard staff. I wanted to discuss it
with the member for Osborne (Ms. McCormick), and I wanted to try and discuss it
with other committee members at the committee of Environment Estimates on
Monday.
The matter is of serious consequence to all members of the
House and particularly the women of this Chamber. It involves the Minister of Energy and Mines
(Mr. Orchard) and comments that he made to me during the committee. He said, you need a slap, and he said that
also with the phrase, you need to go to the woodshed.
Mr. Speaker, I have been in this House for almost four
years, and I have endured name‑calling, personal attacks, obscene
gestures and members opposite saying things like I have no business being an
MLA. They may attack my ideas, they may
attack policies that I recommend, but I will not tolerate references to violence
or threats of violence against me. They
have gone way over the line.
There are other women on this side of the House who have
also had threats made to them in terms of gestures or names, and we will not be
silenced, which I believe is one of the intentions of these kinds of
threats. We are here to exercise our
freedom of speech, and the pin that I am wearing today from the 1919 strike
says: Ideas cannot be confined by bars.
Mr. Speaker, it was not long ago that women could not
vote. It was not long ago that women
could not go to university or own property, but all of these things have
changed. It was not long ago that we
could not run for office, but now we can, and here we are. We are here to work as equals. We will work to change economic policies,
education policies, health, environment or any other policies which threaten
women or violate women in any way and threaten their status or put them in an
inferior or unequal status. The comment,
you need a slap, exemplifies sexism and ageism that women have suffered for a
millennium.
The violence against women in our society crosses all
sectors. It is both systemic and
systematic. I do not know if the
Minister of Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard) has targeted me because I am female
or also because I am young. I do not
know if he has particular problems with the ideas or the things that I say, but
I feel that he has targeted me with certain names in the House, as well.
I think, Mr. Speaker, that I stand here on behalf of women
who want to start to use power in a different way. We do not want to use positions of power to
dominate, to intimidate, to violate or to manipulate people. This, in essence, I believe, is what is the
issue here. I think that violence is
about abusing power and trying to exert control over others through force and
domination, and it is usually preceded by threats of violence. These threats must be stopped.
In any other workplace, this comment would be sexual
harassment worthy of disciplinary action, if not legal action. Surely this Legislature should be leading the
way as a safe place for all. I know that
many women across the province have their ability to perform their jobs
affected negatively by sexual harassment and by violence in their workplace,
and that is why this is a matter of privilege.
A matter of privilege must relate to impediments for a
member to perform their duties and must be so fundamental that it affects the
dignity of all members of the House. Mr.
Speaker, I ask you to consider this matter of privilege in the appropriate
manner. Thank you very much.
I move, seconded by the member for Burrows (Mr.
Martindale), that this matter of privilege be referred to the Committee of
Privileges and Elections.
* (1335)
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Acting Government House Leader): Mr.
Speaker, as we know, this is a very, very serious motion brought forward by the
member. Although I was not here to hear
all of her intervention, I would indicate that when members come forward and
make certain allegations with respect to events that may or may not have happened
at some point in time, that obviously we are wise to first of all refer to
Hansard of that evening to fully determine what the record says. I have not had that opportunity, but I would
sense that Hansard makes no reference to this particular exchange that may or
may not have occurred that night.
So, Mr. Speaker, without being able to ascertain the
validity of the allegations brought forward by the member, I would suggest that
the motion is not in order, because as you are keenly aware, many comments are
made from time to time from member to member.
As a matter of fact, it is the very essence of the society that we are
in, and certainly that happens at committee all the time.
I find it, though, unfortunate that the member would rise
today and try, for whatever reason, to paint a picture that obviously has no
evidence of fact surrounding it.
On that basis, Mr. Speaker, I would ask you not to
countenance the motion that has been put forward by the member.
Hon. Donald Orchard
(Minister of Energy and Mines): Mr.
Speaker, I rise to speak to this motion which has‑‑I did not catch
the first part of my honourable friend's presentation to the House and
background to the House‑‑but I assume it has to deal with consideration
of Estimates Monday evening. The one
thing I did hear my honourable friend say is she tried to attribute certain
comments to me which involved the word "slap," is what I heard her
say today.
I want to tell my honourable friend that I unequivocally,
without reservation and without any hesitation, deny the use of any such
language and, Mr. Speaker, I will identify exactly the circumstances for your
benefit and for the benefit of the House of the circumstances that evening.
I walked into that committee. I asked a colleague, how is the member for
Radisson doing? The answer was, very
quiet this evening, to which I used a phraseology which the Leader of the
Opposition (Mr. Doer) has often used in jest across the floor, because the
Leader of the New Democratic Party has often referred to members on this side
of the House as having gone to the woodshed, a comment that often my friends
opposite have heard the Leader of the New Democratic Party use, meaning that
from time to time, when a member steps out of line according to certain
circumstances of the party's policy, et cetera, that they may have been taken
to the woodshed for discipline purposes, so they do not make inappropriate
statements.
My reply to the response that the member for Radisson (Ms.
Cerilli) was very quiet tonight was that she must have been taken to the
woodshed, a reply that my honourable friend the Leader of the New Democratic
Party has often used.
I said that, Sir, and nothing more. I would never make a reference to any honourable
member inside this House or any member of women in Manitoba that they deserve a
slap, as has been accused by the member for Radisson. That is totally not the kind of language that
I use or I condone, and I regret that my honourable friend would make such an
inappropriate and false accusation of myself.
I would ask you to rule this matter of privilege, not only out of order,
but frivolous.
* (1340)
Ms. Norma McCormick
(Osborne): Mr. Speaker, I wish to speak as an observer
of this incident and in support of my colleague from Radisson. I, too, observed the incident and heard the
phrase, taking to the woodshed. What the
member is saying is correct, that this is a common phrase in this House and
there is, or at least up until this time, has been no indication of what
measure would follow, whether a stern talking to or whatever.
However, following the phrase, taking to the woodshed, in
this instance was the phrase, you need a slap.
At the time, the member for Radisson and I exchanged glances of, I would
say, amazement at what we had heard and, subsequently, in a conversation, I
urged her to go back to Hansard to obtain the tape.
I do respect the rules of this House, and I do want to
remind members that in my opening address following the Speech from the Throne,
I spent about half of my time talking about the importance of members' respect
for one another, about our role in terms of setting a standard for Manitoba.
We have had a great deal of discussion in this House about
the consequence of violence, violence of people to one another, youth violence,
violence in marital relationships. If we
are going to make any meaningful change, we have to set the standard. I would urge members to give serious
consideration to this member's matter of privilege and to support it.
Thank you.
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Deputy Opposition House Leader): Mr.
Speaker, as the deputy House leader for my caucus, I would like to support the
member for Radisson (Ms. Cerilli) in her matter of privilege.
Very briefly, I would like to refer you to Beauchesne 25,
and I would like to quote just one sentence:
"In my view, parliamentary privilege does not go much beyond the
right of free speech in the House of Commons and the right of a Member to
discharge his duties in the House as a Member of the House of Commons."
This was recorded in debates in 1971. I think today we would say his or her rights
and privileges as a member. What the
member for Radisson is saying is that when members opposite use language that
is threatening or sexually harassing, that it inhibits her ability to do her
job in this Chamber and in Estimates and to carry out all of her roles and
functions as a member of this Legislature.
I hope, Mr. Speaker, when you take this under advisement,
that you will come back with a very generous ruling that looks at this in the
broadest dimensions of how we as members carry out our jobs, and I hope that
you will rule appropriately.
I would like to thank the member for Osborne (Ms.
McCormick) for her intervention in this matter, as well.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: I would like to thank all honourable members
for their advice on this matter. I will
peruse Hansard and I will come back to the House with a ruling on this matter.
* (1345)
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
TABLING OF REPORTS
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I am
pleased to table the 1994‑95 Departmental Expenditure Estimates for the
Department of Finance.
Hon. Leonard Derkach
(Minister of Rural Development): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to table the Annual Report for the Manitoba Municipal
Employees Benefits Board.
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey
(Minister responsible for the Status of Women): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to table today the
Supplementary Information of the department for the Status of Women.
PRESENTING REPORTS BY
STANDING AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES
Standing Committee on Municipal Affairs
Mr. Speaker: Is there leave to revert to Presenting
Reports by Standing and Special Committees? [agreed]
Mr. Jack Penner
(Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Municipal Affairs): Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the First
Report of the Committee on Municipal Affairs.
Mr. Speaker: Dispense.
Your Standing Committee
on Municipal Affairs presents the following as its First Report.
Your committee met on
Tuesday, June 14, 1994, at 10 a.m. in Room 255 of the Legislative Building to
consider the annual report of The Forks Renewal Corporation for the year ended
March 31, 1993, and The Forks Renewal Corporation financial statements for the
year ended March 31, 1993 and auditor's report.
At the June 14, 1994,
meeting, your committee elected Mr. Penner as chairperson.
Mr. G. Campbell MacLean,
chairperson, Mr. Nick Diakiw, president and CEO, Mr. Al Baronas, vice‑president,
Ms. Marilyn Williams, communications manager, Mr. Sid Kroker, site archeologist
of The Forks Renewal Corporation and Mr. Del Crewson of Deloitte and Touche
provided such information as was requested with respect to the annual report,
the financial statements and auditor's report and the business of The Forks
Renewal Corporation.
Your committee reports
that it has considered the annual report of The Forks Renewal Corporation for
the year ended March 31, 1993, and The Forks Renewal Corporation financial
statements for the year ended March 31, 1993, and auditor's report.
Mr. Penner: I move, seconded by the honourable member for
La Verendrye (Mr. Sveinson), that the report of the committee be now received.
Motion agreed to.
* (1350)
INTRODUCTION OF BILLS
Bill 25‑‑The Statute Law Amendment
(Taxation) Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Environment (Mr. Cummings), that leave be given to
introduce Bill 25, The Statute Law Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994
modifiant diverses dispositions législatives en matière de fiscalité), and that
the same be now received and read a first time.
His Honour the Lieutenant‑Governor, having been
advised of the contents of this bill, recommends it to the House, and I would
like to table the message.
Motion agreed to.
Bill 205‑‑The Child and Family
Services Amendment Act
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the member
for Radisson (Ms. Cerilli), that leave be given to introduce Bill 205, The
Child and Family Services Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les services
à l'enfant et à la famille, and that the same be now received and read a first
time.
Motion presented.
Mr. Martindale: Mr. Speaker, the purport of my bill is to do
what this government refuses to do, and that is to amend The Child and Family
Services Act so that the Children's Advocate reports to the Legislative
Assembly rather than to the minister.
This would parallel The Ombudsman Act whereby the Ombudsman reports to
the Legislature rather than to any minister of cabinet.
We believe this is necessary as we saw in the last session
when the Children's Advocate made recommendations to the minister, but the
community had no way of knowing what those recommendations were. We believe that this amendment would correct
that problem.
Motion agreed to.
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 Holmfield Colony School forty Grades 1 to 8 students under
the direction of Mr. Lyons. This school
is located in the constituency of the honourable member for Turtle Mountain
(Mr. Rose).
From the Lord Selkirk School, we have twenty‑five
Grades 4 and 5 students under the direction of Mrs. Marcella Turnbull. This school is located in the constituency of
the honourable member for Elmwood (Mr. Maloway).
On behalf of all honourable members, I would like to
welcome you here this afternoon.
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
Burns Committee Recommendations
Public Consultations
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): My question is to the Premier.
Mr. Speaker, on May 2, I was asking a number of questions
to the Premier dealing with the Jets agreement that he had entered into in
November of 1991. At the time, we were
asking the Premier about the report of the Burns committee and whether he had
met with members of the Burns committee.
He said on that date:
I met as recently as last week with several members of the Burns
committee to share their observations, perhaps their apologies and frustrations
at not being able to finish the final report in accordance with the originally
set target date. During these
discussions, they could only give us the indications of what outstanding
matters there were.
Mr. Speaker, the Burns report was originally scheduled to
report in the spring. It is now to
report two weeks tomorrow, at the end of June.
There are a number of major concerns across the province dealing with
the projected losses that the government was aware of in November of 1991.
I would like to ask the Premier: Has he been briefed again by any members of
the Burns committee, and can the Premier advise us of how the public will
participate in this debate about the losses of the hockey team and the options
available to the public dealing with the future of the Jets?
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Yes, Mr. Speaker, I have had subsequent
briefing in the meeting with members of the Burns committee, and the public is
participating at the present time through a whole series of ways by which the
issue is being debated publicly here in this Legislature, on open‑line
talk shows, at public fora that have been organized by many different
organizations.
Mr. Doer: It was not until the opposition was able to
go to the Public Accounts committee and have the Provincial Auditor obtain the
briefing material that was available to cabinet and caucus of the government
but not the public or the media in November of 1991 that we have full and
accurate projections from the government, as they had them in November of 1991.
* (1355)
Public Accounts Committee
Winnipeg Jets
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): I would like to ask the Premier, to ensure
that we do not go through another last‑minute deal where the public is
not informed of the facts of the potential losses and the projections that the
government may have at their disposal, would the Premier agree today that any
dealings with the Burns committee will be referred to the Public Accounts
committee before the provincial Premier or the cabinet makes any decisions on
the future of the Jets and the projected losses for the public?
Will we have the same kind of information that we just
obtained last week from the Public Accounts committee available before we make
a decision in the future?
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, at the time that the decision
was made, it was known publicly that there was the probability of losses that
would occur from the agreement that was entered into to keep the Jets in
Winnipeg until such time as a final decision could be made with respect to the
construction of a new facility.
The decision was made, Mr. Speaker, knowing two things,
one, that the projected losses were approximately half of the direct revenues
to government during the period of time in which that agreement would exist,
that in addition to the fact that governments got back in direct taxation
revenues more than twice as much as the estimated losses they would encounter,
there would be employment levels of something in the range of a thousand to
1,400 people, and that the team would continue to play in Winnipeg and result
in some $50 million of overall economic benefit to the community while they
played in Winnipeg in accordance with that agreement.
Those were the considerations that were made, that were
debated publicly and were the reasons that that agreement was entered into.
I might indicate, as well, Mr. Speaker, that at the time,
the Leader of the Opposition did not raise any serious concerns, did not
express any major opposition to the deal, and, in fact, went on record as
saying he did not want to make this a political issue.
Of course, we know what desperate straits he is in
politically, and we understand exactly why he is going back on all of the
things he said before. That is fair
enough. He is entitled to do all of
those things in the desperate circumstances in which he finds himself.
Mr. Doer: Mr. Speaker, the only person who has made
this a political issue is the Premier who negotiated a deal and withheld it
from the public. The Premier withheld
this from the public until we could get the Provincial Auditor to reveal the
numbers that cabinet had in November of 1991, the $43.5 million that was before
cabinet in November of 1991 when this government agreed to this agreement.
Mr. Speaker, all I ask the Premier to do is to guarantee
this Legislature that any new agreement will come to the Public Accounts
committee, so we can have the Provincial Auditor available to look at the
numbers that the government may or may not release to the public. All I am asking the government to do is have
these numbers go before the Public Accounts committee and these options go
before the Public Accounts committee, a positive alternative to not having the
public aware of the full implications of any kind of future arrangement.
All I am asking the Premier today is to give this Legislature
the assurance that the Provincial Auditor and the Public Accounts committee
will be involved in any future decision of the Jets, because all of us are
responsible for projected losses, and projected losses are the responsiblity of
the public. That is a very simple
request to the Premier.
* (1400)
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, if the Leader of the Opposition
is saying that he would not enter into an agreement which resulted in the
taxpayer getting back more than $2 for every dollar that was put at risk,
direct taxation revenue, if he would not enter into that agreement that is
fine, he can say so. He is entitled to
go to the public and say that he would rather have had the Jets team not here;
he would rather have not had the taxation revenue; he would rather not have had
the thousand jobs; he would rather have not had all of those things. That is his entitlement. We will accept that from him. We know exactly what he wants to do, and that
is to simply make some cheap politics based on it.
We would like to pursue things in the best interests of the
people of Manitoba and ensure that the people of Manitoba are put in a position
where their interests are protected, and the tax revenues that we get and the
employment that we get from having the team here are protected. That is our objective and we will continue to
pursue it.
Waste Reduction Program
Volunteer Organizations
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson): Mr. Speaker, one of the biggest issues
related to environment in North America is overconsumption and waste. There have been two significant documents
released lately that deal with this. One
is the government's bill on waste reduction and the second is the National
Sewage Report Card by the Sierra Legal Defence Fund. My questions for the Minister of Environment
are based on these two.
I would like to ask the minister how the Waste Reduction
and Recycling program is going to compensate programs like the Fort Whyte
Centre Recycling Program which benefits financially from a volunteer program
that will no longer, I believe, be possible with the new program that the
government is bringing forward.
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, the
member has it totally backwards. In
fact, volunteer organizations, and particularly an organization like Fort
Whyte, if we now attach value through this program to collect recyclables, then
rather than just the value that is being brought from the material through the
marketplace that they are receiving today being their source of revenue, but
also, well in excess of several hundred dollars could be accumulated on the
amount of money they collect monthly over there.
Certainly, this is meant to enhance those types of
programs, as well as enhance the household curbside capabilities. It will still depend on those who are
supporters of Fort Whyte to bring their recyclables there, but the recyclables
will be worth far more than they are today.
So the member has it totally backwards.
Ms. Cerilli: Mr. Speaker, perhaps the minister needs to
make that clarification to the volunteers in the Fort Whyte Program who are
calling me with these concerns.
Transition Period
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson): Given that the transition and the scope of
the government's program is a concern, how will programs like the Fort Whyte
Centre and the various curbside programs in the province be involved in the
transition to ensure that they are going to have their ideas and their concerns
addressed in this program?
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, we
announced the amendments to the WRAP legislation that will give us the
legislative capability of imposing predisposal levies. We will then be introducing regulatory
proposals under the tenets of that act to attach that money to the cost of
removing those recyclables from the waste stream.
Mr. Speaker, the intent is that there will be an
implementation committee established within the next few days. There will, in fact, be an advisory committee
as recommended under The WRAP Act, where the public and interested parties with
the Recycling Council of Manitoba, for example, will be invited to participate
and provide advice.
Mr. Speaker, we have been working for a number of years on
The WRAP Act and on proposals of this nature.
We have just spent a year of very intensive negotiations and public
discussion under the CIPSI proposal for a voluntary multimaterial recycling
program, and this program very much follows the principles that were involved
there in terms of the types of materials and the fact that the industry would
pay for the cost of the collection, and the value of the product would be
enhanced.
I assure you, Mr. Speaker, that this will be a very well
received and very appropriate program for the province of Manitoba.
Sewage Treatment
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson): Mr. Speaker, given that the report I
referenced earlier, the National Sewage Report Card, says that sewage is not
just made up of human excrement and water, it contains over 200 chemicals and
other toxins which enter the system from households, business and industrial
operations and includes debris such as grit, gravel, tampons, condoms, rags and
hair, and this is a particular concern in Winnipeg under the report, I want to
ask the minister, what will the government's program on waste reduction and
recycling do to ensure that the rivers, as indicated in this report in
Winnipeg, are no longer used as a garbage dump?
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Well, Mr. Speaker, I
am not sure how the member is able to make the leap of faith with what is a
very positive and proactive approach that we are implementing in terms of
collection of recyclables in this province.
I imagine she is a little worried about how valuable and how important
the public is going to see this program, because it is innovative. It is going to be a leading test in North
America for how a jurisdiction can clean up a broad array of materials, not
just run a very narrow‑scoped recycling program.
I think the member knows full well that when she looks
though this report, they have ignored the fact that Brandon is entering into a
$31‑million sewage treatment upgrade.
The City of Winnipeg is in the process of what will ultimately cost them
$25 million for the immediate licensing and upgrade of their facilities.
They are in the process of responding immediately to the
number of surveys and tests we have put forward. [interjection] Well, the member
for Dauphin (Mr. Plohman) wants to talk about a report card. In 1987, this province‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. I would remind the honourable minister to
deal with the matter raised.
Burns Committee Recommendations
Public Consultations
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Premier.
I was very interested to hear the Premier say in response
to the Leader of the Opposition's (Mr. Doer) question just a few minutes ago
that he does not disagree with the need for a public debate prior to his
government considering and making a decision on the options which are, one
hopes, going to eventually come from the Burns committee with respect to the
Winnipeg Jets. What he did, however, was
indicate that this public debate, in his view, has been served through debate
in this Legislature and in other public forums like open‑line radio
shows.
Can the Premier give a commitment today‑‑because
we do not know when that Burns committee report is going to come down, that
there will, in fact, be opportunity whenever it comes down, if this House is in
session, through a meeting in the Public Accounts committee or one of the
legislative committees, and if the House is not in session at the time it comes
down, through another public forum which brings together members of the
Legislature and members of the public through a public hearing process or
whatever process the minister sees fit‑‑to examine in a very public
way the options that are put before this province?
Can the First Minister spell out his commitment to embark
upon that public process before a final decision is made, whenever this report
comes out?
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, every day that we meet in this
Legislature, there is an opportunity for members opposite to take a position,
express their views and debate the issues of the Winnipeg Jets. To this point, the only thing we have heard
from the Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) is that he is opposed to getting
two dollars back for every dollar that is put out, two dollars in direct taxes
back to three levels of government, back for every dollar that is put at risk
in terms of an agreement to keep the Jets here in Manitoba. All we have heard from him is that he is
opposed to that kind of arrangement and agreement, and the Leader of the
Liberal Party has said similarly.
Mr. Speaker, they will have the opportunity to make their
views known when the Burns report is made public. We have no interest in sitting on that
issue. As soon as it is available to us,
it will be public, and it will be the subject of, I am sure, very intensive
debate, not only here but throughout all of the avenues of public opinion.
All he needs to do is tune in on the open‑line talk
shows all day long and find that the public is expressing their views. All he needs to do is go and meet with the
public in any forum and state a position, and the public will be out there
discussing it with him.
I have been out at public events. I have been out at barbecues. I have been out at public meetings and
gatherings, and the public is talking about it, and they will talk about it. That opportunity will certainly be there for
him to be involved in the debate.
Mr. Edwards: Firstly, the First Minister can give no
assurance to this House as to when we might actually get that report. Secondly, Mr. Speaker, he is now apparently
content to have that public debate occur through the media.
If he really means what he says, if he wants to have that
thorough public review and ensure that he has the benefit of that advice, he
should stand up today and commit to a process of public review, because if we
are not in this House‑‑and we do not know when that report is
coming down so he cannot speculate that we will or will not be‑‑what
will the public review process be, where the public will have an opportunity to
speak not on some sort of ad hoc basis on open‑line shows, but in a
formal process which respects the right of all citizens to have a chance to
come forward and express their views?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, I can assure him we will be in
this House.
Mr. Edwards: If, in fact, the Premier is convinced, as he
obviously is, that we will be in this House, when will we receive this
report? Has he, in fact, received a copy
of it or a draft version today at this point?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, I have received no copy of the
report. The fact of the matter is I have
committed that as soon as we receive it, it will be made public and will be the
subject of debate and discussion here in this House, I am certain.
* (1410)
Family Services‑‑Westman Region
Employee Transfers
Mr. Leonard Evans
(Brandon East): Mr. Speaker, I have a question for the
Premier.
The government has ordered the transfer of two staff in the
Department of Family Services from Brandon to a small town 90 miles away in the
constituency of the Minister of Rural Development (Mr. Derkach) for no apparent
reason. I understand that one vocational
rehabilitation counsellor and one daycare co‑ordinator are being
transferred as of September 1, which will increase travel costs and overtime
costs because they are being removed from the concentration of their caseloads.
Can the Premier explain to this House why this move is
being forced on the regional staff in Westman and eroding the service delivery
of the department in that area?
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, I know the New Democratic Party
is opposed to decentralization of government services throughout rural
Manitoba. I take that as a given from
the New Democratic Party.
Mr. Speaker, I can tell him this. We will not be doing things that will erode
public services, and we will not be doing things that will be detrimental to
the interests of good government in this province.
Mr. Leonard Evans: Mr. Speaker, would the Premier confirm that a
supervisor, Mr. Duncan Pringle, a long‑time and highly regarded civil
servant, has resigned on principle because he was forced to reassign two staff
against his professional judgment to the Roblin‑Russell constituency to
accommodate the political objectives of this government?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, I reject totally his allegations
and accusations. I cannot in any way
confirm what he is saying. If he has
that information, he should make it public, and we will certainly have that
issue dealt with.
Mr. Leonard Evans: Mr. Speaker, I trust the Premier will be
looking into this and do the analysis.
My final question to the Premier is, why would his
government undermine the excellent program for handicapped people offered by
Career Opportunities, formerly known as A.R.M. Industries, by reducing the
vocational rehabilitation service to this organization which will result from
this particular transfer from Brandon to another town?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, without accepting any of the
preamble of the question, I will take that as notice on behalf of the Minister
of Family Services (Mrs. Mitchelson).
CN Rail/CP Rail Merger
Transcona Main Shop
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Speaker, yesterday, I raised the matter
of the Canadian National Railway Strategic Communications Plan, wherein they were
attempting to limit public debate on the proposed merger between CN and CP Rail
and, in fact, have targeted various groups, including government officials and
the media in their efforts. Since that
time, we have now learned that the president and CEO of CN Rail has indicated
that the company is now looking at merging its Transcona main shop operations
with the CP Rail Calgary operations.
Since the Minister of Highways and Transportation has
recently met with CN officials, was the minister informed that CN is now
looking at merging its Transcona main shop operations with the Calgary
operations?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation):
Mr. Speaker, I have met with CN officials; I have met with CP
officials. In both cases, we have talked
about the realities the railroad industry is facing. Certainly, both railroads are downsizing in
terms of the realities they are facing.
They have assured me that in the process of that, Winnipeg and Manitoba
will not be negatively impacted in a comparative sense to other parts of the
country.
The member full well knows that any discussions in terms of
the bigger question of merger of those two companies, as he raised yesterday,
is subject to the bureau of competition, National Transportation Agency and
significant public hearings, but I can tell the member the gist of my
discussions at this time is we will not be negatively impacted relative to the
other districts and regions of this province or of this country.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Speaker, obviously, the minister is not
aware of the comments from the president and CEO of CN Rail who says that is
going to‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Question, please.
Mr. Reid: What steps is this Minister of Highways and
Transportation prepared to take to ensure that Manitoba does not lose further
several thousand railway jobs by any merger, or is he only going to listen to
the railways and the shippers, as he has only done in the past week?
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Speaker, I do not think the member really
realizes the favourable position we are in in Manitoba with regard to railroad
jobs. We have 4 percent of the
population of the country and 12.5 percent of the railroad jobs in this
country. I think that is a very
favourable position to be in.
Mr. Reid: It is obvious, Mr. Speaker, this minister
wants to cut the jobs down to 4 percent.
Public Consultations
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Speaker, since on June 9, the government
hired a private consultant who held meetings with only shippers to discuss the
merger of CN and CP Rail operations, why did the government not open these
meetings to the general public and to railway employees who stand to be the
most severely impacted parties by any merger between CN and CP Rail?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation):
Mr. Speaker, last week, there was a public meeting here in Manitoba in
National Transportation Week which that member did not attend, and I was asked
the question, is the meeting that he is referring to open to the public? The answer was yes. It was open to the public.
Point of Order
Mr. Reid: Mr. Speaker, on a point of order, the
Minister of Highways and Transportation made reference to the fact that I had
not attended the National Transportation Week meetings that were held in
Winnipeg. First, I was never notified‑‑
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The honourable member does not have a point
of order. That is clearly a dispute over
the facts.
Transportation Subsidy Elimination
Impact on Manitoba
Mr. Eric Robinson
(Rupertsland): Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister
responsible for Transportation.
This past week in both Thunder Bay and also in Toronto, the
federal minister, Doug Young, again reiterated his desire to eliminate
subsidies, direct and indirect, to maintain existing rail, highway and air
transport systems.
Given that in speeches he has said subsidies for western
grain farmers and VIA Rail, in particular, are to be cut‑‑and
particularly the concern we have is its impact in Manitoba and also on the
bayline‑‑I want to ask the minister what details he has heard from
the minister on these cuts.
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation):
Mr. Speaker, I am glad the member has raised that question, that the
members over there now realize what is going on. It is a very serious situation.
Mr. Young made some comments in Thunder Bay on June 3. You can read between the lines, and maybe some
big decisions were at hand with that government. In Ottawa on June 8, some comments were made
again, and the Liberal Party in this Legislature, in the emergency debate,
tended to condone what was said and said he did not really mean what he was
saying.
In Toronto on June 13, the minister was very clear. The member is right. That federal Minister of Transport is making
statements about removing subsidies right across the board in so many different
areas, not only in Manitoba but across Canada.
He is doing it, and the member asked me if we had any prior
knowledge. No, we did not have any prior
knowledge. He has done it without any
consultation with provincial governments across this country, without any
consultation with the industry that I am aware of. He does not demonstrate any plan of
action. He is just walking away from
long‑time supports to the transportation industry of this country without
any discussion, without any plan. If
that is the Liberal agenda, I am astounded with it.
The member full well knows we sent a very strong letter to
that federal minister not accepting anything of what he said; in fact, showing
to him how he is being irresponsible in that position.
* (1420)
Mr. Robinson: Mr. Speaker, I and all of us on this side of
the House find it surprising that the federal minister would keep on giving off‑the‑record
speeches to 750 delegates but not to provincial governments.
What efforts is this minister making to defend the
interests of Manitoba? I would hope that
he would not be waiting for a final announcement on cuts.
Mr. Findlay: Well, Mr. Speaker, the member knows the
letter we sent. That was certainly a
very strong response. We participated in
an emergency debate here. But, further
to that, I want the members of this House to know the way we are being treated
by that federal Minister of Transport.
Since I have been minister, since last September, we have
sent him 13 letters and received four responses. The letter we sent last week has not even
been acknowledged at this point, let alone been responded to. So that is the kind of communication and
consultation that that federal Liberal government is carrying on with the
provinces of this country.
Mr. Robinson: My final question is, will this government
contact the other western Canadian governments in order to present a co‑ordinated
strategy to defend the interests of western Canadian producers?
Also, will this government ensure that the issue of
eliminating transportation subsidies takes a prominent place on the agenda of
the meeting of agricultural ministers taking place here in July?
Also, will this minister table any information on these
matters when he receives it, in view of the importance of these issues to this
province?
Mr. Findlay: The Premiers of the four western provinces
and two territories met in Gimli just a couple of weeks ago. They asked the ministers of transport to get
together to form Team West to deal with transportation issues related to
western Canada. Obviously, it was very,
very important that the Premiers, and our Premier (Mr. Filmon), in particular,
took that leadership. We are positioned
to do that. He has asked me to lead that
process, and we will.
This is very significant on our agenda, and we expect and
hope that Mr. Young will show up at the Council of Ministers meeting at the
beginning of July. We do not have
confirmation yet, but it is very imperative he does, so as a group in western
Canada, we can address these issues in front of him.
Sewage Treatment
Government Initiatives
Ms. Norma McCormick
(Osborne): Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister
of Environment.
The National Sewage Report Card, giving Winnipeg its C‑minus
grade, identifies problems with our sewage system with respect to the absence
of anything other than secondary sewage treatment, no disinfection, combined
sanitary and storm sewers which overflow regularly.
Has the Minister of Urban Affairs (Mrs. McIntosh) or the
Minister of Environment met with the city to seek solutions to this continuing
and embarrassing situation?
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, there
is probably not any one issue that has consumed more time in the minister's
office through the Urban Affairs Committee of Cabinet, through the Manitoba
Department of Environment and City of Winnipeg working groups to deal with the
long‑standing and ongoing problems of sewage treatment in this city.
I find it, however, ironic that those who wrote this report
point to Winnipeg and give this city a C‑minus, and at the same time,
they ignore the fact, without making what I consider significant comparisons,
that other cities are dumping theirs totally untreated.
I fail to see the basis upon which some of these
evaluations were made, because it would appear that the authors of this report
appear to think that dilution is the solution to pollution. That is what they have accepted in some other
jurisdictions, Mr. Speaker.
Ms. McCormick: My second question is to the Minister of
Finance (Mr. Stefanson).
Winnipeg sewage treatment plants were upgraded between 1990
and 1993 at a cost of $200 million. A
significant amount of the infrastructure money is committed to sewer
construction.
My question to the minister is, will the sewer replacement
projects correct the problem of having combined sanitary and storm sewers which
result in 2.5 billion litres of untreated sewage spilling into our rivers?
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, I think the member has hit on
what is the most critical aspect of dealing with this problem. No one is denying that there needs to be
action taken. Where I take issue is
whether or not there is, in fact, acknowledgement of the expenditures and the
initiatives that are being taken by this province and by the City of
Winnipeg. There is about $15 million out
of the infrastructure program that will assist in reduction of the combined
sewer outflows.
Let us be perfectly clear, and I am sure the member knows
this figure as well as I do, but the ultimate solution for the City of Winnipeg
to stop any combined sewer outfalls will likely be about $1 billion, a problem
of significant enormity that it will take some time to deal with. I hope the member will acknowledge that there
has been a lot of money spent in the last few years by the City of Winnipeg and
the province.
Ms. McCormick: Mr. Speaker, my final question then to the
Minister of Environment is, as technological advancement is being made all the
time, what more can we do that is cost‑beneficial or affordable in
keeping with a commitment to sustainable development which considers not only
the cost of doing it but the cost of not doing it?
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, the City of Winnipeg, in
conjunction with the Department of Environment, is in the process of upgrading
their licences for all of their sewage plants.
One of the things they have been asked to consider is other technologies
other than simply chlorination to deal with the third level of treatment of
their discharges. Of course,
historically, that has meant more expense.
I believe, and others are beginning to advise me that
perhaps we are now going to be able to access some additional more cost‑efficient
or at least more effective, if not in the same price range, methods of dealing
with this disposal. While I am not a
chemist who could explain it precisely, the fact is, that is one of the things
that is taking a little bit of time in the city presenting its final plans to
the province.
Sewage Treatment
Government Initiatives
Mr. Gregory Dewar
(Selkirk): Mr. Speaker, my questions are for the
Minister of Environment.
As the minister knows and as has been suggested earlier on
in Question Period, the sewage containing fecal coliform bacteria has made the
Red River downstream of Winnipeg one of the most degraded and polluted water
courses in all of western Canada. In
fact, the amount of sewage discharged annually has been compared to the volume
of approximately 60 Exxon Valdez oil spills.
My question directly is to the Minister of
Environment. Is this minister now
prepared to order the City of Winnipeg to disinfect its waste?
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, as I
implied in my previous answer, that is, in fact, the direction that the
licensing of the City of Winnipeg plants is taking. Again, in the report that has been put
together, I find it very interesting that they are not making quantitative
comparisons. When we look at the city of
Montreal, the city of Vancouver, they are putting out billions of litres of
untreated sewage, not just when they have combined sewer outfalls when there is
excess surface water drainage into their system, but on a regular basis.
Mr. Speaker, this city, at least, has done everything it
can to confine its combined sewage outfalls to only periods of high surface
water runoff, and at least that is confined to an identifiable solution, which
is, frankly, another billion dollars worth of investment.
Mr. Dewar: Mr. Speaker, my supplementary question is
also to the Minister of Environment.
Would he be prepared to follow the Clean Environment
Commission recommendation and develop a public warning system for high levels
of fecal coliform for residents of Selkirk and other communities downstream?
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, that recommendation was accepted
in principle but has not been fully implemented. The fact is last year, it was not
particularly advantageous to get it in at the time that it should have been in,
and, in fact, we are continuing to work towards meeting a reduction of the
fecal coliform at the same time as we deal with that other issue.
* (1430)
Mr. Dewar: Mr. Speaker, my final question is to the
Minister of Environment.
Would the minister consider more frequent tests of the
water as it flows through the Selkirk community?
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, the testing regime, as it has
been explained to me, is regular, but it is speeded up under situations where
it would be considered of significant importance to know if there have been
changes in the water quality. So if the
member is asking for more data, if he is asking for more collection, I suggest
to him that is already being considered using the regime that is in place in
order to do more frequent testing if there seemed to be some element of
increase in the contamination at that site.
Mr. Speaker, the thing that hurts the reputation of this
province and this city more than anything else in this debate is in a country‑wide
rating, Manitoba rates better than any other province in a percentage of total
sewage treated. So it is most unfair and
unreasonable to put it into this context in terms of the measurement of the
litres without looking at the total percentage of sewage treated in this
province.
Prendiville Industries
Cutting Rights
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin
Flon): Mr. Speaker, there has been a good deal of
discussion over the last few months about this government's ability to
negotiate deals. In the 1989 period, when
the government was negotiating with Repap, we raised concerns about the
additional wood‑cut areas and the giving up of traditional use for groups
and companies in the Repap cutting area.
One of those was Prendiville Industries.
For a number of months, including a meeting in January of
this year, Prendiville Industries has been trying to get from the government
assurances of a wood supply for their post‑operations both in Birch River
and in Neepawa.
My question is to the Minister of Natural Resources. Can the Minister of Natural Resources tell
this House when the government will guarantee Prendiville industries the 6,000
cords, a small figure by anyone's standards, that they need to secure the 30 to
50 jobs that are part of the operations both in Birch River and Neepawa? When is that assurance going to be given?
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Natural Resources): Mr.
Speaker, I assume that the company he is referring to is the company that was
one of the biggest operators within the province years ago and ultimately sold
a lot of their quota at a time when the price was high, and now, we have the
problem of assessing that kind of a problem.
They sold a substantive amount of their quota at the time
when the value of the quota was high. I
will tell the member that we are reviewing that issue. Once we have done that, I will give him a
reply.
Mr. Storie: Mr. Speaker, the company has been told that
the government has been reviewing this for many months. The latest meeting resulted in a letter going
back to the company which, according to one of the principals of the company,
was woefully inadequate, not making any guarantee.
Is the government concerned about the fact that between 30
and 50 jobs could be lost if this kind of secure source of wood cannot be found
for the company?
Mr. Driedger: Mr. Speaker, when things go well and prices
are high, all of a sudden, we have interest from all over the place, within the
province, outside the province.
Everybody wants to have wood allocations at this time.
The challenge that we are facing within my department and
the forestry department is to try and do an analysis to make sure that we have
the best economic impact and job creation, and I am not taking the request
lightly. I have other colleagues in this
Legislature who have people who have jobs at stake, as well.
We are trying to deal with that issue, and we will be
dealing with it very shortly.
Mr. Speaker: Time for Oral Questions has expired.
Speaker's Ruling
Mr. Speaker: I have a ruling for the House. Order, please.
After Prayers on June 10, 1994, the honourable Minister of
Justice (Mrs. Vodrey) rose on a matter of privilege respecting comments made on
June 8 by the honourable member for St. Johns (Mr. Mackintosh) and moved that
this matter be referred to the Committee on Privileges and Elections and that
the member table his evidence or withdraw his charge unequivocally and
apologize to this minister and this House.
After receiving advice from the House, I took the matter under
advisement.
The honourable minister fulfilled the first condition of
privilege by raising the matter at the first available opportunity. As to the second condition, that of
establishing a prima facie case, I am ruling that this is not a matter of
privilege.
The basis of the minister's complaint was a question
addressed to the Acting Minister of Justice on June 8, which was: "What role did the government play in
effectively disciplining the only judge who has spoken up against this
backlog?"
In her submission on June 10, the minister did not identify
any particular privilege which had allegedly been breached. Also, the matter in question related to the
minister's responsibilities as a minister, not as an MLA.
As I have noted in past rulings, for example on December
10, 1992, privilege is concerned with special rights of members in their
capacity as members in their parliamentary work, not in their capacity as
ministers or party Leaders or whips.
Therefore, comments about the conduct of a minister in the performance
of his or her ministerial duties do not fall within the field of Parliamentary
privilege.
ORDERS OF THE DAY
House Business
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, would
you call for second reading Bill 20, followed by Bill 24. Following that, would you call for debate on
second readings in this order: Bill 8,
Bill 4, Bill 9, Bill 3, Bill 21.
SECOND READINGS
Bill 20‑‑The Municipal Amendment Act
Hon. Leonard Derkach
(Minister of Rural Development): I move,
seconded by the Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr. Findlay), that
Bill 20, The Municipal Amendment Act (Loi modifiant la Loi sur les
municipalités), be now read a second time and be referred to a committee of
this House.
Motion presented.
Mr. Derkach: Mr. Speaker, I am pleased today to present to
you and all members of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba a bill, The
Municipal Amendment Act, that will allow the collection of arrears of taxes on
oil and gas facilities within the province of Manitoba.
The Department of Rural Development has worked very hard to
facilitate the needs of all municipalities in Manitoba. We have worked closely with the associations
representing the municipalities and with individual municipalities.
This legislation permits municipalities to collect arrears
of taxes on oil and gas facilities from the purchasers of oil and gas produced
in those facilities. This amendment has
been requested by the Union of Manitoba Municipalities, The Manitoba Municipal
Administrators Association and by a number of individual municipalities in the
southwest region of our province.
The Department of Rural Development is well aware that this
amendment is a high priority for the municipalities which have requested
changes to this act. Without this
amendment, these municipalities would continue to be required to take legal
action to claim personal property tax arrears on oil and gas facilities.
In addition, Mr. Speaker, my department has researched
similar legislation in other jurisdictions, for example, the province of
Saskatchewan, to ensure fairness and consistency in the approach that we are
taking.
The Municipal Amendment Act, the collection of arrears on
taxes on oil and gas facilities, is important to those municipalities that are
affected by this industry. These
municipalities are largely in the southwest corner of our province and include
the R.M.s of Pipestone, Wallace, Brenda, Arthur, Edward and Albert. In fact, the R.M. of Pipestone has sponsored
resolutions at the last two annual meetings of the Union of Manitoba
Municipalities association in favour of legislative changes to this act. Without this legislation, the R.M.s are
greatly impacted because they are not able to collect the tax arrears.
To give you some idea of just how severe the impact can be,
Mr. Speaker, the tax arrears in some of the older wellheads in the
municipality, such as the R.M. of Wallace, can add up to as much as $100,000 in
a given year, which would represent about 10 percent of their revenue
base. It is obvious that government must
take action to support municipalities in the collection of these arrears.
It is the goal of the Department of Rural Development to
work in partnership with rural municipalities and rural Manitobans to provide
service to all those we serve. Our
department's mandate is to assist the communities and residents of rural areas
and of this province to pursue their own priorities. In short, our goal is to help rural
Manitobans help themselves.
With this legislative change, Mr. Speaker, that is exactly
what we are doing. I seek the support of
all members of this Legislative Assembly to support The Municipal Amendment
Act, and that is, the collection of arrears on taxes on oil and gas facilities
in our province. I am hopeful that with
the support of the members of this House, this bill can receive speedy passage
through the process in the Chamber.
Thank you very much.
Mr. Clif Evans
(Interlake): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the member
for Selkirk (Mr. Dewar), that debate be adjourned.
Motion agreed to.
Bill 24‑‑The Waste Reduction and
Prevention Amendment Act
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey), that Bill 24, The Waste
Reduction and Prevention Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réduction
du volume et de la production des déchets, be now read a second time and be
referred to a committee of this House.
Motion presented.
* (1440)
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, I will take a couple of minutes
to speak to this bill and because of the nature of the bill and because this is
a bill that is very much enabling and leads to all sorts of possibilities in
terms of how we can reduce waste and excess packaging in this province, I will
try and confine my remarks to specific aspects of the bill.
The Waste Reduction and Prevention Act has stood as a model
for waste reduction and prevention legislation across this country since it was
first enacted back in 1990. We know that
other jurisdictions have taken this bill, amended it to suit particular
circumstances within their province and have brought forward legislation within
their jurisdictions modeled on the basic framework that the original Waste
Reduction and Prevention Act had been built upon.
This act assigns stewardship responsibility to distributors
of products or materials with a potential to become waste and that also allows
for the development of regulations to encourage waste reduction and prevention
programs in this province.
Mr. Speaker, I think it is fair to say that the act itself
is very much part of the‑‑will be part and parcel of the regulations
that are attached to it in terms of its ability to impact on waste reduction in
our province.
The underlying principle of distributor responsibility was
adopted in the act following an extensive public consultation process
undertaken by the Recycling Action Committee in 1989.
This principle forms the basis of Manitoba's waste
reduction and prevention strategy, which is to achieve a 50 percent reduction
of waste by the year 2000. I would have
to say that Manitoba, on a percentage basis compared to all other jurisdictions
across this country, has achieved a greater volume of reduction of its waste than
any other jurisdiction. I think it is in
no small part reflected by, first of all, the attitude of the people in this
province and, secondly, by the fact that we now have this framework in place.
The proposed amendments to the act will provide for greater
flexibility in applying predisposal levies on designated products and materials
and collecting the levies from manufacturers, distributors and retailers.
The amendments will also allow for a wide range of WRAP
program management options, but Mr. Speaker, I should point out specifically
that the intention is that the act would be exercised at the highest possible
level in the waste production change, in other words, at distribution or
manufacturer level.
The proposed amendments to the act will provide for greater
flexibility in applying predisposal levies on designated products and materials
and collecting the levies from manufacturers, distributors and retailers.
These amendments allow for a wide range of WRAP program
management options. The proposed
amendments are necessary to allow for the establishment of the Manitoba Product
Stewardship program and the Used Tire Management Program currently under
development by Manitoba Environment.
Principles of sustainable development, you will note, have
been included and written into the front end of this bill. With the introduction of the bill, the
proposed amendments will better reflect current approaches to waste reduction
and prevention that are being undertaken in other jurisdictions and will again
bring the act to the forefront of waste reduction and prevention legislation in
this country.
Proposed amendments provide the following
capabilities. First of all, they provide
for clear authority for retailers to collect predisposal levies from consumers
to implement a variety of economic instruments, including deposit return and
buy‑back systems. This is
necessary, for example, for the proposed Used Tire Management Program that is
presently being piloted.
The changes to this act will permit the establishment of an
arm's length corporation to manage and administer waste reduction programs and
WRAP funds.
These changes provide for the authority to the corporations
to assess predisposal levies and to exercise the power of enforcement where
necessary using the authority of the act.
These amendments will permit the establishment of WRAP
funds specifically for the purposes of waste reduction and prevention
activities of designated materials and to allow for their administration by
this arm's length corporation.
Mr. Speaker, I do not know if it is appropriate at this
stage of the debate, but I am sure you will call me to to order if it is
inappropriate.
The drafters of the bill spent a considerable amount of
time and were challenged in the work that they did to bring this bill forward
in order to accomplish the legislative capability which I just referred
to. What will happen under the powers of
this act is that we will have the ability to make sure that any funds that are
collected as predisposal levies go into an independent organization which then
will, through the regulated authority of the minister, be able to distribute
those funds or redirect them. In fact,
Mr. Speaker, that, I think, is a key to the public receptivity of this bill
because it is virtually a guarantee that not one penny that is collected from
these predisposal levies will be used for anything other than activities
related to the collection and disposal of the materials involved.
Before I leave that part, the reason for phrasing it the
way I did is that I want to acknowledge the work that was done by the drafters
of this bill, because it was a unique piece of work, one which challenged them
and one with which they can take a good deal of satisfaction.
Further, Mr. Speaker, these amendments also retain the
appropriate levels of accountability and control which are most necessary under
any type of legislation where funds are being administered. The Used Tire Management Program is currently
being administered under an interim board of directors and a program co‑ordinator. An industry‑run corporation using the
powers of the bill will be established shortly to administer this program. A tire levy, as established under regulation,
will flow directly to the corporation.
The revenues from the current environmental protection tax are held as
deferred revenue and will be transferred to the corporation. At that point, a Used Tire Management board
will be established to oversee the administration of the program. This regulation is currently under
preparation for public consultation.
The real backbone of this legislation, Mr. Speaker, is the
Manitoba Product Stewardship program which will be a province‑wide
initiative designed to increase recycling opportunities in the city of Winnipeg
and other Manitoba municipalities. The
program builds on the principle of distributor responsibility recommended as a
key element of Manitoba's waste reduction strategy of the Recycling Action
Committee, which began its work in 1989.
The objectives of the stewardship program will be, firstly,
to maximize the reduction, the reuse and the recycling of designated products
and materials; secondly, to hold distributors of products and materials with
the potential to become waste in this province, hold them responsible for the
cost of managing those wastes; thirdly, we will be able to provide stable long‑term
funding commitments to support municipal recycling programs, something that we
have long been wanting to put in place in this province.
The objectives will be obtained through the introduction of
a regulatory framework developed, in part, to support the Product Stewardship
initiative proposed in 1993 by the Canadian Packaging Industry Product
Stewardship Initiative. The stewardship
program provides financial incentives to municipal governments to encourage the
efficient collection, processing and marketing of recyclable commodities. Total program expenditures are projected to
be $8 million annually when this program is fully implemented.
* (1450)
The Manitoba Product Stewardship program, as it is intended
to be implemented, will do the following.
It will establish a regulatory framework to set predisposal levies and
assessments on designated products and materials. It will encourage the reduction, reuse and
recycling of waste materials in this province.
It will establish a management board and an arm's length corporation to
administer the program funding. It will
provide financial incentives to support the collection and processing of
recyclable materials. It will support
the development of Manitoba's regional recycling systems. It will establish a comprehensive monitoring
program to provide for equitable funding formulas and public
accountability. It will implement a
province‑wide antilitter campaign to complement recycling efforts. It will provide a strong public information
component to promote participation in the three Rs. It will provide incentives for the development
of local end‑use products. I do
not think, Mr. Speaker, that we can overly emphasize that point.
Other future program areas to be addressed may include used
oil, batteries, household toxic products, which would be disposed of in a much
more careful manner than we are used to dealing with our recyclable materials.
Mr. Speaker, in the introduction of this bill, I want to
make it very clear that this is the first step to providing province‑wide
recycling capabilities that will be, in my view, unequalled in terms of
percentage of the population that is likely to be served. This does take a unique and certainly
unprecedented approach to product stewardship, because while this is hinged on
the regulatory capabilities that will be developed within the authority of this
act, the opportunity to deal with a much wider range of materials is certainly
available, will certainly be capable of being dealt with under the auspices of
this act.
I would recommend to my colleagues opposite that the debate
proceed expeditiously. The sooner that
these amendments are in place, the quicker we will be able to put in place a
regulatory program to begin developing the fund that will in fact lead to the
improved management of recyclables in this province. I would encourage them to enter into the
debate, to ask any questions that they might want to raise, but I would
encourage them to allow this bill to move expeditiously through the process.
Mr. Speaker: Is the House ready for the question?
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the member
for Osborne (Ms. McCormick), that debate be adjourned.
Motion agreed to.
DEBATE ON SECOND READINGS
Bill 8‑‑The Fisheries Amendment Act
Mr. Speaker: On the proposed motion of the honourable
Minister of Natural Resources, Bill 8, The Fisheries Amendment Act; Loi
modifiant la Loi sur la pêche, standing in the name of the honourable member
for Thompson (Mr. Ashton).
An Honourable Member: Stand.
Mr. Speaker: Is there leave that that matter remain
standing? [agreed]
The honourable member for Point Douglas has 27 minutes
remaining.
Mr. George Hickes (Point
Douglas): Mr. Speaker, I will start off where I left
off. I was reading from the consultant's
report, which is the investigation into the status of issues affecting the
Manitoba commercial fishery. I was
reading the part about the role of native people in a resource allocation, and
this is from the report.
Where I left off was the transfer of management
authority. It says: Over the fisheries resource from federal and
provincial governments to native people and organizations, there was a general
consensus that this transfer will occur and that, at minimum, will result in
native people receiving specific allocations of the resource for domestic food
purposes.
There is speculation that native authority could be more
far‑reaching and that native people would not only receive a specific
allocation of the resource, but also would determine the use of that
allocation. At issue, is the nature and
extent of management authority native people will exercise in the future.
The potential implications for the commercial fishery are
wide‑ranging. The amount of fish
available for commercial harvest will definitely change, although the direction
of change is impossible to predict at this time. Conditions under which the fish are
harvested, season dates, gear restriction, also may change and these changes
may affect marketing practices and arrangements. This impending transfer of management
authority will play a major role in defining many issues confronting the
commercial fishery in the future.
The reason I wanted to put that in, Mr. Speaker, is because
when this bill is brought forward‑‑I know that in the past this
government has not consulted with aboriginal people and aboriginal users
harvesting the fish‑‑and it says right in that report that in the
future, there will be co‑management with native people in the resource
management of fish. So if this
government is serious about doing something positive, they could look at
consulting and working with aboriginal peoples, especially in northern Manitoba
and in remote communities. Because like
I mentioned earlier when I was speaking, the negative impact that has taken
place over the cuts to the Northern Freight subsidy‑‑and it has a
real impact‑‑but when you talk about the south and northern
fishermen, that the biggest impact it will have is on the Far North versus the
southern part of the province.
Because even in southern Manitoba, Bob Christianson
[phonetic], the president of the Lake Winnipeg Whitefish Commercial Fishermen's
Association, and this is right from the Winnipeg Free Press dated April 25,
1991, in which the president of the Lake Winnipeg Whitefish Commercial
Fishermen said: Fishermen on parts of
the lake could lose $1,500 to $3,000 in assistance per boat as a result of the
scaling back of the Northern Fishermen's Freight assistance.
So if that is the impact it has on fishermen from Lake
Winnipeg, could you just imagine the real drastic impact it will have on
fishermen in far, remote northern communities?
Who lives in those far, remote northern communities? Who are the fishermen who operate out of
those communities? It is aboriginal
people.
Just to re‑emphasize that, it says right here that
the Natural Resources minister at that time said he cannot deny that the cuts
could lead to serious problems for fishermen whose spring season begins in
about a month. But, also, it recognized
that the minister at that time of Natural Resources knew the impact it was
going to have on northern aboriginal fishermen because it goes on to say: The minister said the major portion of the
aid is being targeted to fishermen in the Far North.
So when the government understood this very, very clearly,
how could they now consciously go ahead and make that kind of a cut, because
you know in a lot of those communities in northern Manitoba you have
unemployment rates anywhere from 80 percent, 85 percent, 90 percent, some
communities are 95 percent, and the only possibility of income for a lot of the
families is through fishing, that is a given.
It shows how little the government understands about the negative impact
these kind of measures have on aboriginal remote communities.
If you look at the whole bill, Mr. Speaker, the real
emphasis on this bill is increasing the fine from $500 to $10,000. I do not know how many aboriginal fishermen
in northern far remote communities have $10,000 to pay for a fine, and in the
beginning I do not know why anybody would break the law to begin with unless I
look at it from a different angle and look at the last four years of my
experience and what I have seen happening.
What I have seen happening is not very comforting to one who was raised
all my life in northern Manitoba and see the impact that is happening in those
communities where the communities are so desperate for jobs and getting so
desperate for opportunities.
I am just guessing here, but maybe the reason this
government brought this bill forward is poaching or illegal catching of fish is
taking place, and maybe it is increasing.
If it is, I only have to say to the government, take a look at why. What you are doing with all your negative
cutbacks in northern communities, if poaching and illegal taking of fish is
increasing, maybe these individuals are getting so desperate that they have to
resort to these actions to try and feed their families when the job
opportunities have been taken away.
* (1500)
One only has to look at past budgets, this budget, and you
will look at the impact it has directly on aboriginal people. When I say the aboriginal people, the reason
I say that is because even the Minister of Natural Resources in 1991 said that
the portion of the aid is being targeted to fishermen in the Far North.
So when people get desperate and people start losing even
the resemblance of hope, then people resort to drastic measures. When you see that kind of an impact, all you
have to look at is at what has happened to the ACCESS program, what has
happened to the BUNTEP program‑‑it has been cut back year after
year, this year 20 percent. Social
assistance, what has happened? Foster
care cuts, elimination of the Northern Youth Job Corps, elimination of funding
to the Indian friendship centres, cuts to CareerStart, lack of action on the
solvent abuse centres in northern Manitoba.
How long have we been trying to get this government to take
action to negotiate some kind of a deal with the federal government to open and
operate a solvent abuse centre in northern Manitoba? The chiefs in the North have all gotten
together and supported this. They have
all recommended the community of Cross Lake which is kind of central to
communities, and they are looking at satellite treatment programs in
communities like Shamattawa, Nelson House, various other communities. What has ever happened to that? Nothing.
So if you look at the impact that these cuts have had, no wonder people
are getting desperate, no wonder people are losing hope.
This measure again, without even consulting the people in
most need and the people that it will have the real impact on‑‑there
have been no meetings, no correspondence, I am sure, with the aboriginal
community. One only has to look at the
city here, in Winnipeg. A lot of the
people who are living in the urban centres have family in these remote
communities, like myself, and we get food; we get meat. I get caribou meat. I get fish from my family up north, because
that is part of my diet, and a lot of the other people who are in Winnipeg
here, the aboriginal people, I am sure that they resort to their families for a
little help because of the diet.
What about the impact job opportunities that should have
taken place? I have been here since
1990, and I have been asking and I have been looking forward to an urban
aboriginal study. That has been promised
every year I have been here. Every year
it has been promised. [interjection] Yes, that is right. My colleague from Wolseley said they have
already spent‑‑how much?‑‑over $200,000, at least
$200,000, on this study, and we have yet to see one.
The people whom I have spoken to in Point Douglas and
around Winnipeg, I have asked them, have they seen anything? No one has even heard of it, and yet we have
paid $200,000 for this urban aboriginal study that no one has seen, no one has
even‑‑well, you cannot read if it is probably‑‑I do not
know if it is done.
But imagine if you took that $200,000 and put it into the
Northern Freight Assistance Program instead of cutting $90,000, if you used
that to enhance the opportunities for aboriginal people in the Far North. Would that not make more sense? It would make a lot more sense than spending
money on things that are not even taking place and create some employment
opportunities in these communities. It
is long overdue.
People have been waiting for actions from this
government. We hear different ministers
talk about, oh, look at all the jobs we have created. Look at all the opportunities. But yet no one ever mentions that we have
created X number of jobs or we have created X number of opportunities for
individuals in northern Manitoba in these remote communities.
All I ever hear at times is it is a federal responsibility.
Well, whatever happened to provincial‑federal agreements? I know I used to hear about ERDA agreements,
northern development agreements. I used
to hear about these agreements. They
used to get about $90‑million agreements that were spent in northern
communities, that benefitted directly the people who are getting the least
amount of help from this government, I feel anyway. That is my own personal belief. Those agreements used to bring in at least
$90 million, that gave opportunities to the North. Yet since I have been here, I have not heard
of one agreement that has been agreed to and implemented in northern
Manitoba. I have yet to even see that.
If you look at the actions and why people are getting so
desperate and losing hope, one only has to look at the unemployment rate in
Manitoba. Maybe that is why our fines
have to be increased from $500 to $10,000, is because people need to try to
feed their families and maybe they are doing illegal things. But I believe that most citizens in Manitoba
are very honest people, and if people do break the law or do take drastic
measures, it is because that is the only alternative they have left to feed
their families, because the opportunities, like I have said, have been taken
away.
If you look at January of 1994, the unemployment rate in
Manitoba was the highest ever. It was
the highest, highest ever. I went back
all the way to 1966, and I have not seen anything higher than January of
1994. It was 11.5, 11.5 is the
unemployment rate in January of 1994.
That is the highest it has ever been, and like I said, I went back to
1966. So if that is across Manitoba,
could you imagine what it must be in northern Manitoba? It must be a lot, lot higher than that.
The other area I would like to point out, Mr. Speaker, is
for three consecutive years, unprecedented in Manitoba, the unemployment rate
was over 9 percent for three years in a row in 1992, 1993 and 1994. So when you have such high, high unemployment
rates like that, what do people do? How
do you feed your family? You have to
feed your family, and if poaching has increased then maybe the government
should not look at penalizing more, hitting harder over the head, like
$10,000. There are not too many people
in northern Manitoba that I know could pay a $10,000 fine, to be honest with
you. There are very few people I
know. So why look at hitting harder,
penalizing more, instead of looking at the problem and why the reason is if
there is an increase in those areas, looking at the reason why and try and
resolve the problem? Do not add to
it. So look at trying to create
employment opportunities, increase trading opportunities. That is one thing that I believe that we
should look at very, very strongly.
Also what I would like to discuss at this time is when you
look at increases of fines. Now you
increase the fine from $500 to $10,000.
Now if poaching and if breaking the law has increased that much, there
are going to be individuals who will have to go to court. So I want to give a little advice to this
government and to the new Minister of Natural Resources (Mr. Driedger) and hope
he will listen carefully and give it some serious consideration here because
when you have more people going to court and higher fines, that brings in more
revenues for the Province of Manitoba.
So if that is a direct fine related to Natural Resources,
then I would recommend to the minister, negotiate with his colleagues to look
at using the income from those fines to create opportunities for far northern
communities. Put some of that money that
you bring in, put it back into the freight subsidy program because the reason
it must have been cut is because the government is short of funds. Well, if you are going to bring in new
revenues, put it back to the same people who you are taking it from and who you
are hurting.
That, I will hope they will look at, and I hope that the
new Minister of Natural Resources will look at meeting somewhere along the line
with the remote, far northern fishermen and the fishermen's co‑op like in
Berens River and other communities, meeting personally with them and hearing
first‑hand, because he is a fine gentleman. I am sure that the community would be very,
very happy to share some time with the minister, and I am sure the minister
will learn a lot.
An Honourable Member: He is a good man.
Mr. Hickes: Yes, he is very good, and the community and
the people will treat him excellently.
That I am sure of. He will get a
good education. I am sure, because his
heart is usually in the right place, that he will come back with a new attitude
and new positive ideas and look at enhancing the opportunities that are
available to people in the North and not restricting and putting barriers up,
because those days should be long, long gone.
* (1510)
We should be trying to help one another and enhance the
opportunities right across the province.
There should not be a border where there is a line that says North and
South and most of the money goes to the South, very little goes to the
North. I do not think that is very fair
and it does not help anyone.
This is 1994, and whenever there are measures taken that
are going to have an impact on aboriginal peoples, please meet with the
aboriginal organizations and the bands and with the communities so that people
understand what is happening. A lot of
times the individuals that are living and that will be impacted by whether it
is a positive or a negative measure‑‑[interjection] I can finish it
right now. Okay.
So meet with those communities, get some positive
recommendations and positive ideas, and we will all benefit from that. The communities will benefit. We will benefit. You especially will benefit as a government,
because you will be working co‑operatively with the people for the
betterment of Manitobans and for the communities that will have the impact.
Just with those short few comments, Mr. Speaker, I would
like to encourage the minister again to go to those communities, meet with the
people and get some good ideas and share some of your own ideas, and hopefully
right some of the wrongs that have taken place.
I am very pleased to have had a chance to speak to this bill, and I hope
some things positive will come out of it.
Thank you.
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin
Flon): Mr. Speaker, I would like to add a few
remarks to the record with respect to Bill 8, The Fisheries Amendment Act.
I was pleased to have the opportunity to listen to my
learned colleague from Point Douglas who has a long history of association with
many communities in northern Manitoba and a familiarity with a lot of the
problems facing, particularly, the commercial fisheries in our province.
I too am somewhat surprised at the tenor of this bill. I have known the Minister of Natural
Resources (Mr. Driedger) for some time, and I would have thought that there are
many more pressing issues in dealing with the fisheries activity in our
province and the fisheries economy in our province than this minister has
chosen to address in this bill.
The government obviously is desperate, and I am not sure
who they are trying to placate with this legislation. Mr. Speaker, this may be part of the
government's new Justice package, the get‑tough‑with‑offenders
package, but they are missing the mark.
There are two problems with this legislation and the
Minister of Natural Resources knows full well what they are. The first one is that it is pointless to
increase the penalties when you are gutting the inspection services and you are
gutting the number of conservation officers, when you are gutting the number of
people who are responsible for making sure that these regulations are applied. It is probably, if not counterproductive,
certainly not productive. The minister
knows as well as any that increasing the fines and decreasing the enforcement
is not going to produce any kind of satisfactory result.
Mr. Speaker, the second problem with the legislation is that
it does not address the real fisheries problems that people in my community
state. I want to relate an incident that
occurred last Wednesday in South Indian Lake.
I had an opportunity to meet with the fishermen, the president of the
South Indian Lake Fisherman's Association and a number of other fishermen in
the community of South Indian Lake to discuss their ongoing concerns not only
with the variable and sometimes depressed price of their commodity, but to
address some of the other problems that they face, particularly when it comes
to their relationship with the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation.
(Mr. Bob Rose, Acting
Speaker, in the Chair)
Mr. Acting Speaker, I have been, and still am, a strong
defender of the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation. The Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation is
to fishermen what the Canadian Wheat Board is to farmers, and we know that
there have been groups outside the pools and the United Grain Growers, outside
of those co‑ops to express concern about the role of the Wheat Board, and
there are fishermen who express concern over the role of the Freshwater Fish
Marketing Corporation. It is a single‑desk
marketing agency that controls in effect the price of the products produced by
fishermen large and small throughout the province.
The plant, as my colleague from Transcona (Mr. Reid) has
referenced, is in that particular community, employs a lot of people, and by
and large has done a good job of stabilizing the income of fishermen. But there are some shortcomings in that
system, and I know that the board of directors of the Freshwater Fish Marketing
Corporation are attempting to solve some of those problems. They are trying to expand their horizons, and
they have for some time, at least on paper, been attempting to find markets for
a lot of the fish that are being caught across Manitoba, again particularly in
northern Manitoba, that are not at this point a marketable commodity.
Mr. Acting Speaker, there are many in South Indian Lake,
including the South Indian Lake fishermen and fishermen in Pukatawagan, people
like Matt Sinclair, who have been fishing for almost all of their lives, who
understand the fishery intimately. They
also believe and they have in the recent months been in contact with people who
have marketing contacts outside of what are traditionally Freshwater Fish
Marketing Corporation territory. The
Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation does most of its selling in Canada, the
United States. It has some markets in
Europe and some small markets in places like Japan. There are large markets in other parts of
Asia, in particular, and perhaps in other parts of Europe that have not been
tapped.
What we see happening now is a desire on the part of some
fisheries that produce large quantities of fish, in South Indian Lake's case
more than a million pounds a year, the same with the Pukatawagan Fisherman's
Association who have access to some 1.2 million pounds of quota, who are
looking for opportunities on their own.
So, Mr. Acting Speaker, this bill addresses the
penalty. This bill attempts to deal with
some of the smaller problems, most people would say, and yet there does not
seem to have been any effort on the part of the government or this minister to
deal with the larger problem.
I am not sure whether the minister has had an opportunity
to meet with the new group, the northwestern fishermen, including the
communities of Brochet, South Indian Lake, Pukatawagan, Granville Lake and
Nelson House, who have banded together to purchase the formally held fish
packing plant by this particular co‑op.
Now they are looking to not only provide packing services
for fishermen in the area, but they are also looking at an opportunity to
process fish in that facility and they want some help. Right now there are many times when they are
under the impression that the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation is standing
in the way.
Mr. Acting Speaker, almost a year ago now, I met with a
group of Pukatawagan fishermen who had a plan to sell some fish outside of the traditional
markets that are sort of assumed by the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation,
and I was struck by the‑‑and I do not want to be harsh here‑‑somewhat
paternalistic attitude that the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation had
toward this particular project.
We all know that in business and in dealing with the
entrepreneurial spirit, it is not always those who have been at it the longest
who are the most successful. Sometimes
it takes a bit of initiative. Sometimes
it takes a bit of desire to make something happen. For the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation
to tell these groups that it cannot be done, when they are the producer, they
have the know‑how and they want to try, does not make any sense.
* (1520)
I am not saying that individual groups should be competing
directly with products that are developed by or markets that have been
developed by the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation. I know that that would be in itself
counterproductive, but they should not stand in the way where they have not
developed markets, where they do not have well‑defined selling regimes,
where they do not have brokers. There
should be some incentive in fact for fishermen to create their own opportunity
and that does not always seem to be the case.
Mr. Acting Speaker, some many years ago now, the government
of Saskatchewan introduced amendments to its fisheries act to facilitate that
kind of entrepreneurial spirit within the northern community.
I would have thought that if we are going to amend The
Fisheries Act, if we are going to spend the time in this Chamber, go through
the motion, to simply increase fines as some sort of panacea to our problems, I
think we are making a mistake.
As I said, Mr. Acting Speaker, this is not going to
work. It is not going to work because
the government is not committed to enforcement.
I know that in every community that I represent, where there are Natural
Resources officers, there are fewer today than there were five years ago.
I know that the Natural Resources, the conservation
officers, tell me we cannot patrol the lakes in our region. We cannot do the job in terms of sports
angling, and we certainly cannot do the job when it comes to the more remote
lakes that are quite often the lakes that are fished commercially.
Mr. Acting Speaker, we need I think a more aggressive,
proactive piece of legislation that deals more generally with the problems that
the fishery faces.
I wanted to put something else on the record. This may offend some of our GRIP recipients,
some of the members on the front bench who are the recipients, beneficiaries of
the Western Grain Transportation Act.
Mr. Acting Speaker, I want to put the case to you, and I
know that you represent a rural area.
The Province of Manitoba and the federal government‑‑the
Province of Manitoba, let us deal with them first, some four and a half years
ago decided to cut by one‑third the very meagre subsidy, transportation,
freight, transportation subsidy that is provided to fishermen in Manitoba. That subsidy at that time amounted to some
$250,000. The government chose, in its
wisdom, to reduce that by some $60,000 or $80,000.
For northerners, for my community, there are literally
hundreds and hundreds of people employed in the fishing industry. Across Manitoba there are probably
thousands. It is a multimillion‑dollar
industry. I had to read and sort of‑‑I
was going to say chuckle. It is not
really amusing. I know that it is a
serious matter and that farmers, grain farmers in particular, face serious
problems as well. It strikes me as
rather odd that this year the Western Grain Transportation subsidy is going to
be something like $590 million. That is
simply a transportation subsidy.
There is really no systematic support for the fishing
industry, for the thousands and thousands of fishermen in the province of
Manitoba. At the same time we know that
the government, in a news release not that long ago from Information Services,
was boasting about the contribution of some $360 million from both levels of
government for the Gross Revenue Insurance Plan. So we have $590 million in transportation
subsidy at the federal level. We have
$370 million of subsidy from the Gross Revenue Insurance Plan. We have subsidized veterinary services. We have no‑tax fuel. Where is the fairness? If you were a fisherman in northern Manitoba
and the government had just cut your meagre little freight rate assistance
program, would you not ask yourself, where is the fairness; where is the
relative importance being placed; why has the fishing industry not received the
kind of support that many other agricultural products and producers have
received?
Not that long ago we had a chance to meet with the Keystone
Agricultural Producers. I posed the question
to the president of KAP and said that fishermen are no different than any other
agricultural producer. I said, would KAP
propose the same kinds of stabilization programs, for example, that farmers
enjoy, for fishermen? He said, well, we
have never thought about it. I do not
know if you have thought about it, Mr. Acting Speaker.
If you look in the Department of Agriculture, you have
stabilization programs for sugar beets, a stabilization program for honey, a
stabilization program for onions, a stabilization program for pork, a
stabilization program for beef, millions and millions of dollars. Why should the fishing industry not receive
the same kind of consideration? Why are
northern fishermen in particular ignored?
When was the last time that the Minister of Agriculture (Mr. Enns), the
Minister of Natural Resources (Mr. Driedger), the Minister of Industry, Trade
and Tourism (Mr. Downey) sat down with fishermen from Pukatawagan or South
Indian Lake or from any of the other of the Island Lake areas or Berens River
or Bloodvein? Mr. Acting Speaker, we
have to correct that injustice.
I do not expect that the Minister of Natural Resources in
one little bill, Bill 8, is going to be able to correct the kind of inequality
we see in agricultural product. Fishing
is just another form of farming. That is
all it is. Yet because of the historic
relationship between western Canada and our national government and the
population differences, we are treating our agricultural products quite
differently in this province. Fishermen,
quite frankly, are getting the short end of the proverbial stick or, in this
case, fishing pole.
So, Mr. Acting Speaker, I think that it is time that we
addressed that problem. I think that it
is time that we took fishing more seriously as an industry. I would add that most fishermen, including
the people in South Indian Lake that I spoke to last week, tell me that the
ratio of fish that are supplied to the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation‑‑and
it is primarily whitefish, pickerel and some jack‑‑but the ratio of
marketable fish to rough fish, the fish that is not considered, not deemed of
adequate quality for current markets, the ratio is about five to one. In fact, we are throwing away between three
and five pounds of fish for every fish that we attempt to market.
In many countries of the world that would be deemed a
tremendous, a horrendous and an unacceptable waste, and I think it should be in
our community as well. I would argue
that the government should be doing everything in its power and not leaving it
to the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation or individual fishermen's
associations or individual fishermen to find a way to solve that dilemma. It is something that we should be working on.
So, Mr. Acting Speaker, I leave it to the Minister of
Natural Resources to follow up and perhaps maybe withdraw this bill. Maybe he should withdraw this bill and
perhaps‑‑[interjection] Well, it is simply of little value. It does not really address the real problems
facing fishermen. The minister might do
us all a favour if he withdrew this bill and presented, even next session, a
bill that was more comprehensive and tried to deal with the real problems.
If he at that time wants to include some amendments that
stiffen the penalties, increase the powers for inspectors and conservation
officers, fine, do that. But if you are
going to do that, do that in a consistent way and, at the same time, increase
the staff who are going to enforce this.
The member for Lakeside (Mr. Enns) often referred to government laws and
laws that we pass here that have the potential of being scoffed at, of being
ignored, of being unenforceable as scoff laws, that they are laws that we pass
in here with all the best of intentions, but there is no hope of them ever
being enforced and people are going to look at them and ridicule them.
* (1530)
The Department of Natural Resources is dangerously close to
being in a position where these kind of amendments, because they are not
enforceable and because they do not reveal the real issues, are not going to
have the effect and the force that they might otherwise have had. That belittles the process and the work that
we do from time to time in this Chamber.
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Rose): As previously agreed, this matter will remain
standing in the name of the honourable member for Thompson (Mr. Ashton).
Bill 4‑‑The Energy and Consequential
Amendments Act
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Rose): Bill 4, second reading of The Energy and
Consequential Amendments Act (Loi sur l'énergie et apportant des modifications
corrélatives), standing in the name of the honourable member for Transcona (Mr.
Reid).
An Honourable Member: Stand.
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Rose): Is there leave that the matter remain
standing? [agreed]
Ms. Norma McCormick
(Osborne): Mr. Acting Speaker, I want to talk for a few
moments on The Energy and Consequential Amendments Act introduced as Bill 4.
On scrutiny, this appears to be another parenthood and
apple pie bill which gives lip service to the concept of sustainable
development. I want to begin by saying
that if major changes to environmental stewardship are to occur then there must
be some real incentives for business and industry to act and to go as far as is
technically and economically feasible. I
believe there is no organization which moves faster than a properly motivated
business, and the thing that motivates business best is an impact on its bottom
line.
If we are going to look at ways in which we can promote
energy conservation, which I believe is implied in this bill, then we must
explore the ways in which we can come up with real incentives as opposed to
pretend ones. Over the last 10 to 15
years there have been significant developments in the area of environmental
law, and these developments are of concern to business. What began as one or two pieces of
legislation has become a discreet and complex legal specialty. Accordingly, there is not a comprehensive or
coherent legislative or regulatory scheme and this bill, I believe, adds very
little to the situation.
We continue to develop a convoluted maze of legislation,
regulation policy and guidelines, much of which is difficult to understand even
to a legal expert. Some of the acts and
regulations overlap and are applied in a way that is neither predictable nor
consistent. Sufficient to say that those
who are active in the areas which may impact on the environment have nearly an
impossible task as they attempt to steer their way through the legal
responsibilities imposed on them by legislation.
For environmental regulation to be truly meaningful then
there must be enforcement and, again, I raise my concern that we continue to
add regulation after regulation and act after act with no apparent recognition
of the fact that as we do so we also need to add a way of enforcing the
regulation. This regulatory evolution is
apparently being accepted as an inevitable development either prompted by those
who are responding to environmental activism or those who are wanting to appear
to be doing the right thing. Politicians
recognize that we cannot make changes ourselves, but all we can do is go by our
stock and trade, which is regulation and legislation, but we continue to do so
without assigning the necessary enforcement resources. So the question is, are there other
incentives which can provide a balance for punitive laws and regulations which
would in fact provide the impetus that we definitely need for change?
The Canadian public, in poll after poll, continues to be
concerned about the state of the environment.
It is interesting that 20 percent of Canadians donate to environmental
rights or green groups, and 40 percent of Canadians are reported to make their
consumer decisions based on the ecological track record of the company. There is also no shortage of magic bullets to
fly at the problems of waste and pollution.
Technology application is not the problem. Technology, the willingness or finding the incentive
to apply the technology is what we need to concentrate on.
One of the things that we have been talking about in other
opportunities‑‑we talked on a resolution on water allocation the
other day. It seems to me that water
provides us with an example that we ought to take and examine when we look at
energy conservation. If water is
provided to farmers and industries, businesses and households at zero price,
users cannot be expected to recognize the value of the resource, the cost of
supplying it or the cost of disposing it safely after we use it. Water is largely regarded as a free good, and
users, who lack any financial incentive to economize, tend to use it
wastefully.
The same can be said of electricity. We need to examine our electricity consumption
patterns and recognize that there are things that can and need to be done. We in Canada tend to look at this resource as
being freely and infinitely available, and in fact we in Canada operate on that
presumption. A study that was
commissioned by the Southam news poll evaluated the environmental performance
of seven large G‑7 countries in the world. It was interesting that France and Japan
ranked first; West Germany, Italy and Britain were in the middle; and Canada
and the United States shared last place.
Canada is the most wasteful among industrialized nations with respect to
the squandering of our resources and the production of waste.
Canada leads the western industrialized world in energy
consumption, using 291 gigajoules per person, while the United States uses
280. France uses 105; Italy, 109; Japan,
110; the U.K., 150; and West Germany, 165, West Germany being the highest among
the European nations. They still use
slightly more than half of that of the two North American nations.
So we need to examine what are the real ways in which we
can promote energy conservation. It is
true to say that there have been some initiatives, and some of these
initiatives have paid off. We have, for
example, seen a payoff from the Power Smart program, and it has had the net
effect of reducing energy consumption in Manitoba. Additionally, we have had some good ideas
which came into being to reduce the use of fossil fuel. For example, we have the methanol supplement
given to gasoline now which reduces the consumption of the hydrocarbon portion
of the fuel down by about 10 percent.
These are laudable initiatives, but we have yet to see any kind of
initiative passed on to the consumer.
I have a Mohawk fleet card and only put Mohawk gasoline in
my vehicle, but I still pay the same price at the pump for my gasoline as I
would if I were buying 100 percent hydrocarbon fuel. What concerns me here is we have given a tax
break to the company to produce the fuel, but the tax break does not show up at
the pump. So we need to do more than
simply pass acts and regulations to change the patterns of the energy‑consuming
public.
I think that we have to begin by recognizing that we have
to recognize our situation for what it is.
We have no right to claim to be much cleaner than any of the Asian or
European nations. What saves us is we
have a larger land mass, smaller population base and relatively cheap resources
which allow us to continue to squander and pollute with impunity but without
the more drastic and observable consequences that are evident in Japan and
Europe.
The countries that waste the least are less environmentally
damaging than those who are more wasteful.
So we need to acknowledge and take our rightful place as destroyer of
the planet.
* (1540)
Going back to the act before us, what are the kinds of
things that are present in this act that would in fact make a difference? Well, there are penalties, again, penalties
for violations of $10,000 for individuals and $25,000 for corporations. But we continue to hear from the enforcement
of other acts and regulations that it is not simply worth the expenditure of
money to pursue these acts and regulations through the courts and insist on
compliance.
The fear that I have is that again this is one more window
dressing activity and that it points to us as interested in sustainable
development but doing very little. It
just appears that this is one more activity for window dressing. I think what troubles me most is, in fact, it
does weaken the regulatory approach when we continue to put on the books acts
and regulations that we have no resources or will to enforce. So we have to examine whether or not the
energy, pardon the pun, expended in developing and putting this additional
regulatory framework into place, is going to give us the payback that we are
expecting.
There are many useful activities which could be pursued,
and I would commend the members to some of the efficiency energy conservation
activities that were contained in the red book, which is so continually
maligned in this House, but it in fact set out a number of very important and
positive steps which could be put into place to have the desired effect of
changing consumer consumption patterns.
Perhaps the one thing that we could be looking to is some examination of
our hydro rate structure. At this point
in time we do not have a rate structure which benefits those people who are
energy efficient. You do not pay more
for the first amount of energy you use and less for the last one. That is an initiative which would in fact
promote energy conservation.
There are other kinds of things that could be put
forward. The public education, as I say,
has had some net benefit, but we could be seeking other kinds of activities
which could be energy conserving. For
example, I note that in this building the lights all over the place remain on
long after people are here to occupy the offices. We could be doing‑‑[interjection]
I have no windows, so you could not see from outside whether my light is
on. I do believe that there are many,
many things that we, as regulators and legislators, could be doing which in
fact would have a net benefit of making a bigger impact.
In concluding my remarks today, I think it is important
that we continue to act in ways that we can set a good example, ways in which
we can focus less on regulatory initiative and more on coming up with good
ideas for change. We also must continue
to establish the context within which we operate. We must recognize that we have to see the big
picture and not be bamboozled into accepting some‑‑
An Honourable Member: Bamboozled, is that parliamentary?
Ms. McCormick: I will wait for the Speaker's Ruling on that
if you would like and apologize if bamboozled is unparliamentary.
An Honourable Member: Oh, I think it is parliamentary.
Ms. McCormick: It is parliamentary. Okay, thank you.
We have to find ways in which we can do the more meaningful
things. So again these remarks are
intended to go on record as being committed to the concept of sustainable
development, but to question the ways in which this Energy and Consequential
Amendments Act moves us any closer to having the desired outcome.
The act calls for the preparation of an Energy Manitoba
report within two years of it coming into force. When I got elected, I began to look at some
of the reports that are coming available and find that many of the reports
which are mandated in various statutes and regulations are not produced on a
regular basis. Again, it does the same
thing‑‑
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Not true.
Ms. McCormick: The Minister of Environment says, not
true. I am still waiting for anything
newer than the 1990 report on the air quality section from his own department
which he has said, it is coming. In
fact, the last time we had a conversation it was coming soon, so I quite look
forward to it.
Again, what I am suggesting here is that what we have to do
is, in addition to putting forth the regulatory and legislative words, we have
to commit both by our actions and by the resources assigned to the departments
to deliver not just the spirit of the regulation, but the action which is
presumably called for.
An Honourable Member: Oh, I think the spirit is every bit as
important.
Ms. McCormick: Thank you for that support.
Despite the legislation then, we have to figure out ways in
which we can support the intent with some things that the public and the
corporate community can act on.
So I thank you for the opportunity to participate.
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Rose): As previously agreed, this matter will remain
standing in the name of the honourable member for Transcona (Mr. Reid).
Bill 9‑‑The Convention Centre
Corporation Amendment Act
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Rose): On the proposed motion of the honourable
Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism (Mr. Downey), Bill 9, The Convention
Centre Corporation Amendment Act (Loi modifiant la Loi sur la Corporation du
Centre des congrés), standing in the name of the honourable member for Inkster.
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster): Mr. Acting Speaker, it is with pleasure that
I can put a few words on the record with respect to Bill 9. The bill in itself appears to be somewhat
noncontroversial in my reading of it, and I have had the opportunity to have a
discussion with a couple of other individuals with respect to it.
I do understand that back in 1972 there were short‑term
banking arrangements in which there was a cap of approximately $100,000 that
was put into place. This bill seeks to
increase that from $100,000 to $250,000.
The second portion of the bill really deals with the size
of the board, and it wants to increase it from the 13 to 15. As I indicated, Mr. Acting Speaker, we do not
have too much of a problem in supporting both of those aspects of this
particular bill.
I did want to comment, however, somewhat briefly, Mr.
Acting Speaker, on the make‑up of the board of the Winnipeg Convention
Centre. I think that one of the things
that we always have to be cognizant of is when we do have boards that the
boards themselves, if at all possible, try to reflect the general demographics
of the province of Manitoba. Competence,
no doubt, has to be at the forefront, but I do believe that we will find that
competence can be sought out and found through the many different communities
that are out there. There are virtually
endless benefits by trying to at least strive at getting our boards, and in
particular the Convention Centre Corporation board, because it brings so much
to the province and in particular to the city of Winnipeg. The broader the base of representation of
that board, the better off I personally believe that it would be.
Having said those few words, Mr. Acting Speaker, we are
quite prepared to pass it on to committee.
(Mr. Marcel Laurendeau,
Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
* (1550)
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Laurendeau): Is it the will of the House to adopt the
motion? [agreed]
Bill 3‑‑The Cancer Treatment and
Research Foundation Amendment Act
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Laurendeau): On the proposed motion of the honourable
Minister of Health (Mr. McCrae), Bill 3, The Cancer Treatment and Research
Foundation Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la Fondation de traitement
du cancer et de recherche en cancérologie, standing in the name of the
honourable member for Transcona.
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Acting Speaker, I am pleased to rise and
speak on Bill 3, The Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation Amendment Act.
I am sure that many of us have been affected in one way or
another by cancer, whether it be family members or friends or maybe even some
of us, unknown to others, have even encountered personally and had dealings
with the disease of cancer. It is one of
those diseases of life that is very shocking.
I am sure that when we learn that either family or friends have
encountered or contracted the disease, it can place a great deal of strain upon
the family and friends when it is learned that someone who is very near and
dear to them has been diagnosed as having cancer.
I have had experiences in my own personal life, Mr. Acting
Speaker, where I have had‑‑
An Honourable Member: Tell us about them.
Mr. Reid: I am going to tell the Deputy Premier (Mr.
Downey) about it, because I think not only is this bill important for what its
purported intent is, which I believe we support, and I will get to the bill
more directly in a moment on why we support the changes of this legislation.
With respect to people in my own personal life who have
been affected, I know a number of years ago I had close personal friends that
when we were in our 20s we thought our time would never end and that we would
live on forever and we would never be struck down by the diseases of life or we
would never in any way see our life end as we would grow old through the
natural aging process.
That changed for me in my very early 20s when a close
personal friend of mine, whom I was residing with at the time, encountered
cancer through events in his own personal life that we believe led to the
development of the disease. I remember
on many occasions going to the home of the family of my friend after he found
out and the strong and very severe emotional times that the family went through
when we were talking about the disease and its impact upon the individual and
the family. It was a very difficult and
very traumatic experience.
I can also remember times when I would take my friend to
the hospital for his cancer treatments and seeing the many people who were in
the treatment centre at the time and looking at the effects of the so‑called,
hopefully, cures for the disease, whether it be chemotherapy or radiation
treatment.
Of course, being a young person at that time, I never had
the opportunity to see or witness personally that type of treatment and I was
shocked to see some of the effects that took place where individuals would lose
their hair and their skin colour would change, their pallor would change. There were all kinds of difficulties they
encountered, whether it be nausea, et cetera.
I know in taking my friend to the treatments within the
Health Sciences Centre and seeing personally the effects upon him, it was a
very shocking experience. It was very
hard emotionally to see people who were very near and dear to you undergo such
a treatment and, of course, to see their lives essentially disappear before
your very eyes. That particular
individual, unfortunately, passed on a number of years ago.
I know, in talking with family members on many occasions
since, they were quite thankful that not only was the family able to spend some
quality time with the individual, but also that friends were around and were
available and were in a sense attempting to comfort the person who was stricken
with cancer.
Other members I know of in my own community‑‑they
were close personal friends‑‑have gone through cancer
treatments. Some of them have survived
even till today and are still living normal, healthy lives. I also have members of my own family who are
currently undergoing cancer treatments for some very severe forms of cancer.
One particular case, one of my aunts, is now going through
cancer treatment for a growth that has surrounded her spine in the neck
area. That is causing immense personal
problems as she tries to lead a normal life while she is going through the
treatments. We are not sure of what the
long‑term prognosis is, but we are hopeful at this point.
I have also had a chance, Mr. Acting Speaker, to read
through the intent of this piece of legislation and to think of some of the
fine work that is being done by the Cancer Treatment Foundation as they attempt
to forward the work that is done by way of cancer treatment and research. The foundation does fundraising activities
and tries to make sure that there are essential funds necessary for those who
are doing the treatment and research so that we can hopefully one day find a
cure for cancer.
It is from my understanding, and I have read the minister's
comments relating to this piece of legislation, that the original Cancer
Treatment Foundation Act was proclaimed in 1962. So it has been some 22 years that this
legislation has been in place.
I guess, in that sense, it would be appropriate at this
time that we look at making some changes to the structure of the board itself
and to the ability of the board to undertake certain borrowing activities
relating to the necessary ongoing work of the board itself.
It is my understanding, in looking at the new legislation,
Bill 3 is attempting to make changes to the structure of the membership of the
foundation itself, and they are going to be changing the structure of the new
foundation board from 18 to 22 members.
So we are going to see a four‑member increase on the new board
itself.
It is my understanding that there is going to be, with
those changes‑‑currently in place we have one designated member
from the Health Sciences Centre currently sitting on the Cancer Treatment
Foundation Board. I sense that the
minister wants to move this legislation forward in a sense to make it more
democratic in that it would represent various interests of the community and
others in the province. The new
legislation now is going to call for the further designation of members from
other health care facilities within the city of Winnipeg, namely that being St.
Boniface General Hospital which itself has a cancer treatment centre.
It is also my understanding that the University of Manitoba
is going to have a designated member on the new foundation board itself. So we are adding people from facilities that
obviously have extensive experience in dealing with cancer and its treatment
and research. I think that is a good
move in itself that we are going to bring people in from those facilities in a
designated capacity.
The bill also looks at requiring the Minister of Health
(Mr. McCrae) now to appoint 10 people as members of the foundation. This legislation is going to allow the
minister to appoint these people. It is
going to call for the appointment of these people from various parts of the
province so that we have, generally, a broad‑based representation from
the various parts of Manitoba. We all
know cancer knows no boundaries, and of course there are people in various
communities throughout our province who have been impacted in some way by the
cancer disease. It is a good move that
we are going to have people coming from all parts of Manitoba to sit on the new
board.
It is also my understanding now that there are going to be
seven other members appointed by the foundation itself that will pull in
specific expertise, as they see necessary, to advise and to direct in a way
that would lead the board to take proper steps for the further direction that
is necessary in the furthering of their efforts. That is a good move. I think the board, any body, I do not care
whether it is government or a foundation that is doing fundraising for
treatment and research, I think we should have specific expertise available to
us there. Not all of us have experiences
of life that would allow us to have that expertise, and I think we should rely
on others who do to guide us through our deliberations and to give us,
hopefully, the right information that will allow us to make the correct
decisions.
* (1600)
The legislation itself also calls for the election of a
chairperson by the new foundation members.
Since there are going to be 22 members, they are going to be able to
select one of their people as a chairperson.
It is my understanding that the current chairperson of the board is now
appointed by the Premier (Mr. Filmon).
With that, it takes away some of the democratic abilities of the board
itself to pick or choose the person they think is most suitable to be the
chairperson from within the members of the board itself. I think, in a sense of a democratic move,
this is the way to go, to allow the board members to appoint their own
chairperson instead of it being done by the Lieutenant‑Governor‑in‑Council,
who is the Premier.
It is my understanding that there are some current restrictions
on the borrowing limits that have been set for the foundation. The current act sets the limits at some
$300,000 when that was set. I believe it
was in 1962 when the act was proclaimed.
It probably was an appropriate amount of money at that time, but in the
22 years that have passed since that, obviously that $300,000 borrowing ability
has been eroded by inflation and is obviously creating some hardships for the
foundation itself as it attempts to perform its duties.
The foundation has embarked upon a major capital
redevelopment to enable it to continue to serve the needs of Manitobans. The borrowing cap will be removed, from my
understanding, to allow the foundation to facilitate further capital expenditures
that would be necessary to give the foundation borrowing powers that would be
similar to other organizations where I believe they would be statutory.
There are other areas‑‑I know the foundation
does good work for us. We, after having
looked at this piece of legislation, think that this is a good move on the part
of the government, the bill that we feel we can support, although we would like
to hear from other members of the community that may wish to come forward to
add their comments. I know when this
piece of legislation moves through to committee we hope that members of the
public, including members of the foundation or others that would be within the
health care system or the general public at large, would take advantage of the
opportunity to talk about how the foundation's work has maybe affected their
lives and give us some insight as well on the activities of the foundation.
I know we have had many discussions in this House over the
last number of months and going back to even last year. Since cancer treatment and research is an
ongoing part of the health care system of our province, and I made reference to
the fact of some of the facilities that do treatment and research. I am sure we all hope we never have to
utilize in any way any of the health care facilities or the hospitals that we
have within our province, but we hope that they will be there to make sure that
we have the necessary treatments, the necessary medical expertise should we
ever need to have any treatment for medical ailments.
I know my colleague the member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak)
has many times in this House raised health care issues, whether it be the
Connie Curran contract that was signed by the government for $4 million U.S.
tax free, I think it was, a huge amount, Mr. Acting Speaker‑‑yes,
my colleagues in the House here said they wished they could earn that kind of
money. I am sure there are other members
of our society too who wish they could make $4 million, and I see members
opposite smiling, and maybe some of them are making $4 million a year, I am not
quite sure, but I will let them stand up.
An Honourable Member: Not any more.
Mr. Reid: The member for Portage la Prairie says that he
no longer makes $4 million a year, so I guess he has had to somewhat lower his
standards, cut back a little bit to fall in line with his government's
philosophy of cutbacks, so I guess he has cut back his‑‑
An Honourable Member: He is buying a piece of the Jets.
Mr. Reid: Maybe he is buying a piece of the Jets with
his money. Maybe he is investing it into
the Jets, which will obviously save the taxpayers of this province having to
spend tax dollars to support the Jets. I
know my‑‑[interjection]
Mr. Acting Speaker (Mr.
Laurendeau): Order, please. Could I ask those honourable members speaking
from the loge to go out in the hall and do so, so we can carry on with this
fruitful debate.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Acting Speaker, I appreciate that, to
quiet the members opposite to give me a chance to add my comments on this
legislation.
To get back to the discussion that was taking place about
the government's involvement of $43.5 million into the Jets by way of potential
losses that the Jets might incur, I know, in talking with many members of my
constituency when I have gone door knocking, I have found that at least 80
percent of the people I encounter, and possibly more, were opposed to any tax
dollars going into the Jets. That is
what the comments from the people of my community are saying.
An Honourable Member: Especially if you told them it was going to
cost them 40 million.
Mr. Reid: No, I must admit that the Minister of
Environment is wrong. That figure had
not been released. The residents of my
community did not even know what the potential losses were going to be. They did not know that they were going to be
$43.5 million. Now that they know, I am
sure that they are most likely to be even more upset that there is a potential
for such a huge investment from the taxpayers' purse into the Jets themselves.
The question I have always asked of my constituents is‑‑
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Laurendeau): Order, please. I would like to remind the honourable member
that we are dealing with Bill 3, and I am sure the honourable member was just
about to get back to the issue of the treatment and research foundation.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Acting Speaker, you are right, I was just
about to get back to Bill 3, to talk about the importance of The Cancer
Treatment and Research Foundation Amendment Act changes that the government has
brought in and some of the impacts that have happened in our health care system
in the province.
I have referenced some of the comments and some of the
questions my colleague the member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) has raised many
times in this House, either by way of his speeches or in Question Period,
relating to our health care system and the direction this government has taken
health care, whether it be through this legislation of Bill 3 or by way of
Connie Curran's contract when she came in, signed a $4‑million U.S. tax‑free
consulting contract and then went back, never met the requirements of the
contract, and it is creating some problems within our hospitals and within our
community as well.
I have talked with many people, even in my own community,
about the direction the government has taken with respect to Connie
Curran. They think it was the wrong move
that this government made. We have
enough expert advice within our country.
We could have brought somebody from within our own country to advise or
to consult in these matters, someone who is familiar with the Manitoba and
Canadian health care systems and could have led us in a direction that would
have been probably a lot more appropriate than what we saw by way of Connie
Curran's recommendations.
We would not have lost the LPNs through our health care
system. We probably would not have lost
the hospital beds through closures. We
probably would not have seen the reductions in the home care services and the
huge increases in the fees.
We have seen many changes through recommendations that
Connie Curran has brought in, and a lot of them have been negative in their
consequences, not only for people of my community of Transcona but, I am sure,
for every community in the province.
This bill, by way of the changes of the board, will allow
the board to bring in seven new members by way of appointment from the
foundation members themselves. I believe
that there will probably be some doctors who will be appointed for that board
who will sit in as experts to advise, and so the board may be able to consult
with these doctors.
But I think back, Mr. Acting Speaker, to the time just
recently when the government signed its new sweetheart deal, the five‑year
agreement with the doctors. That created
some problems even for some of the people in my community and in particular
some of the young people in my community who were currently going to the
various universities training to be doctors.
They were quite hopeful while they were training to be doctors that they
would be able to complete their education, and that they would be able to move
out into their professions and to provide good service to the residents of
Manitoba.
Unfortunately, during the course of their education, this
government came along and it introduced a contract that it had signed with the
doctors of the province that essentially changed the rules of the game in the
middle of the game, Mr. Acting Speaker.
What they have done is‑‑it is creating a hardship for the
young people of my community, because they were hopeful that they might be able
to sit on some of these boards that are sitting in Winnipeg, whether it be the
Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation board, as experts to advise and to
consult with the foundation. Now they
are going to be forced into the rural areas of the province, and they are not
going to have the same opportunities that would have been afforded to them if
there had been other programs that the government had put in place by way of
incentives, say.
I have talked to young people. I have several in my community who are in the
third‑ and fourth‑year of medical school. They came to the Legislature here to meet
with us. What they were telling us is
that they very much want to continue their education as doctors, and they very
much want to go into the rural centres to serve the people of Manitoba because
they see that there are opportunities there.
But they also want to have the opportunities to have incentives in‑‑
An Honourable Member: One hundred percent subsidized post‑secondary
education.
Mr. Reid: No, they do not want to have subsidized post‑secondary
education. That is not what they want
contrary to what the member for Portage la Prairie (Mr. Pallister) thinks.
* (1610)
Well, what I am relating to the members opposite, including
the member for Portage la Prairie, is that these young people who are training
to be doctors in the province want to have the opportunity to serve the people
of Manitoba in their chosen profession, but what they want to have the
opportunity to do is to be able to train in the years after they have completed
their formal education. They currently
do not have that. Being forced into
these areas, there are no programs there.
There are no incentives for them.
They do not have any pension plans.
They have no vacations and no opportunity to come out and retrain, and
they have no relief for the jobs while they are performing them in the rural
communities, something that is very critical to them.
Because let us face it, in the rural areas, if you are sick
in the middle of the night, you do not have a hospital to go to in all
cases. You have your local community
doctor hopefully that you can go to and that doctor is essentially on call 24
hours a day‑‑
An Honourable Member: It is hard work.
Mr. Reid: It is hard work, and I know members opposite
can even‑‑and I am not saying that the two are related, but if the
members opposite can think to some of the experiences that they might have had
with veterinary services where the veterinarians are on call 24 hours a day and
how difficult those lives are. Because I
know one of my neighbours is a veterinarian and had served in rural Manitoba
for about 10 or 12 years, he was explaining to me one day the impact upon his
family life that it meant to serve the rural communities and how important it
was to the communities.
(Mr. Jack Reimer, Acting
Speaker, in the Chair)
These young doctors are going to, in much the same way,
have to perform the same services to the rural communities, and they are going
to be on call 24 hours a day. They want
the opportunity to have some relief so they can come out and retrain. They want to have some opportunities so they
can have a quality of life with their families, and they also want to have the
opportunities so that they do not have to be on call 24 hours a day. So there needs to be some relief there for
them.
So if you had put incentive programs in place for these
young people, not change the rules in the middle of the game, then I am sure
they would have been content to follow along with the government's wishes and
go out and perform the necessary medical services for the various communities.
The comments that I have just placed on the record, Mr.
Acting Speaker, were comments that were related to me by the young people who
came to this building to meet with us.
As my colleague the member for Kildonan (Mr. Chomiak) has said,
democracy, and indeed it should have been, but of course the government chose
to impose this deal upon these young people.
At the same time when they signed this five‑year agreement with
the doctors, it has effectively tied the hands of any future governments from
having to deal with matters relating to the health care system, which is
something that from my way of thinking, bears studying because of the long‑term
consequences that are involved here.
Mr. Acting Speaker, these young people very much want to
serve on the Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation boards. They were hopeful that they could have had
the opportunity, and possibly, they will sometime in the future have that
opportunity. I look forward to this
piece of legislation going to the committee so that members of the public will
have the opportunity to come out and tell us what their concerns are, any
thoughts they have about this legislation or indeed any other concerns that
they might have with respect to health care itself. So we look forward to this piece of
legislation going to committee and members of the public coming out.
With those words, Mr. Acting Speaker, I thank you for the
opportunity to stand up and comment on Bill 3.
Ms. Avis Gray
(Crescentwood): Mr. Acting Speaker, I am pleased to rise and
put a few comments on the record in regard to this bill. This bill basically makes some legislative
changes to the workings of the Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation.
First I would like to say that, of course, it is very, very
important that when we are looking at the health care system, whether it is in
Manitoba or any province of this country, that in fact it is necessary to not
only involve initiatives and leaderships from the government of the day but, of
course, to involve our nonprofit organizations and private industry as well
when we are looking at the entire system of health care.
Certainly, the Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation has
been a very integral organization in regard to the future of our health care
here in this province. The Cancer
Treatment and Research Foundation has done excellent work in the area of cancer
research. It certainly will continue to
do that work.
As we look at the amendments to this particular piece of
legislation, I think we are seeing some improvements in terms of the
opportunities for this foundation to do the work of cancer research and
treatment.
We see that in some of the amendments, Mr. Acting Speaker,
we are now moving from a board of 18 members to some 22 members. I think at some point there is an optimum
number of members that one can have on a board for them to be effective. I know that some of the literature will
suggest that once you move beyond 24 board members it gets somewhat unwieldy,
but this is a move from 18 to 22. I
think the move or the expansion of that is so that in fact there can be an
expansion of the kinds of representation that we have on this particular
foundation.
We see now that the St. Boniface Hospital has the
opportunity to have a person appointed to this board, and that there will be an
appointment as well from the University of Manitoba from their board of
governors. I think that is important as
well, Mr. Acting Speaker, because of the close relationship between research
that goes on in the area of cancer research and some of that research which is
out at the University of Manitoba.
We have also seen, in this particular bill, some changes in
regard to really a better representation of the individuals who will sit on
this particular board, and with the appointments of individuals who will
represent a number of geographical areas in the province, that also would
suggest in fact that we will have a better representation of the individuals.
I would hope that in the appointment of these particular
individuals the government of the day and the minister will not simply look to
individuals in those communities, which happen to be known by that particular
party, but in fact will look towards individuals who are well known within the
communities, who are well known in the area of perhaps health, who may be
health professionals, who may be volunteers in the community, who are very well
known, and that we would really see a very broad representation on this
committee.
I think it would be very important as well, Mr. Acting
Speaker, that we see some aboriginal representation on this committee, as well
as looking at a balance of gender when we look at the appointments. So I would hope that the minister would take
into consideration these comments as well, which are not necessarily reflected
in the amendments in this particular bill, but which the minister would have
discretion and the opportunity to look at.
Mr. Acting Speaker, this bill of course as well, as we have
seen of bills and amendments to bills presented in this particular legislative
session, the government of the day has moved to look at more gender‑neutral
language in their legislation and, again, we see that reflected in this
particular bill, and that is appropriate as well, and we are pleased to see
that.
One of the other major changes that this bill seems to
reflect is that there is a change to the borrowing limits of the Cancer
Treatment and Research Foundation. I
believe that when this legislation was enacted in 1962, at that time there was
a borrowing limit of some $300,000. The
1960s were a very long time ago and we are now in the '90s, and so what we are
seeing here is a repeal of that particular section so that there is not a
borrowing limit to the abilities of the Cancer Treatment and Research
Foundation.
That gives this organization an opportunity to raise as
many dollars as possible in the area of treatment and research. I note, however, that there seems to be some
monitoring in place, of course, through the auspices of the Ministry of
Finance. That is appropriate and we
support that.
* (1620)
I would be very interested, Mr. Acting Speaker, as we get
into the committee stage with this particular bill, to hear from members of the
community not just simply as to what their thoughts are on the particular
sections of this bill, but I would also be very interested in hearing from the
community as to how they see the representation of this particular foundation,
how they see that occurring, how they see that representation in terms of
ensuring that this board, because cancer is a disease that can affect all of us
and spares none of us in terms of socioeconomic status, race, gender, et
cetera, would be very representative of our community at large. If members of the community at committee
level have some suggestions to the minister as to how this can be done in the
appointments, we would look forward to that information.
I want to keep my remarks brief. I know that we will have an opportunity at
the committee level to again go through this piece of legislation clause by
clause; we will have an opportunity to hear from the community and possibly
from the foundation themselves in regard to this particular bill, and we as a
caucus certainly support the speedy passage of this bill to the committee
stage.
Thank you.
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Mr. Acting Speaker, I am also pleased to rise
to add a few remarks to the discussion on Bill 3, The Cancer Treatment and
Research Foundation Amendment Act. This
is a very short bill which makes a number of changes to the board and to the
appointment of chairperson, terms of office and to the ability of the Minister
of Finance to raise additional funds for this particular research and treatment
board.
In changing the basis of representation on this board and
the membership of the board, I understand that the government's intent is in fact
to broaden the basis of the board, particularly in the appointment of 10
persons from separate geographical areas of Manitoba. It also tries to broaden the basis of
representation by institutions ensuring that there will be one person appointed
from the Health Sciences Centre, the board of the St. Boniface General Hospital
and the Board of Governors at the University of Manitoba. It also provides for seven people to be
appointed by the foundation itself, and in effect, that actually makes almost
half the board self‑appointing, which is rather a large proportion but I
gather is an expansion or an extension of what has been there before.
Mr. Acting Speaker, it seems to me that there are some
useful elements in this bill, and I look forward to the discussion at committee
from the institutions that are involved.
In particular, I think the broadening of the basis of representation is
an interesting area. I am curious about
the 10 geographical areas of Manitoba.
Normally we do not speak in terms of 10 geographical areas of
Manitoba. We speak in terms of the
administrative districts of certain departments of government, where we have
northern Manitoba, Westman, Eastman and the Winnipeg region.
So I am curious as to what 10 geographical regions the minister
is suggesting here. Are these 10 regions
to be determined each time an appointment is made? Are there 10 regions which are to be
specified, or does it simply mean 10 people who do not all come from the same
region? Does it simply mean that there
must be 10 people from a diversity of regions?
I think there is some clarification which we might be able to achieve
there in discussion with the minister at committee.
I think also that there are some opportunities here for the
research community and for the Minister of Health (Mr. McCrae) to broaden the
basis of representation and activity in the setting of health policy and the
setting of research policy in particular, and to broaden it to include, I
believe, more women than have been included in the past. I certainly accept the points that the member
for Transcona (Mr. Reid) and also the member for Crescentwood (Ms. Gray) have made
in this area. The member for Transcona
spoke of the ability to represent youth, particularly young people working in
the medical system. The member for
Crescentwood spoke of the desirability of appointing people, aboriginal people
in particular, who have not in the past been part of the medical research
establishment. I think both of those are
very important.
Of course, much has been written in both United States and
Canada in recent years about the very limited role which women have played in
medical research and in the setting of medical policy, an unusual, well,
perhaps not unusual, but certainly a striking omission when we look at the 95
percent of people employed in health industries who are in fact women, not just
as nurses but as technicians and throughout a wide area of hospital and health
care facilities. So the broadening of
the gender basis, I think, is possible here with the expansion of the numbers
of people involved in the setting of policy in this particular board.
There are, I think, areas particularly in cancer which are
a specific interest to women. Obviously,
breast cancer and uterine cancer are ones that we are seeing increases in, and
we are not really‑‑particularly in the area of breast cancer there
has been very little improvement in the treatment of breast cancer over the
last 20 years in spite of the fact that some money has gone into foundations
such as this and into other research foundations throughout the world in fact,
that the incidence of breast cancer, particularly in the industrial world, is
expanding. The success of treatment has
not been making corresponding increases in the same way as perhaps the
treatment of other diseases. There is
great concern in the circles, not just of women but of their families, and particularly
I think in some very serious statistics that we do find in particular parts and
particular regions of Canada.
There are a number of ways here, opportunities in this bill
for expanding the role of women in the Cancer Foundation, both in the terms of
setting of policy but also in the opportunity to use the Cancer Foundation for
public education. Obviously, the Cancer
Society itself does a great deal of this as well, but I believe the linking of
research and public information is an important area.
In the last 10 years or even in the last five years, we
have seen some very serious undermining of medical research, particularly in
the cancer area. The use of Tamoxifen,
the dispute over the recommendations about mammography and falsification of findings
by some senior medical researchers in North America, I think have given great
concern to women about the role of research and the public information which is
available to them.
I would suggest there is an opportunity in this bill to
broaden the bases of representation and to broaden the concerns to better serve
the public of Manitoba.
I would also say, Mr. Acting Speaker, that there is an
opportunity here for the government and for the people who are appointed
subsequently to this board to take note of the critiques which are being developed
about that link between research and public service or public information and
particularly in the area of cancer research.
One of obvious critiques which is frequently made is that
much of medical research is driven by research grants. Of course, this foundation will be no
different. In fact, it expands the
independence of the research foundation from government, and it is a
fundraising foundation to some extent, in fact, to a large extent. The drive to depend upon research grants
rather than on public funding of research has certainly been seen by many
public commentators in recent years to distort to some degree the kind of
research which is conducted.
Now that is just not true obviously of cancer
research. It destroys many areas of
research, but one of the areas I think that people feel has been very seriously
overlooked by many cancer researchers is the area of environmental hazards, and
that is a very serious area of public policy and one which I draw to the
government's attention.
When you are research‑grant driven, the opportunity
to do the long‑term research on environmental hazards, for example, the
role of DDT in the formation of uterine and breast cancer is one that the links
have been drawn constantly, but the long‑term research has not been
there. It has become much more prefer‑‑not
much more preferable but certainly more common for research which is funded by
drug companies for example, to use drug‑based research. The Tamoxifen issue I think is one of those
and for research which is driven by dependence upon private funding to become
very much oriented toward a high‑tech solution, toward machinery, toward
equipment, toward the use of drugs.
The longer‑term issues and the public policy issues
of the use of insecticides, the use of DDT, the use of the general
environmental issues which we are facing across North America are ones that we
certainly want to see as part of the research activities of any cancer research
foundation.
* (1630)
I think, Mr. Acting Speaker, that is really all I have to
say. I have perhaps some comments I
would have liked to have added if there had been a little longer and that is to
relate the Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation to the absence of a
research policy by this government. It
was something which I did suggest to the Minister of Education (Mr. Manness)
several times during our Estimates in dealing with post‑secondary
education and asked him to discuss and gave him a series of opportunities in
fact to suggest what the research policy was of this government.
This kind of a bill, I think, does lend itself to
establishing some general principles about public policy and research,
particularly in the area of cancer research, and also for the government to
perhaps speak more generally on the role of research in Manitoba. There are substantial changes happening
across the country. There are severe
national reductions in research funding across the country. We have seen that over the last 10 years and
that does not seem to be changing at the moment. There are proposals for a shift in the
funding of research from the provincial and federal governments which are
coming from independent agencies such as The Royal Society of Canada.
I think every university across the country is finding the
funding of its laboratories, the funding of its researchers on a long‑term
basis extremely difficult. I would have
welcomed, again, some indication from the government of where this particular
foundation fits with it research policies for St. Boniface Hospital, for the
Health Sciences Foundation, for other research that may or may not be conducted
in other hospitals or indeed the technological aspects of research which we
should be developing in our community colleges.
Perhaps if the Minister of Education (Mr. Manness) does
speak at some point on this bill, and perhaps he has spoken, I am not sure that
he has, that that opportunity is again open to him.
I think further, too, for the government there is an
opportunity in bills of this nature to also link research with economic
innovation. I know that there are some
individuals who are advisers to the Cancer Research Foundation who certainly
are linked with the Economic Innovation Council, but although the government
does claim to have the health research and health industries as one area of its
economic development program, there are very few linkages that we do see in
practice that are happening in this area.
It is possible that the Cancer Treatment and Research
Foundation and the linking of this to St. Boniface Hospital and the University
of Manitoba indeed is part of the beginning of a broader strategy. If so, I would like to know about it, and I
think the public of Manitoba would certainly be well‑served by creating
the focuses for research in Manitoba and defining them and funding them and
making sure in fact that they are linked to the economic strategies of the
province as well.
So with those, Mr. Acting Speaker, I look forward to the discussion
at committee.
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows): Mr. Acting Speaker, I rise to speak on Bill
3, The Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation Amendment Act, and I am pleased
to say that the Cancer Foundation is located in the constituency of Burrows. It happens to be in the Health Sciences
complex and the boundary runs on Sherbrook Street and west of Sherbrook. All of the Health Sciences buildings are in
my constituency, although I cannot say I have ever been to the Cancer Treatment
and Research Foundation. I hope that if
I do, I only go there as a visitor, not as a patient. But all of us, I think, are grateful that in
our city we have this treatment facility and research foundation so that for
those people who do need it, it is there.
The main features of this minor amendment bill are to
expand the membership of the foundation from 18 to 22 and to designate
representatives from St. Boniface Hospital and the University of Manitoba. I think it is good to expand the membership
to include other important hospitals in our city.
It also requires the minister to appoint 10 persons as
members of the foundation from separate geographical regions of the province,
and I think that is a good idea.
I read from time to time the alumni magazine from the University
of Saskatchewan, and that is how their senate is organized. They have senate elections based on
geographic regions in the province of Saskatchewan, which is appropriate for a
number of reasons. One is that it is a
provincial university so it is only fair that the whole province be
represented, and also their students are from the whole province so it is only
fair that the student body and the alumni be represented by geographic regions
on the senate.
That would be a good way to organize many institutions in
our society so that the representation is broad. So I think we can commend the government for
broadening the geographical representation to this board by including
representatives from all geographical regions of Manitoba.
Many times we in this House, particularly those of us who
are urban members are accused of having Perimeteritis and not being able to see
beyond the Perimeter Highway. It is good
from time to time to travel around the province to get a broader picture, and I
hope that is what will happen with having representatives from across the
province on the foundation board of directors.
Seven other persons will be appointed by the foundation who
will be selected for the specific expertise that is needed. It is good that the foundation has that kind
of latitude that they can pick people in the community, whether it is
researchers or whoever it is that they choose because of their expertise, to be
on the foundation board.
Another change is that the chairperson will be elected by the
foundation members rather than appointed by Lieutenant‑Governor‑in‑Council,
which means, I guess, that there is one less political patronage appointment in
Manitoba after this passes. I think that
is good. A research foundation like the
Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation should be nonpolitical. There is no reason why there needs to be a
government appointment of the chairperson.
I personally think it is more appropriate that they choose their own
chairperson.
In the past, there was a restriction on borrowing for the
foundation. The current act sets a limit
of $300,000. This has been changed so
that the foundation has more extensive borrowing foundations, which presumably
better meet its needs.
The foundation is quite involved with fundraising in order
to carry out its activities. Of course,
it probably acts like most foundations in that the capital it raises is
invested and only the interest on the money is spent on research. That way the amount of money in their
investment portfolio increases and the amount of money that normally they would
be able to spend from the interest increases as well, although many foundations
are having problems because of low interest rates. For example, The Law Foundation has suffered
greatly from low interest rates, and we hope that does not happen to the Cancer
Foundation.
* (1640)
It has an effect on the funding ability of any
organization, but it would be particularly unfortunate if the interest on
investments from the Cancer Foundation were decreased because of lower interest
rates and therefore they were not able to do as much research because all of us
here, and I think everyone in society, are very concerned about cancer as a
disease and wanting to find cures or wanting to find medication that will
ameliorate the effects of cancer and increase people's longevity. So it is very important that research
continues, particularly to find a cure for cancer.
I do not have scientific studies with me today, but I think
there is evidence that at least some kinds of cancer are increasing in our
society. All we have to do is pick up
the newspapers and we read articles that concern us. For example, in the Winnipeg Free Press of
May 18, 1994, there is a headline that says:
Study links antihistamines to growth of cancer in mice. Then a story on May 18, the same day, by the
science reporter, says: Cancer findings
not duplicated, linked with antihistamines challenge.
Well, in our family we happen to have a son who has
allergies, and he takes antihistamines from time to time, so when you pick up
the newspaper and you read that antihistamines have been linked to the growth
of cancer in mice, well, of course, it causes concerns. You wonder whether you are doing the best
thing for your child or not. So, of
course, we rely on organizations like the Cancer Treatment and Research
Foundation to do research into areas like this so that we are not prescribing
inappropriate pharmaceuticals to people that need them.
I have a couple of articles on research grants that the
Cancer Research Foundation has made from the Winnipeg Free Press of April 6,
1994, the headline is: Cancer research
boosted. The story says that two
Winnipeg researchers received more than a hundred thousand dollars from the
Canadian Cancer Society to study ways to improve communication between cancer
patients and their doctors. It goes on
to say that Dr. Harvey Chochinov, a psychiatrist with the Manitoba Cancer
Treatment and Research Foundation, received $66,000 from the Cancer Society to
test a questionnaire that measures daily changes in cancer patients'
symptoms. Chochinov and his team will
study whether the information leads to better medical treatment. Of course, we are pleased to see that studies
like that are being funded so that, indeed, hopefully, the end result is better
treatment.
Here is another story from the Winnipeg Free Press from
November 26, 1993. The headline is: Cancer fight goes to factories. A very interesting program, it says, a made‑in‑Winnipeg
program to educate immigrant factory workers about breast cancer is reaching
3,500 local women on the job and catching on in clothing companies across
Canada. Basically, the gist of the story
is that they wanted to get information to women who are at risk, and they
believed, if they invited them to come to a hotel for a seminar, that they
would not come for cultural and other reasons.
They said, well, we will take the information to them, and indeed that
is what this program does. It takes the
information to the women on the shop floor, and they had the co‑operation
of businesses in the garment industry, who were co‑operating in bringing
this information to their employees. It
is the Manitoba Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation that first approached
two Winnipeg factories to see if women would be interested, and the factories
co‑operated, and they were interested.
So they should be commended for innovative programs like that.
I have another article also from the Free Press of October
27, 1993, also about the Manitoba Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation, who
announced a new Department of Psychosocial Oncology, which makes Manitoba a
leader in helping people cope with cancer.
It is very interesting to read the literature in this area
about the links between people's personality and different kinds of
cancer. That is why a lot of effort is
being put on this, I guess, new or developing area in terms of cancer treatment
whereby people are receiving counselling, and they are part of support groups,
and they are looking at their lifestyle but also looking at how they relate to
other individuals, and there seems to be some evidence linking personality to
different kinds of cancer. So funding research
or funding a new Department of Psychosocial Oncology, I think, is an important
thing to do.
I have here a chart of different types of cancer, and it
says that an estimated 116,200 Canadians will find out they have cancer this
year, and another 59,700 will die from it.
Of course, the chart is broken down into the different kinds of cancer,
and the largest kind, with almost 20,000 individuals, is lung cancer. This is one area where we know that we can do
something about this because we know about the connection between lung cancer
and tobacco. We know that if we can
decrease the amount of smoking in our society, we can decrease the incidence of
cancer in the general population.
I have been getting phone calls, and probably my colleagues
in the Legislature have been getting phone calls from constituents who are
concerned about the taxation of tobacco products in Manitoba. I just had one this morning. Sometimes we get accused of pandering to the
public will and blowing with the wind and doing what people want. This is one good example where I disagree
with my constituents who have been phoning me and saying: I support the current level of taxation on
tobacco products in Manitoba. In fact I
support the government's position on that because Manitoba failed to cave in‑‑and
they should be credited with this‑‑to the policies of the federal
government, which withdrew a great deal of taxation in the province of Quebec,
which forced Ontario to do the same because of their geographical proximity.
We are disappointed that the federal government would do
this, because they had alternatives.
They could have stood up to the smugglers, and the federal Liberal
government could have stood up to the tobacco companies and said: We are going to tax tobacco exports to the
United States so that they would not be smuggled back into Canada, but they did
not adopt that option. They took the
easy way out, of lowering tobacco taxes.
To their credit, the government of Manitoba has not taken the easy way
out. They have stood up to individuals
who smoke. I do not think anybody else
agrees with them, but they have at least stood up to the smokers and said: We are going to do this.
They have done it for a very good reason. I do not want to be an apologist for the
Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), and I do not know what all the reasons are
that he would give for this, but I think the case is one of the public
interest, of saying that we know that when people smoke, they have a much
higher chance of getting lung cancer. We
know as a society that there is a great cost to this in terms of health
care. Not just lung cancer, but any kind
of cancer has a cost to it. It is all
citizens, it is all of society in Canada who pay taxes who support our health
care system.
I suppose it might be different if individuals had to buy
private insurance as they do in the United States, and if you are a smoker, if
you want to pay 50 percent more in private insurance costs than your neighbour,
then go ahead do it. It does not affect anybody
else. But in Canada it affects all of
us. If people make a lifestyle choice
and decide to smoke, then all of us pay for the consequences of that when
people are treated in hospital. So I
personally agree that we should continue to support the current levels of
tobacco taxation in Manitoba.
The tobacco companies are trying to blackmail the
Government of Canada. It has been quite
interesting to see the cartoon Doonesbury poking fun at the tobacco companies
on a regular basis, even cartoon characters in the form of cigarettes. In Canada one of the largest manufacturers,
Philip Morris International, is saying if the federal government forces plain
packaging then we will not invest money in the food industry and other
industries that we have investments in in Canada, and they are a very large investor.
For example, Philip Morris owns Kraft General Foods Canada
Inc., Canada's largest packaged food maker and distributor with 11 plants and
4,700 employees. The company's 100‑odd
brands, including Nabob and Maxwell House coffees, Tang, Jello and Post and
Nabisco cereals, dominate the shelves of Canadian supermarkets.
Well, I think the government should say we are going to do
it even if you carry out your threat, your blackmail, because we know that
other companies would be happy to invest in Canada. If you are not going to invest in new plants
and equipment to process food products and other things in Canada, we are sure
that there are other companies that will.
It reminds me of a very good quote that I would like to
share, by the mayor of Mississauga, Ontario, Mayor Hazel McCallion. Mayor McCallion once said in a speech in
Winnipeg, we want development but on our terms.
I think that is an appropriate position for any government to take. I think any government would say that they
welcome development, but she had the courage to say, on our terms. Now I suppose it is easier for the mayor of
Mississauga to say that than other people because the developers are constantly
knocking on their doors because of their geographic location between Toronto and
Hamilton.
* (1650)
I wish that the federal government would take this approach
and say to the tobacco companies, we are going to go ahead with plain packaging
and if you do not invest in Canada, we are sure that somebody else will.
So I hope that the tobacco lobby does not get through to
members on the government side. I hope
they continue their position of continuing the taxation. I heard the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson)
quoted on the news within the last week saying that their tax revenue from
taxing the sale of tobacco products has not gone down‑‑I believe he
was referring to the first three months of this year‑‑in spite of
what some people predicted. Of course,
some people will subvert the law and try and get around the law, but I think it
will always be a small minority of people and they will, of course, have to pay
the consequences.
I have an article here called Trends in Health Status and
Practices in Canada and the United States, an article written by Charlotte
Schoenborn. This is from Canadian Social
Trends, Winter 1993. It is published by
Statistics Canada. It is a very
interesting little paper because it talks about healthier lifestyles and says, "Behaviours
that have been aggressively targeted with public education campaigns,
legislation and taxation‑‑such as smoking, impaired driving and
seat belt use‑‑are changing the most." There is good reason for that. I mean we know statistically that when
taxation is increased on tobacco products that the amount of consumption goes down. We know if that consumption stays down that
the incidence of lung cancer and other kinds of cancer is going to go down as
well. It is good that governments are
targeting smoking as a lifestyle choice that is not a desirable lifestyle
choice and encouraging people to quit smoking.
You know, there is an aphorism that you cannot legislate
morality, and I do not personally agree with that. I think you can legislate morality. In Manitoba, a good example would be drinking
and driving whereby the government has had an extensive advertising campaign
against drinking and driving and has also increased the penalties for drinking
and driving and the result is that people do not drink and drive nearly as
often as they used to in Manitoba. [interjection] Well, I would not quite go
that far. The result is that fewer
people drink and drive and fewer people are killed on the highways of Manitoba
because of that.
Similarly with tobacco, if governments and the Manitoba
Lung Association and other organizations carry out an extensive advertising
campaign against smoking and if taxation remains high, it encourages people to
quit smoking. There are many positive
benefits to the public in Manitoba when that happens.
The other two examples are impaired driving and seat‑belt
use. I used impaired driving as an
example, and I think seat‑belt use is a third example that has been shown
to be effective when it is targeted.
When the laws are changed to make seat belts compulsory and when there
is an effective advertising campaign, then people indeed do buckle up and they
do use their seat belts, and then they have fewer injuries and fewer deaths
when they are involved in accidents.
Going back to Philip Morris, I believe that some consumers
in the United States are going to organize consumer boycotts, and I would
encourage Canadians to do the same thing.
If Philip Morris is going to blackmail the Canadian government and the
Canadian people, then we should indeed boycott Philip Morris products so they
can experience some consumer wrath and be forced to change their policies as a
result.
It would be a shame indeed if the federal government
refused to act on this because of concerns about the Free Trade Agreement and
the NAFTA agreement being abrogated in some way because of special packaging
laws in Canada. It would reveal the Free
Trade Agreement and NAFTA for what they really are, and that is giving up our
Canadian sovereignty.
We know the Liberals campaigned in September and October of
1993 on a policy of renegotiating NAFTA with the United States, but when they
formed government, they proclaimed it on January 1 with no changes. That was one of their first major flip‑flops. The public may not see the consequences of
this for some time, but we may well have an example here of a major implication
of the Free Trade Agreement and NAFTA if indeed plain packaging cannot be
brought in in Canada because of NAFTA.
It would be a shame if, as a result, the Canadian government was
unwilling to stand up to the tobacco companies and stand up to the United
States and do what they should be doing in order to discourage Canadians from
smoking. [interjection]
The member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux) brings up an
interesting point: What about those
tobacco farms in Ontario? I think there
are two ways of doing things. One is you
close people down and you do not care about the consequences. Tobacco farms are one example, military bases
are another.
Just to use military bases as an example, for many years
the peace movement has been saying, what we need is a military conversion
policy so that we convert military factories and military bases to peaceful and
nonmilitary uses. When the federal
government, the Liberal government came in and they said, we are going to
reduce the military budget, they closed bases with no policy of conversion to
nonmilitary uses. [interjection]
Well, if Cornwallis is being transferred to another use, I
am happy to hear that.
With tobacco farmers the same thing is true. There should be a conversion program so they
can get into other kinds of agriculture that are not harmful to people's
health. If that requires public tax
dollars to do, then maybe they should do that as well.
To conclude my remarks on The Cancer Treatment and Research
Foundation Amendment Act, we are going to be supporting this bill. We would like to see it go to committee. There is nothing that is particularly
contentious in this bill. We are prepared
to perhaps put up our Health critic, and he will probably be our last speaker
on this bill.
I am sure that when our Health critic speaks on this bill
he will use the opportunity to talk about health care cutbacks, because we know
that this government likes to talk about good news like this minor amendment
bill, but they really do not want to talk about things like cutbacks to home
care, closing hospital beds, Filmon Fridays, Connie Curran, signing $4 million
contracts with an American consultant in order to tell us in Canada, who have a
better health care system than the Americans, how to run our health care
system.
Just today I happened to be at a hospital. I talked to the co‑ordinator of
volunteers. This individual told me that
she had 39 junior high and high school students who were recruited to volunteer
in Seven Oaks hospital. Because she is
losing Filmon Fridays‑‑and now they are calling them Filmon Mondays‑‑she
cannot supervise and train these volunteers, so all of them are being referred
to nursing homes. I think that is a
shame, particularly because it is this government that forced that on this
institution. This government is the one
who is trying to offload to the volunteer sector and offload to nonprofit
organizations and churches.
It is all through the speeches of your ministers. Just read the speeches from the current
Minister of Family Services (Mrs. Mitchelson) and the previous Minister of
Family Services. They are on record in
Hansard as talking about the important role of volunteers in our society. Then Seven Oaks hospital recruits 39
volunteers and they say, we cannot use them because of Filmon Fridays. Shame on you.
These are young people that want to get experience in the health care
system as volunteers, and they do not have room for them because of Filmon
Fridays.
This is the same government that argues every day in
Question Period and every day in Health Estimates that the quality of patient
care has not been jeopardized by their cuts.
That is not true, because volunteers are very important to the quality
of patient care at Seven Oaks Hospital.
So with those few remarks, I am about to wrap up my remarks
on Bill 3, The Cancer Treatment and Research Foundation Amendment Act.
Thank you, Mr. Acting Speaker.
* (1700)
PRIVATE MEMBERS' BUSINESS
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Reimer): The hour being 5 p.m., time for Private
Members' Business.
PROPOSED RESOLUTIONS
Res. 19‑‑Save Rail Jobs
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Mr. Acting Speaker, I move, seconded by the
member for Selkirk (Mr. Dewar), that
WHEREAS CN Rail and CP Rail have secretly been discussing
the merger of rail operations from Winnipeg east; and
WHEREAS CP Rail has changed from a Canadian company to a flag
of convenience company; and
WHEREAS CN has completed the Northern Ontario rail line
abandonment feasibility study in 1987; and
WHEREAS the federal Minister of Transport has stated that
he is looking forward to analyzing any proposals that may be brought forward by
CN and CP Rail to merge or otherwise rationalize their operations in Canada;
and
WHEREAS the federal Minister of Transport has stated that
railways are nostalgia and romanticism from the past; and
WHEREAS the federal Minister of Transport has hinted that
CN may be privatized causing major job losses in western Canada and in
Manitoba; and
WHEREAS CN Rail Transcona Shops employs some 1,800 people;
and
WHEREAS Manitoba has lost over 3,000 rail jobs since 1988
and is continuing to lose jobs; and
WHEREAS the Dugald, Manitoba Wheat Pool grain elevator
services and area grain producers would be severely affected by the loss of
rail services; and
WHEREAS property owners living in communities along
Manitoba's eastern border now serviced by the CN Reditt Subdivision rail line
will be left isolated with no ground transportation services with the merger of
the two rail lines.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED that the Legislative Assembly and
government of Manitoba call upon the federal government to reject the merger of
CN and CP Rail operations; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that this Assembly urge the
provincial government to pressure the federal government to live up to its
commitment to restore Manitoba as the rail transportation hub of Canada; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Clerk of the Assembly send
a copy of this resolution to the federal Minister of Transport and to all
Manitoba members of parliament.
Motion presented.
Mr. Reid: It gives me great pleasure to rise to speak
to this resolution which is of very timely significance considering that for
the last two days we have raised in this House matters pertaining to the merger
of CN and CP Rail operations from Winnipeg east.
We have asked questions of the Minister of Highways and
Transportation (Mr. Findlay) here, hoping that he and his government would take
some steps to protect the interests of Manitobans not only employed in the rail
sector but also for those who utilize the services of the two railways.
I think back to some of the comments that were made by the
federal government when they came into office and they introduced their recent
budget, when the federal Minister of Transport said during the budget debate in
parliament that railways were a romanticism and nostalgia of the past. Those are the comments of the federal
Minister of Transport, Doug Young.
Since that time we have seen further comments come from
this minister relating to the railway merger.
He has said, not long after assuming his office as Transport Minister
for Canada, that he was waiting with anticipation to look at the merger
proposal that would be brought forward by the two railways, and it left us with
the thoughts, Mr. Acting Speaker, that this minister was intent on giving it
his blessing, and that the two railways could indeed go forward with their
merger.
This is going to have significant consequences for us in
the province of Manitoba. We have within
the province of Manitoba not only the rail operations where the trains move
back and forth, but we have the maintenance repair shops in Manitoba as
well. As the Minister of Highways (Mr.
Findlay) has said today, we have some 12.5 percent employment in the rail
sector within Manitoba in comparison to our population base in comparison to
the rest of Canada. That is a
significant number of jobs, so we stand to lose a lot in this province.
In my own community of Transcona, we have some 2,000 people
who are associated with the railway activities.
In addition to that, we have a number of people who are working at
various communities throughout Manitoba, including other parts of Winnipeg, in
particular the Weston repair shops where we have many hundreds more railway
employees who are actively involved in the repair of rolling stock equipment.
Now we learn today, Mr. Acting Speaker, that the head of CN
Rail, Mr. Paul Tellier, CEO, is actively looking at the possibility of moving
the CN Transcona Shops operations to amalgamate it with the operations in
Calgary, CP operations in Calgary. Now
that throws a cloud over what is happening here in Manitoba, and I do not know
why this Minister of Highways and Transportation has not taken the necessary
steps to at least ask the CN officials if that is their position and why they
are making comments like that, comments that were made in the Parliament of
Canada Standing Committee of Transport.
We have to take the steps now to protect those jobs. We cannot wait until the ministers get
together for their meeting in July.
If we wait that long‑‑we look at the comments
even when I asked questions yesterday relating to CN's communications
strategy. CN Rail has now hired the
services of a private company who has put together for CN Rail a strategic
communications plan dated May 24, '94.
In this proposal, in this document that I have in my hands, it calls for
CN to neutralize the campaign against the possible merger of the activities of
CN and CP rail.
To me that is an affront to the democratic process that we
have in this country. Here are two companies
that are going to look at‑‑and they have targeted specific groups
in their activities where they want to target CN managers, CN employees,
municipal authorities and community leaders, union officials, federal and
provincial government representatives and the media in their efforts to stop
the debate and to divert the debate taking place about the merger between the
two railways.
This is a significant document, Mr. Acting Speaker. This is a change in the direction for the
corporation itself, I believe. I do not
think I have ever seen anything like this in my working career when I was
working with this company where they would actively promote the neutralization
of any public opinion against any activities which they were undertaking.
That is not the way we operate in Canada. We have a democratic process here that allows
all members of the public, and this is why I raise the issue today with the
Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr. Findlay) when I asked why we did
not include members of the public and railway employees, who are going to be
severely impacted by any merger proposal that comes forward.
The three governments, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta,
have hired a consulting firm, Sypher: Mueller International, I think is the
name, and the consultant has contacted Manitoba shippers for their views and
will hold a workshop in Winnipeg on June 9, 1994‑‑last week‑‑to
allow shippers to raise and discuss their concerns. I raised the issue with the Minister of
Highways and Transportation.
It is with the view that there are more people in our
province that are going to be impacted by the decisions of these two railways
to merge and that should be consulted about their concerns so that they have
the opportunity to raise them with the minister, with the consultant and at the
same time could help us put forward a plan of action that the three provinces
can come forward with a unified position.
So I think it is important that we have the railway employees and the
members of the general public involved in that.
This document from May 24, the Strategic Communications
Plan, indicates that, and I will quote directly from the document: A great many communities which owe the basis
of their quality of life to railway activities in the eastern part of the
country will probably be hard hit by CN's measures to reduce cost. So it is very obvious that there is going to
be significant impact by the merger proposal.
This strategic document goes on to state, Mr. Acting
Speaker, that it calls for a short, low‑profile, high‑intensity
communications campaign to divert attention away from the merger proposal
itself. It also goes on to talk about
many of the communities that are going to be impacted and the actions that
could be taken to divert attention away from the merger, because these
communities, the people that are living in them, and the employees of the
railway are attempting to draw public attention to the merger itself.
The Ontario government, as we already know, has already
taken a stand on the merger proposal, something that other governments in
Canada have not taken a stand on to this point in time. I was happy to see that Ontario did take that
stand because it is very obvious that they too are going to be seriously
impacted by the merger. So they have
already recognized that and they have already taken a stand.
I will read the objectives into the record, Mr. Acting
Speaker, of what this CN strategic plan is.
It says here that CN is going to divert the debate so that it does not
focus solely on the projected merger. It
is going to limit the damage caused by the campaign undertaken by residents and
it is going to prepare CN for similar actions in other local communities that
may be hit by changes in company operations.
* (1710)
So those are some of the objectives of this strategic plan
that the company has in dealing with the merger proposal. It goes on to talk about CN and its officials
avoiding meetings with groups except in circumstances controlled by CN. In addition to that it says to their
officials that they should avoid meetings with journalists except in
circumstances allowing a minimum of control over the result. So they are trying to control the media as
well through this process.
At the same time, they have key messages that they want to
send out to the public so they get their spin on the story on how this merger
is supposed to be good not only for Ontario but for the other provinces where
the merger is going to have some impact.
The scary part about this whole thing is that this
strategic plan was supposed to have been concluded by the end of June, two
weeks hence. So it is very obvious that
CN feels that this merger proposal is going to go forward before the end of the
month. That is why I think that it is
important for the minister of our province, the Minister of Highways and
Transportation (Mr. Findlay), to take a serious stand on what we think about
the impacts the merger is going to have on the province of Manitoba.
Now, I go back to some of the comments that we had when we
were talking about the short‑line railway legislation in the last session
of this Legislature, Bill 33, I think it was.
We had members of the House, a few of us had the opportunity to speak on
this legislation. I am going to take a
quote here directly from the Leader of the second opposition party, the Leader
of the Liberal Party (Mr. Edwards). It
says, Mr. Acting Speaker, I just hope very much that we have a change of
government at the federal level, because I know that will bring with it a
change of philosophy about rail lines, about these national institutions. It pains me to see millions and millions and
millions of dollars that are spent in other much less important expeditions
than keeping these rail lines together.
An Honourable Member: Who said that?
Mr. Reid: The Leader of the Liberal Party said that on
July 7, 1993. Now here we have the
member's own party saying that railways are nostalgia and romanticism from the
past. We have the federal Liberal
Minister of Transportation saying to the Canadian public, now we need to
eliminate all of the subsidies for all of the transportation programs that we
have in Canada. He wants to eliminate
$590 million from the WGTA, the Western Grain Transportation Act, the same
programs that support the producers of this country in getting their product to
export market position.
We have the federal Liberal Minister of Transportation now
saying that he wants to eliminate the $330 million transportation subsidies of
VIA Rail, the very same subsidy that supports the bayline activities for VIA
Rail to provide service to the remote and isolated communities of northern
Manitoba. And it goes on where he wants
to eliminate the subsidies to the ports, Port Corperations of Canada. He wants to eliminate subsidies to the ferry
services of Canada that provide important transportation links to other
provinces in Canada. It wants to eliminate
the coast guard services and support subsidies that are in place in Canada, and
he wants to commercialize the activities.
That is the term of reference that he is using. Now, he wants to commercialize the
activities.
I am sure when we look back at some of the comments that
have been made about commercialization, we all know what the reference is when
we talk about privatization. Everyone
knows that privatization means that we move away from government‑supported
programs, but at the same time, it gives us cause for some concern because it
leads us to conclude that what this government wants to do is indeed privatize
all of the transportation services in our country, but he is using the word now
"commercialize."
I want to read into the record, Mr. Acting Speaker, a
definition from the dictionary that I took this afternoon on the word
"commercialize": to manage a
business, basis for profit, to develop commerce in, to exploit for profit, to
debase in quality for more profit. That
is the definition of commercialization.
So do not let the federal Minister of Transportation tell us that he is
not trying to privatize the transportation services in this country.
I know the Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr.
Findlay) here has an interest in transportation; otherwise, he would not be
doing the job that he is. I also know
that the Minister of Highways and Transportation has living with him in his own
constituency that he represents many rail employees. I know many of those people; I used to work
with them. I know them personally. I grew up with many of them, there is no
doubt about that. There are many people
from my own community of Transcona have relocated to the communities of
Springfield. They are very worried about
what is going to happen with their rail jobs.
I hope that the Minister of Highways and Transportation
(Mr. Findlay) will take the necessary steps, not only in the best interests of
transportation employees and shippers in this province, but also to represent
the interests of the constituents in his own communities.
We have had a problem within the province of Manitoba going
back to, I believe it is, 1991, when we lost great coal and potash traffic that
was being diverted by CP Rail through North Portal, Saskatchewan. In addition to that, we have seen further erosions
of rail traffic moving by way of diversion through the U.S.
It is my understanding, and I talked to a CP Rail just at
lunchtime today‑‑he tells me that the CP Rail network has more
trackage miles in the United States now than it does in all of Canada. It is my understanding, they are looking to
expand that network further, so even if you look at the side of the locomotives
and the rolling stock equipment that have, they have now painted the American
flag as part of their decal, which tells me that this company is nothing but a
flag‑of‑convenience company and that they are not going to do the
things that are in the best interests of the country.
If you look at the words of Paul Tellier, the CEO for CN
Rail, it appears that CN Rail is headed in the same direction.
When this country started, it was built by the
railways. We gave CP Rail $25 million
and 25 million acres of land to establish the rail network in this country, and
now they are abandoning Canada by the actions that they are taking to divert
their traffic and the job opportunities through the U.S. So we have to take the steps within this
country and stand united to make sure that we protect the rail transportation
jobs within this province.
When I referenced the fact that we are going to have
problems on the rail line, the abandonment study that was done in 1987, Mr.
Acting Speaker, you can take a look at the statistics relating to the main‑track
derailments. The report that came out
just recently shows that there has been a lack of maintenance on that line that
has led to further derailments, some very serious derailments, some of them
involving chemical spills. Many of the
members of the public are not aware of these spills or these derailments, but I
have witnessed them personally and the devastation that they have caused to
parts of northern Ontario.
So I ask all members of the House, Mr. Acting Speaker, to
stand united on this matter and to take a position that we will no longer stand
for the erosion of rail jobs in the province of Manitoba, and ask the federal
government to live up to their commitment of the 1993 election wherein they
called for the restoration of Manitoba as the transportation hub of
Canada. Thank you.
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation):
Mr. Acting Speaker, I think the member who introduced the resolution is
very right, and it is rather timely that this would come up at this particular
time, given comments coming from the federal Minister of Transport over the
three speeches that he has made in recent days.
* (1720)
Clearly, the rail industry is at a very significant
crossroads. As I mentioned in Question
Period today, as the Minister of Transportation, the thing that really disturbs
me about the comments that have been made is that they have been made pretty
much in isolation. There has been no
discussion with provincial ministers, current or that preceded me. He has laid out no plan of how he is going to
attack the initiatives he has laid out.
One could easily argue from the strong and repeated statements made that
he is on a very committed course, because the first speech was the kind you had
to read between the lines; the second speech, there seemed to be ambiguity
between ministers in Ottawa, backtracked the next day; and then the next time
in Toronto, bang, it was head on. The
statements were the same. They were
added to. There was a very clear
statement that they were going to terminate an awful lot of activities that we
have known traditionally to be part of the transportation activity in not only
western Canada but all of Canada.
I think we must recognize though, just to talk about the
reality we face, that we are in a global trading environment. We have to compete globally. We have CUSTA and NAFTA that are a part of reality
now. I think the trading changes, the
movement of goods would have changed‑‑were changing before these
agreements were signed, would have changed pretty much to the same extent today
without those agreements. We are clearly
moving more and more in a north‑south trade pattern, as we have talked
about repeatedly here. Since 1990 our
trade patterns in the U.S. have increased by some 40 percent.
Everybody in the economic world, everybody who is out in
the private sector trying to create jobs and earn a living, does realize very
clearly they must be competitive. We
must be able to supply the customer with the product and supply it at a price‑‑and
I have heard repeatedly, as I have said in this House, there are more and more
commodities moving, whether you talk to the railroads, whether you talk to the
trucking industry.
Clearly, things are changing, and the member for Transcona
(Mr. Reid), if I understand what he is saying repeatedly, in this resolution,
in the nature of the questions he asks, the process of discussion through
Estimates, he wants to save jobs for the sake of jobs. He says we must act to save jobs. I interpret that to mean we must just stop
the world and freeze it where it is and those jobs are guaranteed no matter
what.
That is not the real world anymore, and if we are going to
save jobs, it has to be because they are there to perform a service‑‑produce
a product, move a product, whatever‑‑for somebody who is willing to
pay the price for the service provided that that job is involved with. That is the reality we must live with. That is the changing world, and we all want
to pursue that objective.
I think if that member talks to his counterparts who are in
government in Ontario, Saskatchewan or B.C., he will find that they have woken
up to that reality too. We can talk
about saving jobs, but the best way to save them is if they are doing something
that is productive and everybody along the way is making a small profit, that
there is a product produced that somebody wants to buy.
That is the global economic system that has withstood the
test of time. It is a system that is
effective. It does create efficiency,
and it is the way of the current time and certainly the way of the future.
An Honourable Member: Sixty‑million‑dollar budget for
Transcona Shops . . . .
Mr. Findlay: There is a big budget in Transcona Shops, as
the member says, for jobs, yes. But what
is the new reality to make sure those jobs are there? That is the issue.
If we are moving commodities more and more north‑south‑‑there
will always be the continuous east‑west.
Winnipeg and Manitoba always will be a hub, I think more of a hub in the
future than they have been in the past.
And if you have two rail companies in this country, both of which have
certainly experienced serious financial problems‑‑because I do not
think they really managed in the context of understanding the realities that
were about them and that they had to face, that is why there is difficulty
there.
Now, if we can say, everything must stay the way it is,
nothing will change in the railway companies‑‑I have been told that
technically they are bankrupt. And would
we not be in a terrible position if they closed the doors? I mean, that is a reality. If you are bankrupt, you close the doors. One can say some provinces are in that
position. Some can say the federal
government is in that position. Even
though that is unlikely to happen, it is a fundamental reality. It could happen. So we must make adjustments to allow the rail
industry, the truck industry and the airline industry to compete and be
profitable in today's economic environment.
That does mean change.
As I look at the rail industry, it is rather astounding
that activities in the rail industry in western Canada are subsidizing
activities in eastern Canada. That is
where all the people are. That is where
all the production, manufacturing is happening.
Yet we are subsidizing them. Now,
I can understand why eastern Canada wants to have two railroads. They want the competition. Absolutely, the Transportation Act of 1987
promoted competition, and we want to see competition.
The railroads are in a very difficult time, and in many
senses it is a parallel to what we were talking about about a year ago in the
airline industry. You had two major
companies fighting with each other, one of them or both of them potentially
going to go broke. Over the course of
time, solutions that were not apparent at the beginning were found as long as
you kept talking and looking and analyzing options. I think it is fair to say on this day that
Canadian Airlines and Air Canada and Gemini all have a much more potentially
good future than they had a year ago.
They got some new alignments and new arrangements, and they are looking
at the world in a different fashion than they were a year ago when they wanted
to kill each other.
Today you have CN and CP in the same scenario. I do not agree with the federal minister
that, as he states, the dream is dead or‑‑here it is‑‑the
future of the rail industry is uncertain, is gripped by problems of
overregulation, mismanagement, overcapacity, financial losses, archaic work
practices and out‑of‑date legislation, and the survival of the
national passenger rail system in Canada is very much in question.
That is a lot of pretty strong statements. One might agree with some capacity of it,
some components of it, and as I am trying to say, there is some economic
reality we must address, they must address because we, as a country, cannot
allow continual losses to happen in the industry. I think there are answers along the way in
how CN and CP can function in this country to create jobs, more modern jobs,
more high‑tech jobs. There are
great opportunities in terms of the intermodalism between particularly truck
and rail and I think with air cargo movement in the future. As we talked about the northern distribution
alliance, the rail is a very significant part of it to distribute from here the
goods that come in through that‑‑to that potential system in the
future.
We can expand the jobs in transportation here but not by
having a closed mind on adapting to the future.
We cannot close our mind. We must
be innovative and find what commodities are moving from where to where. What is the cost efficiency for us to play a
role in it? Those are the kinds of jobs
that will survive the test of the future.
An Honourable Member: The equipment is stretched to the limits
now. We cannot get enough equipment.
Mr. Findlay: The member says the equipment is stretched to
the limit. That is in the current time
frame that he is looking at. There are
ways and means to make things more efficient, and we have had a shortage of
commodities moving in the past. We had
all kinds of equipment parked‑‑[interjection] That is exactly the
reality. He just identified it. Everybody is working with a smaller bottom
line. Yes, more goods are moving, and
there are less jobs. That is exactly
what is going on everywhere in society. [interjection] The member blames free
trade. If it was not for free trade, a
lot more downsizing would have happened.
There is no question.
CP now owns a lot of lines in the United States, and that
is moving goods out of western Canada, eastern Canada into the northeastern
United States. Particularly, it creates
jobs that are happening in Canada, and they are doing the services in the
United States. That adaptation‑‑[interjection]
Mr. Acting Speaker, free trade is an absolute reality. You can argue against it all you want in
opposition, but it is a fact of life. It
was happening anyway. Those agreements
did not change much because the normal process of economic development,
marketplace orientation was happening and will continue to happen, and we have
been very successful in that context.
The trucking industry has evolved very effectively under deregulation,
very competitively. In Winnipeg, we have
six of the 10 national trucking firms headquartered here. That is very significant, part of the hub of
transportation in Canada.
An example I heard the other day, just to show you how
important we are as a hub, is people look at how to do things more cost effectively. An oil rig drilling operation in Texas had a
job to drill in northern Russia. They
had to get the rig from Texas to Russia.
You know what they did? They
trucked it from Texas up to Winnipeg, put it on a plane and flew it over. Now that is a good example of the northern
distribution alliance principle being played out.
How many more times can we do that? How can the people in the transportation
industry be innovative to bring people forward to take advantage of the
opportunities we have? If we offer a
service that is attractive at a price that is attractive, that is how we will
attract the business and that is how we will attract the jobs. There has been some argument and discussion
about activity at the airport overnight in terms of freight moving in overnight‑‑Purolator
contract. That is 40 more jobs at the
airport. That is significant. That is how you create jobs. You be innovative and do things that attract
somebody to buy your service or use your carrier, whatever the situation is. That is the reality of the future.
* (1730)
Now I think Mr. Young has gone a wee bit too far. If we are going to have change‑‑and
I know we are going to have change‑‑let us have some meaningful
discussion and consultation with the provinces, with the industry, instead of
going out boom, bang, crash with three speeches that get harder and harder and
leave the rest of us wondering, well, what is coming next. He is talking about taking away subsidies,
and the reality is some of these subsidies will have to diminish over time but
not be removed overnight. It is
absolutely the wrong way to approach it, because it creates pandemonium in the
system. Natural progressive adjustment
is part of the world we live in.
The resolution addresses the CN‑CP merger. I know the members would like to see it stop,
but the process‑‑and he talks about democracy and we have a
democratic process in this country‑‑nothing will happen till they
have gone before the Bureau of Competition, and certainly the National
Transportation Agency will have to approve it.
We have requested that they hold public hearings in the process. No question about it.
Mr. Acting Speaker, in this process we are certainly
concerned about the employment reductions that might result from this, but also
are looking at the opportunities of employment increases as we become more of a
hub. Let us say, the Newco idea comes
forward, CN, CP work in the West. This
is more of a hub where those three railroads interconnect, and then Burlington
Northern, north‑south, interconnect here in Winnipeg. I think there are more jobs to be created in
that fashion.
The member for Transcona (Mr. Reid) does not want to hear
that optimism. One does not want to
develop opportunity around where opportunity has a chance of developing.
[interjection] Well, the member is worried about Detroit headquarters. Well, why did Canadian Pacific have their
Canadian custom service centre located in Winnipeg? That is positive; that is optimism.
There are job losses across the country, and the Leader of
the Opposition (Mr. Doer) wants to downgrade that. They put 210 jobs in Winnipeg, and he wants
to scoff at that. I mean, a job is a
job. Those are the modern, high‑tech
jobs.
An Honourable Member: How many running trades did you lose that
same year, the CP?
Mr. Findlay: Well, the member obviously wants to say, let
all of the losses happen, we will do nothing about trying to find opportunity,
and the member says, you let them go.
The marketplace will dictate whether jobs are needed in the current time
in the future; there is no question about that.
If he is going to keep his head in the sand, yes, jobs will be lost, and
the new technology jobs will not happen in Winnipeg.
The telecommunications area is where they have been
happening, and I am very happy that CP is here doing it. I would hope that we have an opportunity to
attract CN to do that in the future, modern, high‑tech jobs. Mr. Acting Speaker, we are certainly
concerned about the economic and social consequences for the communities along
the rail lines if the rail line disappears somewhere in eastern Canada. There are certainly consequences for their
ground transportation.
We are certainly concerned about the inevitable return to a
monopoly system because we believe in competition. The National Transportation Act of 1987
certainly opened up opportunities for competition. We have achieved more competition in the rail
industry, and we want that to continue.
I do not think that the current option that is being
discussed, total merger in the east, nothing else‑‑it will be the
final result. We must be involved in a constructive
process of discussion to find out what option will work for the survival of
those two rail lines. The member for
Transcona probably wants to see their total demise and both of them to go
bankrupt, which would never serve the interest of Manitoba.
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster): It is with pleasure that I am going to stand
and put a few words on the record with respect to this particular resolution
that is introduced from the member for Transcona (Mr. Reid).
Let me start off by talking a bit about my own personal
background within the CN and experiences that I have had with CP. I would like to assure, in particular, the
member for Transcona that the concern that he expresses and, I take it,
expressing on behalf of his political party is no more than the concern that
members of the Liberal caucus, in particular myself, have with CN and with CP.
I know, for example, my family in itself has had many
opportunities, jobs, within CN and the CN yards, starting from my grandfather
and brothers of my grandfather's, other generations of my family that have had
the opportunity to work with CN.
With respect to the Weston Shops under the former riding or
prior to the last boundary redistribution, I represented both sides of the CP
or the Weston Shops between Logan Avenue and Selkirk, if you like, and now I
represent, I guess, it would be the northern side of the Weston Shops, if you
like.
I have had opportunity to talk to both CP and CN
workers. My own campaign manager in my
campaign, the one who is promoting the Canadian Auto Workers union is someone I
am talking to all of the time, and we express the concerns in terms of the CN
and CP and the future of the railway industry in Canada.
Mr. Acting Speaker, I guess if you ask the question, is
there a need for change, I would answer that by saying, yes, there is a need
for change. I think if you take a look,
not only at the railway industry, if you take a look at all the different
industries that are out there, even governments and Crown corporations, health
institutions, you are seeing a considerable amount of change, not because it
is, in many cases, a choice; it is reality.
You have to be able to look into the future and make some necessary
changes in order to ensure that the survival of those industries is going to be
there.
It was interesting, the minister was talking about
opportunities, or potential opportunities, if you like, and the member for
Transcona (Mr. Reid) from his seat made reference to let us not fool anybody or
who are you trying to fool? Mr. Acting
Speaker, I do not believe that the member for Transcona wants to hear about
what could be potential positive outcomes of any sort of negotiations or any
sorts of change, that the status quo is what the member for Transcona wants to
see.
Mr. Acting Speaker, I sincerely believe that if the status
quo were to prevail, if the member for Transcona's debate that he provided for
today was to succeed and nothing was done, that is not going to be in the best
interests of the workers in Transcona that not only live in Transcona but live
throughout the city of Winnipeg and, in fact, in some parts of rural
Manitoba. I have an uncle who works over
at the CN who lives out in Ste. Anne.
This affects not only people who live in Transcona; this affects people
throughout the province of Manitoba in terms of jobs.
Mr. Acting Speaker, I believe that there is a
responsibility of all members of this Chamber to acknowledge the fact that
there is that need for change, and when we acknowledge that fact, that does not
mean that there is going to be a merger.
If you read the resolution, you would be convinced that the
member for Transcona is saying that there will be a merger, that there is no
doubt whatsoever. That might fit the
member for Transcona's own political agenda, but that does not necessarily mean
that that is going to be the eventual outcome.
* (1740)
I would refer to what the minister made reference to. I remember the discussions because I attended
the rally that was sponsored from the unions with Canadian Airlines and Air
Canada, and we were hearing then a lot of concern being dealt with, and saying,
well, we do not want to see a merger because if we see a merger that is going
to be a loss of jobs, not only a loss of jobs at Canadian Airlines. It was being said by the Liberals then in
opposition; it was being said by the New Democrats also. Not only did we see through a new
administration the preservation of Canadian Airlines and Air Canada, we also
saw a government that took the initiative to protect jobs at Gemini, and I have
more faith in the current federal administration than the previous federal
administration in terms of doing what it can to ensure that the jobs are, in
fact, being preserved in the province of Manitoba, as it was alluded to earlier
in terms of Manitoba having that 12 percent of those rail line jobs when we
only have 4 percent of the population.
I hope, and I will lobby‑‑and by lobbying,
there are many different ways of lobbying, such as putting comments on the
record this afternoon, as I have done‑‑my members of Parliament,
and I would trust that, in fact, they will address this issue and come down
with what is in the best interest of all Manitobans.
It was interesting, my colleague for The Maples (Mr.
Kowalski) had handed me an article from the Progressive Railroading magazine, I
guess it is, from May 1994, and it makes reference where it says, and I
quote: Without considerable cost
reduction, CN, which already pays $200 million per year in interest on long‑term
debt, would see that debt double by 1998.
Mr. Acting Speaker, what this does is, again, it reinforces
that there is, whether one wants to believe this particular article or chooses
not to believe this article, I would argue that there is that need for change, and
what would be a better way of trying to accomplish that change than to try to
get some form of a level of discussion that would be more apolitical if the
member for Transcona (Mr. Reid) and the Minister of Highways and Transportation
(Mr. Findlay) are true to what they say inside the Chamber in terms of their
sincerity towards protecting the jobs, protecting the railway industries in the
province of Manitoba, or maybe that there is something we can do to ensure that
that debate, that positive debate is, in fact, occurring, because what is most
important to me, and I believe my caucus, is that the industry as a whole is
healthy in the province of Manitoba and that as elected officials, we are doing
what we can to ensure that those jobs are being protected wherever it is
possible.
That is the primary reason why I was wanting to stand up
and put a few words on the record, Mr. Acting Speaker. The current resolution, its form, I could not
support for a number of different reasons, but I do believe in listening to the
responses that there is something that maybe we can do as a legislative
Chamber, and that is, in fact, what I am going to be suggesting in the form of
an amendment.
So at this point in time, I would like to move, seconded by
the member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs)
THAT the resolution of the member from Transcona (Mr. Reid)
be amended by deleting all of the words following the first "WHEREAS"
and replacing them with the following:
WHEREAS the railways are of great importance as an identifying
and unifying element of Canada; and
WHEREAS the importance of the railways to Canadians and to
Manitobans has not diminished to the present day; and
WHEREAS the city of Winnipeg remains a major rail centre
with significant employment derived therefrom; and
WHEREAS significant changes are likely to occur in the rail
industry in the near future; and
WHEREAS it is desirable that this government be apprised of
the issues surrounding the railways so as to be able to respond effectively to
changes in the railway industry;
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT the Legislative Assembly of
Manitoba urge this government to form an all‑party committee for the
consideration of issues surrounding the railways and the future of the rail
industry in the province of Manitoba.
(Mr. Speaker in the
Chair)
Point of Order
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): A point of order, Mr. Speaker, I believe that
the amendment proposed by the member for Inkster changes the original
resolution, so to be out of order. The
original RESOLVED is for this Assembly to take a clear position on this merger,
and the member for Inkster clearly demonstrates by his amendment that it
clearly changes the intent of the original resolution before this Assembly.
Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, on the same point of order,
understanding in terms of what the Leader of the New Democratic Party has just
said, I do believe there have been resolutions that have been introduced into
this House over the last five and a half years, six years, that I have been
here where we have seen much more significant changes to the resolution, but I
would argue, of course, that what we are talking about here is the railway
industry and that this resolution deals specifically with the importance of the
railway industry as the other one does and, in fact, offers an alternative that
would see a better level of debate which would be in the best interests of all
Manitobans, and I would hope that the New Democratic Leader and the government
would support it.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. On the point of order raised by the‑‑are
you up on the same point of order? [interjection] On that same point of order?
[interjection] No, not on the point of order, okay. Are you up on the point of order? Oh, okay.
On the point of order raised by the honourable Leader of
the Official Opposition (Mr. Doer), I am informing the honourable member that
at this point in time, he does not have a point of order. There is no point of order there.
Having had an opportunity to quickly peruse the amendment
of the honourable member for Inkster, I am going to take this amendment under
advisement at this time, and I will come back to the House with a ruling on
this one at a later date.
* * *
Mr. Jack Penner
(Emerson): Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker, for
allowing me the opportunity to put a few comments on this important resolution
on the record.
I want to say that the honourable member for Transcona (Mr.
Reid), I believe, truly does have the best interests of his constituency and
employment opportunities of his constituency at heart, and I commend him for
supporting the workers at the Transcona Shops and other transportation industry
employees in this city as well as in this province.
I want to say to you, Mr. Speaker, that I commend the
honourable member for Transcona for continually rising in the House and
speaking in support of their position.
However, I think one must realize that in this debate and the resolution
he has put forward and some of the points he makes in this resolution are
basically stating what the NDP traditionally has done when they are not in
government‑‑that is, espouse the position of the status quo.
That has been traditionally the position of the NDP party,
not only in this province but in many other provinces, and I think one only has
to look at the record and the history of governments, be they in this province
of Manitoba or be they in Ontario, Saskatchewan or B.C., that we realize
quickly, once these parties in these provinces take power, they change their
positions dramatically. Whether we look
at the health care system and the debates going on in the education system in
some of the provinces to the west of us and other areas, I think we can truly
reflect on the positions taken previously compared to the realities of the day
when you are governing.
I want to today probably take a bit of a different approach
to this debate than has been taken by some because I commend the Transport
Minister Young for some of the statements that he has made in some of the
speeches that he has made lately, because in his conclusions he states that the
Government of Canada will continue to meet its Constitution legally and
fiduciary obligations with respect to transportation.
* (1750)
I think that is an encouraging statement coming from a
federal transportation minister. When he
states that Transport Canada will not abandon its responsibility to ensure that
safe and secure transportation standards and rules and regulations will be
maintained, I think that is an encouraging statement. When he says, I believe it is possible to
promote the national interest at the same time as protecting the interests of
the national taxpayer of Canada, I think that is encouraging from a transportation
minister's point of view.
He says, however, that shippers must have an efficient and
integrated transportation system. I
think that statement is one that leads the honourable member for Transcona to
put forward the kind of resolution that he has put before us, because that in
itself raises a number of questions.
However, some of the questions that we raise and the issues that
Minister Young raises in his speeches are not only questionable, but they are, in
part, downright scary, and the grain producers of western Canada must have some
very, very deep concerns when they hear the minister say: The future of the rail industry is
uncertain. It is gripped by problems of overregulation,
mismangement, overcapacity, financial losses, archaic work practices, and out‑of‑date
legislation.
He says that the
survival of a national passenger rail system in Canada is very much in
question. Towns such as Churchill and
all the small communities from The Pas to Churchill certainly must have fear in
their hearts when they hear that kind of statement.
He says that the St. Lawrence Seaway is losing money and
losing business year after year and cannot continue to operate under the status
quo.
Does that mean that he is also seriously considering
shutting down the support system within the St. Lawrence Seaway? That lends a scary aspect to the debate from
the agricultural community's perspective in western Canada and specifically in
this province of Manitoba, because not only have we relied traditionally on the
ability of the St. Lawrence Seaway to move our goods, raw product as well as
finished goods, out of this province in the most efficient manner, but we have
relied on the ability of that system to bring goods back into western Canada in
an economical manner. So it is a two‑way
street.
He says that there is a continued, and will be a continued,
shift towards north‑south trade corridors in North America, and I think
that leads us to the reality of the debate.
If we take the minister's statement at its worth, and I
have no reason to believe that he is not an honest man, if we believe what he
said in Toronto, that he will pull out of the system $650 million out of the
railway system subsidization, that in itself, with the statement made that
there is a continuing shift towards north‑south corridors, would lead me
to believe that the federal Liberals in Ottawa are prepared not only to
withdraw the funding of the Crow benefit that we have traditionally known in
its entirety, but are willing to look at shifting transportation policy in a
north‑south direction instead of an east‑west direction.
Now what does that do for Manitoba? I am not quite as pessimistic as the
honourable member from Transcona (Mr. Reid) is in that sense. I believe that lends some opportunities for
the expansion of not only the railway system in Manitoba, but, in saying that,
I am being very selfish for the province of Manitoba, because I think that in
itself can direct some growth in the province of Manitoba. I think that is detrimental to the province
of Saskatchewan, and probably somewhat detrimental to the province of Alberta.
We do have the Burlington Northern entering Winnipeg, and
we do have the CP and CN Rail entering Winnipeg from both the east and the west
side. If you take that cross section of
traffic and you assume that much of the grain could flow south down the
Mississippi and into the Gulf of Mexico into an export position, which would be
no more costly, maybe even less costly, than shipping down the St. Lawrence or
through Vancouver without a subsidized transportation system.
You might, in fact, encourage more job creation in the city
of Winnipeg and the province of Manitoba if you did that because you would draw
from both sides, both east‑west, into a north‑south transportation
mode.
That is what Minister Young calls futuristic thinking and
maybe it is. I have for years been a
proponent of looking at the Red River corridor, for instance, in a much more
integrated way than many of us have for many years. I think we should take a real hard look at
it, at doing away with much of the border when it comes to transport of goods
and commerce. I think we should build on
our capacities on both sides, and that, in itself, could largely be
accomplished by a better north‑south transportation system, if, in fact,
Mr. Espy, the Agriculture Secretary in the United States, would agree that we
would not inflict upon the American agricultural communities any hardships by
moving our goods north and south.
That, of course, would require that the Americans would
have to concede that the Export Enhancement Program that they have used to dump
large amounts of their raw ag commodities into the marketplace would have to be
eliminated.
I think there is a much, much broader debate than we are
willing to enter into in this Chamber that will emanate out of this whole
process. I think we should be open
enough in our approach to look at the total commercialization of the total
system and how we use this total system to add value to what we really do well
in this province. We do have some
tremendous natural resources we can utilize to add value, to create a job
opportunity, that we have not utilized up to now.
If we integrate the transportation system well enough and
if we do not use the scare tactics that some would like to use, if we set them
aside and look at the whole initiative in a positive sense, I think there are
things we can achieve for Manitoba that have not been visible yet.
I certainly would encourage all members of the Legislature
to take a very hard look at it, at the integration of the total transportation
system and add some efficiencies and values to the transportation system,
because it would serve not only the agricultural community, it would serve the
industrial community. It would serve all
of society in a much better way.
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. When this matter is again before the House,
the honourable member will have three minutes remaining.
The hour being 6 p.m., this House is now adjourned and
stands adjourned until 1:30 p.m. tomorrow (Thursday).