LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA
Tuesday, July 5, 1994
The House met at 1:30
p.m.
PRAYERS
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
PRESENTING PETITIONS
Canada Post--Unsolicited Mail
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley):
Mr. Speaker, I beg to present the petition of M. Vandale, T. Tomasz, J.
Hamilton and others requesting the Legislative Assembly to request the federal
minister responsible for Canada Post to consider bringing in legislation requiring
all unsolicited mail and flyers use recycled materials.
MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS AND TABLING OF
REPORTS
Renewing Education--New Directions
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): Mr.
Speaker, I would like to table for the House a document called Renewing
Education: New Directions, A Blueprint for Action.
Mr. Speaker, I also have a ministerial statement.
It gives me great pleasure tor rise in the House today to
present the government's plan for educational renewal, and it is entitled
Renewing Education: New Directions, A Blueprint for Action. It presents the
framework for change for the renewal of our education system. building a secure
future for our children and our province requires a solid education. We need tod everything possible to ensure
that our children are prepared to be successful in today's competitive world.
Kindergarten through senior years is the most crucial time
for skill development. The education received at this level is fundamental to
each student's ability to prosper both at the post-secondary level and in the
workforce. Government must take the lead in renewal. Our focus will be on
literacy since it is the foundation of everything that an individual requires
to become a lifelong learner. Ensuring all students can read, write, thing and
compute at a high level is the goal of the educational renewal process. To make
this happen, we will promote greater and more effective decision making at the
grassroots of education, the schools and the communities.
New Directions is a framework for action set out in six
priority areas. They are essential learning, standards and evaluation, school
effectiveness, parental-community involvement, distance education and
technology, teacher training.
Together, parents and communities play a vital role in
education. Parents, as a child's first teacher, establish the foundation for
lifelong learning in their children. Many parents and community members want to
be more involved in shared decision making about education programming and
other school matters.
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Actions are required to enable parents to have a more
significant role as educational partners and to create ways for all parents to
become involved in their children's schools and schooling. Therefore, we will
require schools to establish advisory councils for school leadership comprised
of parents and community members as requested by those same parents. We will
require schools to include advisory councils for school leadership in
developing school plans and divisional school budgets. We will enable parental
choice, within limits, in selecting the public school best suited to their
child's learning requirements in order to increase flexibility of parental
choice within the public school system. We will state fundamental rights and
expectations of parents related to their individual children. We will define
basic or essential education and outline the core subject areas that will be
mandatory along with those subjects that will be compulsory, kindergarten to
Senior 4.
When choices are being offered by the school, the local
community will be involved. Within all subjects, the required foundation skill
areas will be literacy and communication, problem solving, human relations,
technology. We will also enhance educational standards and evaluation to ensure
that all students in Manitoba can read, write, think and compute at a high
level. Standards of student achievement will be developed in relations to what
students need to know and be able to do at the end of Grade 3, Grade 6, Senior
1, Senior 4.
We will move in a direction which sees effective learning
environments established uniformly and consistently in early, middle and senior
schools throughout Manitoba. To do so requires us to acknowledge that schools
are the most important organizational unit in the education system. Principals
play a key role in all effective schools. Schools must be responsible and
accountable to parents, the community and the ministry.
Consequently, we will designate principals as the primary instructional
leaders in schools and state their fundamental responsibilities and roles. We
will require schools to develop and communicate yearly school plans. We will
state the fundamental responsibility and roles of teachers, school boards and
the minister, and we will initiate school reviews when necessary.
Technology is rapidly changing our worlds. Advances in
technology and the many ways it is used occur at a continuing, escalating pace.
to remain competitive in the global economy, Manitobans must be aware not only
of how to use existing technology, but must also learn how to use technology in
new ways, to solve old and new problems and create new opportunities.
To shape and co-ordinate this, we will proceed with
technology and distance education projects which provide professional
development opportunities for teachers. We will establish a provincial advisory
council on distance education and technology. Teachers, including principals,
have a pivotal role in ensuring that students receive education and training
that provides them with the knowledge and skills required to participate in and
contribute to a vigorous and prosperous society.
As a result of their direct contact with students, teachers
have the greatest impact on the teaching and learning that a student
experiences in the classroom and in the school. It is crucial, therefore, that
teachers and principals be provided with the tools required to deliver relevant
educational programs to Manitoba students. it is also critical that the tools teachers
and principals acquire remain relevant and current as education progresses.
With these factors in mind, teacher certification in the province of Manitoba
will be reviewed and reformed.
This document outlines new directions, priorities and
initial actions. In the fall, we will build upon these important beginnings by
defining specific time frames, policy changes, regulatory amendments and other
implementation details. Much of this change will be driven by the actions of
our communities and by our collective willingness to continually innovate and
improve the education system for the benefit of all Manitobans.
It would be more prudent to make changes in an integrated,
planned approach over several years, so that all our citizens know that by the
turn of the century, our education system will truly be the best in the world.
I invite all partners in education to work with me to renew education in the
province of Manitoba. Together we can meet our obligation to present and future
generations of Manitobans.
Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker.
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Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition):
I would like to thank the minister for tabling his statement in the Chamber
today. He has certainly used a lot of the right words in the document, but our
criticism is the fact that over the last six and a half years, they have not
performed any of the deeds necessary to get our education into the 21st
Century.
We see these words, Mr. Speaker, as words to get this
government past the next election, not to get Manitobans into the next century
in terms of getting our kids ready.
The government has made three promises in education. They
have promised to keep the funding level of education at the inflation rate.
They have broken that promise. They have promised to provide grassroots
democracy and autonomy to school boards and school divisions. They have broken
that promise. They have promised in 1988 to revise the education acts of
Manitoba, and they have not fulfilled that promise, so when we see a statement
today in the House, we will evaluate the government's performance on its deeds,
certainly not on its words.
Mr. Speaker, provinces across Canada re far ahead of this
government in terms of real action at the education area. Ontario has just
produced an action plan to deal with violence in schools, something we see
wanting from this document.
British Columbia produced three years ago a strategy to
deal with protocol dealing with kids who are involved in the law and involved
in social services and involved in the education system, again, nothing we see
from this government in terms of a real action plan.
Certainly, we see a total vision of curriculum available in
other provinces, detailed curriculum strategies to take the provinces into the
next century. We do not see that in this document. We see more consultations.
We see more deliberations. We see more studies. We see more good intents. We
see good words, but no deeds.
The words about parents we certainly support. We have been
calling on this government to involve parents for the last six and a half
years. The government's words ring hollow to us when they rolled back all the
rights of the democratically elected school boards and made only one school
division with the Premier (Mr. Filmon) and rolled back the autonomy of the
grassroots. They have no credibility because they have done nothing for
grassroots, and they have done nothing to involve parents for six and a half
years, as we have called for.
Mr. Speaker, we believe that education and our schools are
so important for our kids and our future. It is the first place that many kids
can have the opportunity--their family is the first place and their school
system is the second are of contact where kids can get the opportunities in
life that are so important--the training, the skills, the absolute input to
move forward and be successful.
Kids need a healthy school system. They need a safe school
system. There is a serious problem in our schools in terms of safety in our
schools which is not addressed by this document. They need structure. They need
basics. They need benchmarks, but they also need a curriculum that is
articulated and a curriculum that will take our children into the 21st Century,
a curriculum in a changing world that provides a board level of skills and a
broad level of services to take out children into the next century.
We also need to invest in our teachers. You cannot on the
one hand expect teachers to go ahead and forward with new curriculum changes
and on the other hand decimate the curriculum programs. Just like distance
education, they decimated the Distance Education branch and then they talk
about advisory committees today on distance education. The words ring hollow to
the actions of the government and the three ministers who have held that
portfolio over the last six and a half years.
Mr. Speaker, we believe that there is something
fundamentally wrong in our society when kids cannot get physical education and
drama and music because there have been cutbacks in funding in our education
system, the same week we put a cheque out for $5.3 million to the Winnipeg Jets
hockey team.
How do we justify the morality of decisions that are being
made by this government of cutbacks in one area and operating blank cheques in
another area? That is not an education vision. That is not a fair vision for
the future.
Mr. Speaker, this government has had three priorities in
education. One has been to reverse the grassroots democracy of school boards
which they have done through legislation. Two, they have had the vision of
moving toward a two-tiered education system where certain kids who have
financial abilities get better education and better opportunities than other
children. The third criterion or priority this government has had is that
education is a cost.
Mr. speaker, we
believe the public education system is not a cost. We believe it is an
essential investment and we believe that we have to really provide an action
plan, a real action plan to invest in our kids so they are able to meet the
challenges of the 21st Century. This government has failed to do that and we
believe our kids deserve much better. Thank you very much.
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, we, of course, are going to read more
thoroughly as time will permit the blueprint that has been tabled for the first
time here today by the Minister of Education (Mr. Manness), so I do not intend
to purport to be able to go through it line by line and indicate what is
positive and what is negative.
From the minister's early comments introducing this, I must
say, and as the Leader of the Opposition has already indicated, certain thrusts
of this blueprint look very positive indeed and long, long overdue. The
reaching out to the parents and the community members in new and innovative
ways in a spirit of partnership, trying to build a community effort to better
serve out students and their parents in our school system, is long overdue.
Around this country, increasingly jurisdictions are moving to involve parents
in new and different ways and the responses are good. It is an appropriate way to
move and it is something that our caucus has been outspoken on for a long time,
including placing before this House various resolutions and bills to that
effect.
Mr. Speaker, what is interesting about this is that it has
been six and a half years since this government took office, and what is
interesting, if you look at the minister's comments, he talks about
specifically that all citizens will know that by the turn of the century our
education system will truly be the best in the world. Coincidentally, that is
about six years from now and this government has been in for six and a half
years. Had they started with any idea what to do about education in this
province, we would have that education system now.
Instead, in their two terms in government, what they have
done is everything possible to erode and undercut quality public education in
this province. The result today is that on the road, apparently, to Damascus
they have had a conversion and they are going to come up with a blueprint for
action, they say. Where has the action been to invest in our children? Why, for
six years, has this government seen and portrayed education as a social cost
rather than an investment? That is the way they have portrayed it and their
actions--and this is laced with that word "action". Well, their
actions in the last six years have spoken louder than the words today can get
rid of. Those actions have meant that more and more people are losing faith in
our public education system and moving toward independent schools. That is the
wrong way to go.
Mr. Speaker, I was particularly interested to see that this
talks about working together in partnerships. Where has that spirit been in the
last six and a half years? Why has this government and this minister, in his
short tenure in this position, done nothing but draw lines between the people
in our community who have an investment in education, draw lines between
teachers, trustees, government, parents and their children?
The approach of this government has been one of division,
and it has been an adversarial one. Today, they are reaping the results of that
attitude which is that we have a divided community. Surely, today we know more
than probably at any time in our history as a province that they key to
successful government is not just understanding that we need to change but
managing change, and you cannot manage change when you divide people.
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That is what the government has done for six and a half
years. Now they talk. Now they talk, when they will not have to implement this
in the next--they are talking about, in the fall we will come forward with time
frames; in the fall we will come forward with these things. Maybe we will have
a good education system by the turn of the century. Well, Mr. Speaker, that is
not good enough.
In conclusion, we will, as I have said, study each and
every recommendation that is put forward in this blueprint. What I look for
from this minister to do and, believe me, because of the last six and a half
years it is certainly not too late for him to turn the page and
perhaps--perhaps--that is what he is saying in this ministerial statement. We
will look forward to him turning and building bridges, but it is going to take
not just a change in policy but a change in attitude. Thank you.
* * *
Hon. Donald Orchard
(Minister of Energy and Mines): Mr. Speaker, I would like to table, on behalf
of the Manitoba Round Table on the Environment and Economy, the "What You
Told Us" document on energy.
INTRODUCTION OF BILLS
Bill 225--The Public Schools Amendment
Act (2)
Mr. Jack Penner
(Emerson): Mr. Speaker, I was
wondering whether you would petition the House for unanimous consent to
introduce Bill 225, The Public Schools Amendment Act, at this time, a private
members' bill.
Mr. Speaker: Is there leave of the House to allow the
honourable member of Emerson to introduce Bill 225, a private members' bill, at
this time?
Point of Order
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Second Opposition House Leader): On a point of order, it was brought to our
attention last night that the member was wanting to introduce a bill.
I think it should be noted that we are doing it on leave
for first reading so that we can at least hear where the government,
particularly the Minister of Education and Training (Mr. Manness), is coming
from on this particular bill, because it is somewhat, potentially, a very
controversial piece of legislation.
* * *
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. I am
simply asking a question now. Is there leave to allow the honourable member for
Emerson to introduce Bill 225 for first reading? Leave? [agreed]
Mr. Penner: Mr. Speaker, this
bill--
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The
honourable member, kindly move your bill first, sir and then you will have an
opportunity to tell us the purport of the bill.
Mr. Penner: I move, seconded by the
honourable member for St. Norbert (Mr. Laurendeau), (by leave) that Bill 225,
The Public Schools Amendment Act (2) (Loi no 2 modifiant la Loi sur les ecoles
publiques), be now introduced for first reading and read a first time.
Motion presented.
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Mr. Penner: Mr. Speaker, my comments
will not be very long. I have been asked continually by people across this
province why it is necessary for parents to petition annually school divisions
to allow for religious exercises and/or prayer to be held in schools, and the
annual requirement is what the concern has been.
This bill will negate the provision for annual petition
requirements and include in the bill a provision that will allow the parents to
sign a petition and/or sign a document indicating that their child would be
allowed to, or not allowed to, participate in religious exercise and/or prayer
in school.
Some of us happen to think that no matter what religious
denomination we are from or what part of society we are from, children should
have the same rights as adults do in public participation in either religious
exercises and/or prayer, specifically prayer in school.
Whether we as a society congregate and say prayers of
thanks, and we do as a society, or whether we ask for guidance, as we do in
this Chamber virtually daily, it is our right as human beings and as a society
to jointly do that. This bill simply would indicate that the parents have the
right to indicate when their children enter school to allow them to do this
over a period of time.
Motion agreed to.
Introduction of Guests
Mr. Speaker: Prior to Oral
Questions, may I direct the attention of honourable members to the Speaker's
Gallery, where we have with us this afternoon His Excellency Noboru Nakahira,
the Ambassador of Japan to Canada.
On behalf of all honourable members, I would like to
welcome you here this afternoon.
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
Education System
Violence Prevention Programs
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition):
Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Premier.
After six and a half years and three Ministers of
Education, we have a document here today. We have noted the three promises the
government has broken in terms of education over the last six and a half years.
Mr. Speaker, a concern we have had that we feel is
neglected in the statement from the government is the whole issue of violence
in our schoolrooms and the whole issue of safety of our students and teachers
in the classroom. It is certainly an issue that has developed more and more
with the parents we are listening to, with the teachers we are listing to, the
trustees and students.
Obviously, the funding reductions have put greater pressure
on the teacher-pupil ratio. Incident reports indicate an increase of some 43
percent in the number of weapons-related suspensions in the Winnipeg School
Division, and 47 percent of the teachers in the Manitoba Teachers' Society
report increased physical abuse situations in the classroom in the '93-93
school year.
I would ask the Premier, why is there no specific action
plan on dealing with a safe school environment, which is certainly a priority
of the parents who we are listening to across Manitoba?
*(1400)
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier):
Mr. Speaker, the issue of youth violence and violence in the schools is one
that obviously is of great concern to all of us.
I point out to the Leader of the Opposition that he throws
in gratuitous comments and remarks indiscriminately, such as alluding to the
fact that this has something to do with the pupil-teacher ratio.
The pupil-teacher ratio in Manitoba is one of the lowest,
if not the lowest in the entire country--
An Honourable Member: It used to be.
Mr. Filmon: Is, is, is.
So he has no solutions. He just has a lot of problems that
he throws on the table.
Our Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey) got together people
from a wide cross section of the community, teachers, parents, students
themselves, people from Corrections, counselling people, all sorts of people
throughout the community, Justice people, to work on solutions. They put
forward solutions, many of which are now being implemented.
We have always held ourselves pen to potential solutions to
be brought forward. [interjection] Mr. Speaker, we have always put ourselves
forward to solutions put forward by those who want to do that, in a positive
way, not just in a way of bringing it forward for political sake.
The Minister of Education (Mr. Manness) has met with the
stakeholders consistently over the last six months to listen to their concerns,
their ideas and their proposals on how to solve education.
Mr. Speaker, there is a difficultly, and we will be open
about it. The difficulty is that there are competing interests. I know from having
met with the Manitoba Teachers' Society executive four years in a row that the
only topic they consistently wanted to talk about was the amount of money that
was put into teachers' salaries--the only topic.
They did not want to talk about violence in the schools.
They did not want to talk about all of these educational issues. That is a
difficulty we are going to have to come to grips with. That is why this
minister is putting forth a constructive proposal, a proposal that involves all
people from the community, to try and solve problems, not try and make cheap
politics out of them, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Doer: I cannot count how many
gratuitous comments were in the Premier's response, Mr. Speaker.
The government has failed to deal with the whole issue of
violence in the schoolrooms. Talking to teachers, parents, pupils, it is a
major concern. To have us now referred to the Minister of Justice (Mrs.
Vodrey), who was the former Minister of Education who did nothing on the
protocol in Education, you will excuse
us if we are asking the Premier for some action and not for words.
Mr. Speaker, the government, the former Minister of
Education, had a proposal from the school trustees, the school teachers, the
principals, the superintendents across Manitoba, calling for an absolute
protocol to deal with cross government co-ordination to deal with problem children in our school system who are
also in contact with the health system, the social services system and other
systems. The government has promised us technical bureaucratic committees, but
has promised no action in the community.
When can we expect from the Premier, who has had three
Ministers of Education, a specific action plan and protocol plan that is in the
communities and in the community schools on behalf of our kids in those
communities?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, when we consult
with the stakeholders, with the parents, with the various people who have an
interest in education, we get criticized because we are not taking action. When
we take action, we get criticized by the Leader of the Opposition for not
consulting.
We have done both. We have listened, we have consulted, and
the minister is putting forth some concrete proposals that will indeed improve
the ability of our schools to function and will involve parents in the process
to a greater extent than they have ever been involved before
Parental Involvement
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition):
We have been calling for greater parental involvement in the education system
for the last six years [interjection] There are a lot of former Ministers of
Education now saying a lot of things across the way, Mr. Speaker, who did
nothing when they were in office.
In 1990, the Premier promised--we believe that some degree
of local autonomy is important to school boards in dealing with expenditures of
education funds, leaving them to make the decisions locally and make them
accountable to the local taxpayers and the local parents. consultation is
critical in ensuring this best education system with the local school boards.
Mr. Speaker, why should we believe the Premier today when
he talks about involving grassroots parents when he broke his promise to allow
for locally elected people in the school divisions to make the decisions back
in the pre-election period in 1990? His word was not good then. Why is it good
now?
Mr. Filmon: Mr. Speaker, all of the
decisions that are the responsibility of local school boards have been made by
local school boards.
I will not apologize to the Leader of the Opposition or to
anyone for having put in place legislation that limited the amount of increase
of taxes that they could put on the ratepayers of Manitoba. If he counts that
as unwarranted interference, he is out of touch with the people of Manitoba.
Home Care Program
Drug Policy
Mr. Dave Chomiak
(Kildonan):
Mr. Speaker, throughout the government's so-called health reform, the
government has said that patient care would not be impacted negatively by their
changes, yet we see line-ups getting longer, patients complaining in hospitals,
nurses laid off, home care cut back and more cuts coming down the road.
Can the minister explain--and we have government documents
that indicate it--why he might be placing home care clients in jeopardy by
invoking a new policy whereby home care attendants now administer drugs to
patients, rather than nurses who used to administer the drugs?
Hon. James McCrae
(Minister of Health):
Mr. Speaker, over the last number of months, there have been significant
developments in the whole area of home care and also in the whole are of the
responsibilities and roles of members of the nursing profession in which we
take great pleasure.
I am sure that the 18,000 or so recipients of home care in
Manitoba will be pleased to know that they have an independent arbiter when it
comes to disagreements between themselves and the program with regard to levels
of care, with regard to the kind of care they receive.
I know from talking with representatives of the Manitoba
Association of Registered Nurses that the announcement made by the Premier (Mr.
Filmon) at the nurses' convention with respect to nurse-managed care is
something they look forward to developing with us under the leadership of Dr.
Helen Glass and her committee.
So we have made significant steps forward, I suggest, in
the area of home care and in the area of changes, improvements in
opportunities, for members of the nursing profession.
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Speaker, does one
get the impression the minister is avoiding the answer?
Can the minister explain why the change in policy, why they
are tinkering with home care again? We know what happens when this government
tinkers with home care.
Why are they changing home care? This policy is frankly
illegal, Mr. Speaker, and I will table the medical services act which indicates
this policy of having home care attendants administer drugs is illegal. Why are
they doing this?
Mr. McCrae: Mr. Speaker, it is a
pretty important allegation the honourable member makes. I will be certain to
follow up and ensure, if something illegal is happening, that it be stopped,
and if it is not illegal, that the honourable member withdraw his comments in
that regard.
I make no apology also for putting the patient first. I
wish the honourable member would explain himself once in a while when he puts
his clearly defined, vest interest ahead of the interests of the patients in
this province. He is going to have a lot of explaining to do in that regard.
In any event, we also have a Home Care Advisory Council,
headed by Ms. Paula Keirstead, whose recommendations we look forward to hearing
and whose advise we look forward to hearing as they do their work, as well.
Again, I think that clients of the Home Care program would
be pleased to know that such an advisory council is in existence, and we are
inviting them, clients and staff of the program, to make their views known to
the advisory committee.
*(1410)
Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Speaker, the only
person first in this government's agenda was Connie Curran, who was first in
line to take her $4 million down to the States.
My final supplementary, Mr. Speaker: This policy was put in
place before the minister even put in place his advisory committees. Can the
minister outline whether or not he talked to the college of Physicians and
Surgeons, the Manitoba Association of Registered Nurses and all the other
regulatory bodies before they put this policy in place, which appear to be very
contradictory.
It is the government's own memo that indicates that they
have put this policy in place. Why are they jeopardizing patients' health
without consulting with the regulatory bodies that are supposed to be looking
after patients' health, Mr. Speaker?
Mr. McCrae: I told the honourable
member, Mr. Speaker, I would follow up on the one part of his question that
actually was a question, and that was about the legality and the
appropriateness of a particular procedure. I will follow that up, but when he
wants to talk about who comes first, Connie Curran always comes into his
questions.
He always forgets to mention Michael Decter every time he
mentions Connie Curran. Do not forget Michael Decter is the person who sat
around the table with the honourable member's colleagues when they were
government here in Manitoba. Then he left his $140,000-a-year deputy minister
position in Ontario to head up all the Connie Curran operations in Canada.
If the honourable member has any questions about Connie
Curran, he can ask Michael Decter, his friend.
Education System
Social Programs
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Education.
I have now had a chance to review briefly the document,
leaf through it. What was interesting--[interjection] Well, it did not take
long. It is not much. It did not take long.
My question for the Minister of Education: What has often
been said by teachers and trustees--they have told us, and I am sure they have
told the minister--is that, increasingly, health programs, social services
programs and other social programs which government offers are having to be
offered through the schools. These things are being loaded onto the school
system increasingly, and teachers and trustees are saying it is taking away
from their teaching ability, because they simply do not have the resources to
offer all of these programs.
That has been a constant theme in the last few years of
discussions with those groups. There is not anything that I can see in this
blueprint which speaks to that particular issue, and a real concern of all of
those involved in the education system in this province is, what is the role of
schools going to be as a community centre for the delivery of those services,
and where will the resources come from to deliver those services?
What partnerships, what reaching out is the minister going
to do to those various departments in his government, to those sectors of our
society, as they increasingly become participants in our education system?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, the member may want to pass
judgment on the length of the document, but I want to assure him that six
painstaking months were put into place with tremendous consultation across the
piece to arrive at the document that was tabled today, in keeping with what the
members, of course, have been calling for year after year, and that is, of
course, greater consultation.
I am troubled by the lack of statesmanship approach brought
forward by both Leaders of the opposition, because if anybody does any reading
with respect to education reform, one of the first commentaries is to stay away
from the politics of blame, because, of course, the politics of blame, in
reality, do not do an awful lot to help the students in the public school
system today. I have tried to do that.
Mr. Speaker, the focus on the document put into place today
is literacy. it is academic achievement. it is being able to comprehend and to
read and to write.
the question brought forward by the Leader of the Liberal
Party is no different from the question that had been put forward by his party
before, the member particulary for Crescentwood (Ms. Gray), who has asked the
question over and over again--the protocols with respect to the departments and
how it is we deal with students who are medically complex or those who are
overly aggressive in the classroom.
Mr. Speaker, as I have suggested many times, that protocol
with respect to departmental review of this subject is in place. I have seen a
near-to-final draft on my desk as of last week. Again, we are going to try and
release that this summer. That is the same answer to the same question that I
have given over and over, over the course of the last two months.
Parental Choice of Schools
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Education says he and his
department have put six hard months into this. He will pardon us if we do not
have a lot of sympathy. Maybe they should have put six hard years into this,
which they have had and did not do.
My second supplementary question for the minister--and I
look forward to that report--is specific to his Action No. 9, which is in the
document and indicates that parents will have increased ability to enable
parental choice, within limits, in selecting the public school best suited to
their child's learning requirements in order to increase flexibility of
parental choice.
Can he be a little more specific on that? Is he talking
about across-school division boundaries? What happens to transportation costs
in that regard? What impact is Mr. Norrie's commission likely to have or
potentially going to have on that type of an action plan?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, before I answer the question, I
feel compelled to acknowledge an awful lot of work that has been done by my
predecessors in this government, who, through task force and indeed
consultations, have gone throughout the education community to bring forward an
awful lot of information that again, is reflected in part in this document.
Furthermore, specific to the question, the member wants to
ask about the question of greater flexibility. We anticipate that, in some
settings, there will be a reduction in the number of school divisions and that
there will be larger districts and divisions, but within that, we sense that
students and their parents should have greater access to choice, but, Mr.
Speaker, that does not mean free choice.
That means, in some cases, that if there is some additional
costs, particularly associated with transportation, there may be some
incumbency upon the parent to recognize part of that cost. That is what we are
talking about. Choice cannot always be free.
Distance Education
Advisory Council
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, one of the chapters in this, Chapter 5, is
Distance Education and Technology. We had a very thorough report done by an
advisory committee which was released last December, in December of 1993. This
report, in its Action No. 14, calls for the establishment of a provincial
advisory council on Distance Education and Technology.
Mr. Speaker, it strikes me, without obviously having
details, that we have had that committee, and they produced a report which was,
in effect, a blueprint and set out key goals and time frames for distance
education in this province. Why are we doing this again? What is going to be
the new role of this new advisory council?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, the member is not even part right.
On this, there was a task force that was in place that
brought forward recommendations. One of the recommendations was that this
advisory group be put into place to give recommendation to the government as to
how the advent of distance education be brought forward into the future. That
was put forward by the task force purely within the field of education.
What we have had happen over the course of the last two
years is an incredible add-on with respect to other government services and
indeed nongovernment services that all want to share the information highway.
So we are trying to integrate this whole process through various ministries,
but still within today's world, the advisory council with respect to education
will certainly be put into place to focus purely on education.
Domestic Violence Court
Backlog
Mr. Gord Mackintosh (St.
Johns):
Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey).
Delays in the justice system in dealing with charges of
domestic violence, which are almost always against women, are of serious
concern to Manitobans. On May 27, the Minister of Justice advised the House
that the backlogs in the Domestic Violence Court were four and a half months,
all in light of an objective of this government of a three-month backlog in
that court. At the next sitting, the very next sitting on May 30, the minister
said that they were actually eight and a half months. That is a difference of
four months.
Now, yesterday, in an affidavit filed in the Court of
Queen's Bench executed by Judge Giesbrecht of the Provincial Court, there is
evidence, referencing a transcript from the court, showing that a man charged
with domestic assault, September 25, 1993, will not face trial until September
21, 1994, a delay of one year, Mr. Speaker, almost to the day.
My question to the Minister is, who are Manitobans to believe
as to the seriousness of the backlog, a judge under oath or this minister.
Hon. Darren Praznik
(Minister of Labour):
Mr. Speaker, given that the member has referenced a matter, a particular case
which the judges' association is now pursuing before the courts with respect to
Bill 22 and given that the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey), in her role as
Attorney General, is not appropriate to be dealing with that matter, I will be
responding to this particular issue, because it does fall in the realm of
public sector compensation.
Mr. Speaker, clearly, what we have going on with the
provincial judges in Manitoba is very much a dispute with money. I say to the
honourable member--
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
Point of Order
Mr. Mackintosh: Mr. Speaker, my
question was as to the backlogs in the Provincial Court, not about judges, not
about their compensation.
Mr. Speaker: The honourable member
does not have a point of order.
* * *
Mr. Praznik: Mr. Speaker, clearly,
backlogs, whatever their length of time in the court, are reflective of a
labour relations issue that is now going on with provincial judges, and I think
the statistics of court use support that.
Youth Court
Backlogs
Mr. Gord Mackintosh (St.
Johns):
My question is to the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey).
Given that the Minister of Justice has argued in this House
that the backlog in the Youth Court is just five months, and given that I
brought into this Chamber an example of a nine-month backlog even with no
trial, and given that Judge Giesbrecht swears in her affidavit that there is a
one-year backlog in that Youth Court, who are Manitobans to believe?
Hon. Darren Praznik
(Minister of Labour):
Mr. Speaker, I would reference the honourable member to yesterday's Free Press,
where one Judge Ron Meyers in a particular speech indicated very clearly that
because of their basic salary dispute with the provincial government, with this
Legislative Assembly, they have, in fact, slowed down or are not going the
extra mile to make sure that work is done.
I would just indicate to the honourable member that the
number of hours that courts were sitting in March of 1994 ranged from 0.6 of an
hour per day to a high of 3.6 hours in a day, and in April from 0.9 to 4.4
hours per day. Clearly--
Mr. Speaker: Order, please.
Point of Order
Mr. Steve Ashton
(Opposition House Leader): Mr. Speaker, we are seeing a rather bizarre distortion of
the rules when a minister--a minister is entitled not to answer a question, but
it is rather unusual for another minister to get up and not only not answer the
question but to deal with other matters.
The member asked a very specific question on court delays.
I would point out that perhaps the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey) might care
to read Beauchesne in terms of sub judice convention, which indicates that it
does not strictly apply in terms of civil cases, and not only that, Beauchesne
Citation 510, which indicates: "The Speaker has pointed out 'that the
House has never allowed the sub judice convention to stand in the way of its
consideration of a matter vital to the public interest or to the effective
operation of the House'."
I would submit to you, Mr. Speaker, that it is quire in
order for our member to be asking about court delays, and it is incumbent upon
the Minister of Justice to provide answers in the public interest.
Mr. Speaker: On the point of order
raised, the honourable member does not have a point of order.
Beauchesne Citation 402: "The Speaker has stated, 'Of
course, the Chair will allow a question to be put to a certain Minister; but it
cannot insist that the Minister rather than another should answer it'."
* * *
Mr. Mackintosh: It is fascinating to
see how this government deals with its gross mismanagement of the court system,
Mr. Speaker.
Provincial Court
Vacancies
Mr. Gord Mackintosh (St.
Johns):
Mr. Speaker, given hat, unfortunately, there are seven new judge vacancies on
the court brought by this government as of last Friday and in light of the
backlogs, my question to the minister is this: When did this government, now
near the end of its mandate, plan to refresh the bench?--the minister's words.
When does the patronage really being?
Hon. Rosemary Vodrey
(Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, as I have answered in this
House previously, there were three vacancies and, as the members know, I have reported
in this House before, there are judicial nominating committees which are
already operating to deal with those three vacancies.
When I receive information from the chief judge regarding
where the needs will be for other members of the judiciary to be appointed, to
have the judicial nominating committees appointed, this government will be
acting.
Youth Care Workers
Training Program
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows):
Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Family Services will know that Manitoba is one of
only two provinces in Canada that does not have a youth care worker training
program in spite of the fact that the community has requested one. Red River
Community College rated it No. 2 in their priorities for new programs, but it
was not approved.
Given that there is an increasing need for this
professional training for youth care workers, can the Minister of Family
Services tell us why this program was not approved, and what her government is
going to do to see that it is approved for this coming year, or next year at
the very least?
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Family Services): Mr. Speaker, I have to say that I thoroughly
enjoyed the last 10 months with my responsibility as Minister of Family
Services. There has to be an understanding that it takes a little while to get
up to speed on the issues in the department.
We have had a three-month session. It is really nice to
know that the session is coming to a close, so that we can look very
proactively into the future and look at all of the issues that need to be
discussed, the issues that need to be reviewed and decisions that need to be
made.
So I look forward to the time between the sessions, when we
can look at the issues surrounding youth workers and see what the future might
hold.
Mr. Martindale: Mr. Speaker, that is a
very disappointing answer, given that one of the senior officials in her
department endorsed such a program.
Group Homes
Closure
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows):
Two youth group homes have been closed in recent months. Two more are going to
be closed.
Can the minister tell us where these youth are supposed to
go? How can she rationalize a system that has fewer spaces, instead of more
spaces, to deal with troubled youths in our society.
Hon. Bonnie Mitchelson
(Minister of Family Services): Well, Mr. Speaker, I have indicated many times
in this House what our vision is for children and for families int he province
of Manitoba. That is a vision that looks at family support, family preservation
and family responsibility.
We have put in place within the Department of Family
Services, in this year's budget, a special family support fund of $2.5 million
that will look towards keeping families together.
I know there is an issue with those who are presently
within the system that we are going to have to deal with, but what we want to
do is focus on the future of the children and the families in Manitoba and try
to make Manitoba a better place in which to live, reduce the number of children
that have to be taken into care by providing the supports right within the
family for the children's sake.
Prime Motor Oils
Environmental Cleanup
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson):
Mr. Speaker , the people of Manitoba, especially the people of northeast
Winnipeg, have had enough of hazardous waste management by Solvit and Prime
Oil. I have photographs with me that show that the Lexington and Paris site has
standing water and oil and unprotected hazardous waste in barrels, and an
insecure area which allows access, where young people are know to be going into
the site.
Mr. Speaker, this are or site for Prime Oil has had a work
order mentioning it since December 1991, and I would like to ask the Minister
of Environment given that he said on May 24, '94, that: "The whole are is
being evaluated quite carefully to make sure we do not inadvertently overlook
something", I would like to ask the minister, why was this Prime Oil site
at Lexington and Paris Streets not included in the work order that I mentioned
in 1991, which required a cleanup of all Prime Oil sites?
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Mr. Speaker, if the member would care to share her
information with me, I could get her a more detailed answer.
*(1430)
Ms. Cerilli: Mr. Speaker, this
minister said that he was going to get tough on this issue in May, and we are
still getting phone calls asking, for the neighbours of the site, when is it
going to be cleaned up.
Why, I ask the minister, has this site not been cleaned up,
as the minister has been saying since 1991?
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, a very
extensive classification of the material and site was done to make sure that it
was categorized and removed appropriately and not mixed in a way that would
create additional problems to those we already had. Unless the member has new
information that I am unaware of, evaluation of the original Prime Oil site has
indicated that while we have a cleanup situation on our hands, we do not have
an immediate and emergent problem.
The contracts--we have been seeking to have the material
cleaned up and have an estimate on the cost of cleanup of the land, and that
will be followed through appropriately.
Ms. Cerilli: Mr. Speaker, the issue
is, why is this minister not aware of this contaminated site in northeast
Winnipeg, when it is mentioned in the work order that was issued in 1991? What
is going on in this Department of Environment, and why--
Mr. Speaker: Order, please. The
honourable member has put her question.
Mr. Cummings: Mr. Speaker, the member
has been know to bring information to this House before that was incorrect,
when she reported a spill at Pine Falls that never occurred.
Mr. Speaker, I will do my best to ascertain the validity of
her concerns, and we will deal with them.
New Directions Report
Implementation
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster):
Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Education.
If you take a look on page 34 of the blueprint on education
changes, it states that changes will be incremental over the next six years.
Implementation of some actions will be taken immediately.
My question to the Minister of Education is, can the
minister indicate to us today what actions the government plans on taking
immediately, in particular for this coming September, the beginning of the
school year?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): We will be beginning work on curriculum issues
immediately, starting with the development of the curriculum framework K to
Senior 4. Upon completion of the framework, work will begin in the K to 12
curriculum areas, core subjects, and essential curriculum learnings will now be
new or revised and will be based on the framework.
Work will begin immediately to develop the Grade 3
diagnostic test, with a target for implementation for the '96-97 school year.
Work will begin immediately to provide schools and parents with information
about the establishment of advisory councils for school leadership. A handbook
will be available this fall. We will target it for release in October.
We are working with a western consortia of provinces in the
development of a common math and language arts curriculum, and we will be doing
a special review of special education programs starting in September of this
year.
Mr. Speaker, there are another three or four items. the
member may wish me to provide them in a subsequent answer.
Student Consultations
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster):
Mr. Speaker, I am wondering if the minister can indicate to the House, because
there are going to be some changes coming up for the September school year,
what consultation there will be between now and then in terms of what the
government's plans are, because the minister, in previous questions that I have
asked him with respect to students and input for the students, had indicated
that the students would be able to have input after the blueprint was tabled.
I am interested in knowing if the Minister of Education has
anything that is going to be happening between now and September in terms of
meeting with his partners and the students of the province.
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): Mr. Speaker, this is the dilemma a government
has, and, of course, opposition can have it both ways. Just a half an hour ago,
they were screaming at us because we were consulting too much and not acting.
Now they want to go back to consult.
The reality is, we did take into account some of the
preliminary findings as a result of the student survey. That is why we have
delayed, basically for the last week and a half, releasing the report.
The member wants to know exactly, and I can tell him
specifically the emphasis. Students have called for a greater emphasis on
English and language arts, more so than the members opposite. They did not even
draw it forward in questions today, Mr. Speaker.
Academics and literacy never came forward today in
questions, but with the students, it is a big issue, and the whole reform
document is based on that fact.
Hiring Policy
Mr. Kevin Lamoureux
(Inkster):
Mr. Speaker, on page 22, it recommends in terms of the yearly school plan
parental and community involvement, including involvement in hiring and
assigning teachers, developing the school plan and the school budget.
Is the government suggesting that local school advisory
groups will be responsible for the hiring and the discipline and firing of
schoolteachers? Is there, in fact, some sort of a check?
Hon. Clayton Manness
(Minister of Education and Training): There can only be one employer. There can only
be one employing authority, and that will remain the school division, yet the
guidelines that will be in place will call upon the local parent-community
advisory group to have some strong influence on those decisions at the board
level.
Winnipeg Airport
Upgrading Costs
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona):
Mr. Speaker, the Winnipeg International Airport activity creates some 9,000
direct and indirect jobs and contributes over $430 million a year to the
provincial GDP.
The federal government is negotiating with local business
interests to turn the airport operation management over to a local airport
authority under a 60-plus-year lease arrangement. Some other Canadian airports
have been transferred, including Vancouver, which now charges passengers a
departure fee of between $5 and $15.
My question is for the Minister of Highways and
Transportation.
Since nearly 50
percent of all Winnipeg airport aircraft movements are cargo-related, has the
Minister of Highways and Transportation raised the issue of fairer portioning
of the local Airport Authority improvement costs, so that the travelling public
will not be responsible for 100 percent of the future capital and operational
costs of the local Airport Authority?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): Mr. Speaker, the member full well knows
that we discussed this in the Estimates process. He knows the answer. The
Winnipeg Airport Authority has been put in place. It is an interim committee
that is dealing with the issue.
The federal government has put the whole process on hold,
even though Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Montreal have airport authorities
and are competing with us and are beating us right now. If the federal Liberal
government get on this way and get the new airport authorities in place with
whatever new guidelines they want to have in place, get on with it, the Airport
Authority can get on with the question the member is talking about.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Speaker, since
there are over two million passengers a year and thousands of airline industry
employees utilizing the Winnipeg International Airport, has the Minister of
Highways and Transportation raised with the federal government the failure to
include consumer and employee representatives on the local Airport Authority
board during and after negotiations for transfer of the airport? They are not
currently included on that board.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Speaker, I am sure
the member knows that I am leaving this evening or tomorrow morning to meet
with the federal minister and other provincial colleagues. Clearly, this issue
will be on the table for discussion.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Speaker, I am glad
it will be discussed.
Winnipeg Airport Authority
Transfer Agreement
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona):
Since taxpayers have already paid for the airport operations, will the Minister
of Highways and Transportation ask the federal Minister of Transport, when they
meet this week, to release the complete details of any transfer agreement of
the Winnipeg International Airport to the business interests?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): Mr. Speaker, the Airport Authority had a
public meeting approximately a month or six weeks ago, when they discussed with
the community items of interest to the community. That will be an ongoing
process if the Airport Authority is approved in the future. I think it will be
very important to expanding the economic activity, both cargo and traveller
activity, through the airport in Winnipeg if that Airport Authority can get
underway.
I hope that the federal government will see the light and
create the opportunity for the leaders of the community in Winnipeg to have
their airport be very competitive in the opportunities of the future.
Port of Churchill
Government Commitment
Mr. Eric Robinson
(Rupertsland):
Mr. Speaker, my questions are also for the Minister of Transportation.
Repeatedly, we have raised questions during the session
concerning the western grain transportation system and also the Port of
Churchill. As of this morning, again, there is no grain committed to the Port
of Churchill, making it appear that Churchill may get even less grain this year
than the levels in the past four years.
I would like to ask the minister or the Premier (Mr.
Filmon) whether or not either one has contacted the Canadian Wheat Board. If
so, what commitment have they received from the Wheat Board so far this year?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): Mr. Speaker, our information at this
time is about 190,000 tones of grain has been committed through Churchill to
South Africa. We also hear there are rumours of other potential sales.
We certainly hope that they materialize, so that we can
have 400,000 or 500,000 or 600,000 tonnes of grain moving through Churchill. We
certainly have written the federal Minister of Agriculture saying that the
Manitoba Liberals had committed a million tonnes to go through the Port of
Churchill, and we expect them to be able to achieve that objective.
Thompson Airport
Government Commitment
Mr. Steve Ashton
(Thompson):
Mr. Speaker, the federal government's policies on transport are causing major
concerns, not only in terms of Churchill, but in terms of airports. In fact,
the Minister of Transport federally is talking about a scorched-earth policy in
terms of transportation, and it can affect Manitoba, including, in particular,
the Thompson airport, which right now is on the chopping block when it comes to
the air traffic control tower.
I would like to ask the minister, as I have done previously
on this, and perhaps ask the Premier (Mr. Filmon), as well, if the provincial
government will take a strong stand against the devastation that would be
wrought by the federal Liberal government's policies in terms of
transportation.
Will they take a strong action to defend the Thompson
airport, the Port of Churchill and the many other vital transportation services
in Manitoba?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): Mr. Speaker, I can certainly assure the
member for Thompson that we do take a very strong position and try to defend
the interests of Manitoba on all the various issues the federal Liberal
government are undertaking that will negatively impact on us.
I want to assure the member we have written the federal
Minister of Transport saying that for the good of safety and for economic
development in Thompson, there is strong support for maintaining that tower. I
do not know what the federal decision will be. The Minister of Labour (Mr.
Praznik) has also written the federal Minister of Transport on the same
initiative.
We are very disappointed, because we are not getting answers
to any of the letters we have sent to the federal government. I have sent some
15 since I have got into this portfolio. I have only got answers to four. As we
well know, we sent a fairly strong letter on the 9th of June, and they have not
even acknowledged it yet.
So if that is the way they consult with the provinces, that
is not a very good way to govern, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Speaker: Time for Oral Questions
has expired.
ORDERS OF THE DAY
House Business
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, in
discussion amongst House leaders, we have agreed to go into Committee of Supply
to continue to consider the concurrence motion in Committee of Supply.
So I would move, seconded by the Minister of Family
Services (Mrs. Mitchelson), that Mr. Speaker do now leave the Chair and the
House resolve itself into a committee to consider of the Supply to be granted
to Her Majesty.
Motion agreed to, and the House resolved itself into a committee
to consider of the Supply to be granted to Her Majesty with the honourable
member for Seine River (Mrs. Dacquay) in the Chair.
* (1440)
COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
Supply‑‑Capital Supply
Madam Chairperson
(Louise Dacquay): Order, please. Will the Committee of Supply please come to
order. The Committee of Supply has been
considering the following resolution:
That the Committee of Supply concur in all Supply
resolutions relating to the Estimates of Expenditure for the fiscal year ending
March 31, 1995, which have been adopted at this session by the two sections of
the Committee of Supply sitting separately and by the full committee.
Mrs. Sharon Carstairs
(River Heights): Madam Chairperson, I have a question that I
would like to ask of the Minister of Highways (Mr. Findlay). I have over the last few weeks had a number
of letters from constituents with respect to the underpass on Kenaston. Some of them have been in favour; some of
them have been opposed. What has been
consistent through letters, however, was their desire for some kind of process
that they could indicate clearly, that they could have their input into this
final and ultimate decision of this construction. Will the Minister of Highways outline for us
this afternoon exactly what stages of public involvement will be required in
the final decisions to build the underpass?
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation):
Madam Chair, the member puts me at some kind of a disadvantage to ask me
to answer that question because it is really an Urban Affairs issue. The Minister of Urban Affairs (Mrs. McIntosh)
deals with the city on any matters related to the provincial government and
streets and bridges inside the Perimeter.
The Minister of Highways deals with those roads that, as the member for
Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux) knows we have had that discussion in Estimates, are
outside the Perimeter primarily. Yes, on
occasion we get involved in cost sharing with the city on specific items like
that portion through St. Norbert and the bridge over the La Salle and the four
laning of the Brookside portion close to the Perimeter. That is the role the Minister of Highways
plays.
But it is an infrastructure decision involving the three
levels of government: city, province,
and federal government. The relationship
in terms of what to do and how to do it between the province and the city rests
in the Ministry of Urban Affairs. So it
does not help the member, but that is the jurisdiction of responsibilities we
have in this government.
Mrs. Carstairs: Madam Chairperson, it is very clear that
substantial amounts of provincial money are going into this project. In addition, during the Highways Estimates
the minister indicated that his department was consulted and would be consulted
when infrastructure projects specifically deal with roads and that type of
project, which this certainly is. Now,
the Department of Highways itself does have a series of protocols. It has public meetings, it ensures that there
is an environmental impact assessment if one is warranted. Will those kinds of controls still be put
into place in this particular project?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, I cannot answer much
differently, other than to expand a little bit to the member. Yes, we were involved in some technical
aspects, but the city engineers ultimately are responsible in this situation,
and I cannot say specifically who or to what extent we were involved in any
consultation process with the city engineers.
It would only be in a secondary position with them.
With regard to environmental process, again you would have
to ask the Minister of Urban Affairs (Mr. Ernst) or the City of Winnipeg. We have a process with our roads that are
under our jurisdiction. Yes, where an
environmental license is needed we obtain it.
There are several steps along the way to make a decision to get to the
construction phase.
I am sorry, although it might sound like a cop‑out it
is outside my responsibility and jurisdiction.
We are only called in on some basic technical aspect, and in terms of
whether‑‑the member wanted to ask whether I think a project is
important to the overall transportation sector for Manitoba‑‑I
would have to say focussing on getting traffic to and from the airport and to
our trucking terminals and to our intermodal centres is very important in a
transportation sense. Now how that is
done, that is a broad question, involves a lot of players.
Mrs. Carstairs: Well, this is exactly the concern that many
of the people writing to me have, that the Department of Highways is not going
to do its normal processes that they would do in a provincial highway setting,
that the City of Winnipeg does not have the same sorts of rules and regulations
guaranteeing that there will be the public meetings and the environmental
assessment, nor does the federal government, because it is monies that are
going to be used in the City of Winnipeg.
So the concern is that the whole public participation is going to fall
through the cracks, that no level is going to conduct it.
Can I ask the Minister of Highways if he will take it upon
himself to meet with the Minister of Urban Affairs (Mrs. McIntosh) and the
Minister of Environment (Mr. Cummings) and if so possible, lay before the City
of Winnipeg their concerns that public processes be put into place to guarantee
that there is public participation.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, again, I just want to remind the
member we are not dealing in a provincial highway here, so we cannot institute
our processes on them. I will follow up
what the member suggested, that between Urban Affairs and Environment and
Highways we should look at the issue. It
is probably fair to say that there might be something falling through the
cracks here, and we will discuss it and look at how the process will be handled
from here on.
Mr. Clif Evans (Interlake): Madam Chair, leading off with the Minister of
Highways, I would just like to refer back to Estimates what was discussed
during Estimates with regard to Riverton Boat Works. I have read through Hansard and also had an
opportunity to meet with the proponents, with Mr. Thorsteinson and his family,
with regard to the Hansard and the documentation. Mr. Thorsteinson has indicated that he would
certainly appreciate meeting with the previous minister. He also asked me to pass on his comments to
the previous Minister of Highways who did what he could to assist Mr.
Thorsteinson, and they are very, very grateful for that.
However, this is an issue that has been longstanding. The previous minister who is well aware of
it, and my colleague who I thank for bringing this matter up to the now‑Minister
of Highways (Mr. Findlay), Mr. Thorsteinson would in fact like to discuss the
different possibilities, and after reading Hansard, that there may be. We do want to get the federal people to the
table and that has been the difficulty.
The minister may not be aware of the fact that the federal member of
Parliament for Portage‑Interlake has also been made aware of this. Riverton Boat Works has not received the
answers that they are looking for from his office. Whether the minister is aware of that, whether
there has been any correspondence from the member of Parliament for Portage‑Interlake
or not, I would certainly hope there might have been; if not, I do have some
correspondence that I would like to share with the minister. The now‑member of Parliament, Dr.
Gerrard, had indicated throughout the pre‑election days that they were
going to resolve this matter once and for all and bring it to light.
I would like us to work together on this with the minister,
and I think that a meeting between the Minister of Highways and myself and the
Riverton Boat Works and a member of Parliament that if we can get together and
somehow look to resolve this whole matter and bring everybody to the table, put
the questions and the answers together about how we can do it, I think it has
been too long standing of an issue, people's lives have been altered because of
this issue. I certainly feel that
support from this minister and perhaps getting with the member of Parliament to
enlighten him even more as to what can be done, I would appreciate comments
from the minister.
* (1450)
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, I became aware of this issue
through the Estimates process, and certainly the former minister, Mr. Driedger,
was involved in terms of discussion and ongoing process here. What I have learned is that it is certainly a
very difficult situation for Mr. Thorsteinson.
I am sure the member opposite is fully aware that the province is not
involved in any direct way in this circumstance. Mr. Thorsteinson had a direct contract with
Public Works Canada, in other words, with the federal government, and he has
made certain allegations, comments, and I am sure they are true or very close
to true, that design specifications were not what they should have been. He incurred certain expenses, and when he
tried to get reimbursed from the federal government, the dispute started to
arise. As time went on, it would appear
that Public Works Canada either stopped talking or never did talk to Mr. Thorsteinson
in any constructive way about trying to resolve the circumstances that he was
in with the contract that he had for building a tug.
The situation, as I know it right now, is that Mr.
Thorsteinson has launched legal action against the federal government. But the member for the Interlake (Mr. Clif
Evans) is saying he would like to still talk to the federal government, and,
yes, I am sure that Mr. Gerrard made all kinds of promises during the election
period. Now all of a sudden he is
elected, and what is he doing to follow up on his promises to have it resolved?
[interjection] Yes, zero. I am not aware
that Mr. Gerrard has responded to us as a department directly in any sense, and
it is difficult for us to get involved if the federal government will not come
to the table because they are the people that have the issue with Mr.
Thorsteinson and Riverton Boat Works. I
am prepared to work with the member opposite to see if we can do something to
bring the federal government to the table.
I do not know what all the truth and facts are here. I certainly know that Mr. Thorsteinson has
been severely hurt financially because of this process, and I think it goes all
the way back to 1987, if I am not mistaken, 1985. So we are talking close to 10 years now, and
there has been an outstanding issue of monies that have been held back by the
federal government as a result of the contract and the dispute, which is, I am
sure, serious business for Mr. Thorsteinson.
So the department has, I can assure the member, tried in
all its ways and means to achieve some discussion between the two parties, but
the federal government, to my knowledge, at this point, have consistently and
continually refused to discuss the issue at all, and whether Mr. Gerrard will
become active and try to bring the two parties together, I cannot comment for
him. I can only say that we will
continue to do what we can from my office to get Mr. Gerrard to take some
leadership with his government to resolve the issue for his constituent, but,
you know, I feel almost helpless, basically, in the circumstance, and I am sure
the MLA for Interlake (Mr. Clif Evans) also feels somewhat helpless. We have got a federal government that has dug
their heels in versus a constituent who feels very frustrated in the process.
Mr. Clif Evans: Thank you for those comments, Mr.
Minister. I would in closing on that
topic, the minister is leaving tonight or tomorrow with respect to the
ministers' meeting in Calgary, the opportunity, hopefully, may arise there to
speak with the federal minister there on this topic. It would be greatly appreciated if the
minister, knowing of course the schedule and the timetable that he has, could
mention it and if he could agree, and I would be more than willing to do as
much of the mediating between this minister, between Dr. Gerard and Mr.
Thorsteinson, into getting together, at least as a start, with the four parties
to see exactly what kind of a direction we can take.
I will contact the minister after he has returned from
Calgary to see if he had any luck with the federal minister. I will also contact him to discuss perhaps‑‑I
will try and reach Dr. Gerrard and see if we cannot get together in a common
place here or wherever and discuss this with Mr. Thorsteinson.
If the matter could be resolved, not only Riverton Boat
Works, but the family itself could get back up on their feet. They are turning contracts down now. They are still being sought after to do work,
and they cannot do anything because of this situation.
As far as the legal action goes, and we discussed it on
Saturday, they are willing to negotiate that.
They are willing to negotiate as far as putting it away as long as they
have some assurances, put it off to the side until we get some assurances and
then we can discuss it, and if nothing comes out of it, then go from there
again.
I would like to very quickly go over some of the roads and
maintenance‑‑
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, the member has me at a great
disadvantage. My material is back in the
office, and he is going to ask some very technical questions. I thought I was on in a half an hour, and I
was headed out to get it. If he would
like to ask questions elsewhere for two minutes while I go get the information‑‑[interjection]
The Minister of Natural Resources (Mr. Driedger) is here to bail me out, so I
will go get my material and I will be right back.
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chairperson, I would like to ask the
Minister of Natural Resources, while I have the opportunity, a few questions.
I would like to actually begin with the LGD of
Armstrong. They have written to the
minister and have sent a resolution requesting, resolved that council request
the Minister of Natural Resources to determine a route for a controlled outlet
for Dennis Lake.
I realize that we had met with the minister a couple or
three weeks ago‑‑I appreciate that‑‑on peliukan bass
drains in Netley Creek. In previous discussions
with the previous Minister of Natural Resources, we had discussed an outlet for
Dennis Lake. I think where council is
wanting to move on this is to determine, with the government's help, where best
an outlet for Dennis Lake could be achieved through the co‑operation of
water resources and the Natural Resources department and council.
The other issues and the other drainage issues in the LGD
of Armstrong, of course, are important and are still important. The minister, in his discussions with the
reeve, had indicated just which way they are going with this, and council is
satisfied with that. The latest
resolution, and it was something that was brought up again to the previous
Minister of Natural Resources‑‑with a positive response, I may
say. Now the question is, when all of
this is going to get done and well and fixed, Dennis Lake outlet is still going
to create a problem.
Has the minister discussed this part of the request with
his department at all, and will he?
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Natural Resources): Madam
Chairperson, normally when the member for Interlake asks a question, I usually
say no first off, and then I will come back and get around to discussing it.
He makes reference to the LGD of Armstrong and the problems
that they have had, and he is correct that we met in my office a while
ago. Concerns were brought forward. There are portions of the Interlake where the
drainage system leaves a lot to be desired, and a particular case with the LGD
of Armstrong and Dennis Lake‑‑a lot of history in many of these
cases as well. I had indicated at that
time to the LGD council that I personally did not feel receptive to taking the
Dennis Lake flow and putting it into the Netley Creek.
The Netley Creek itself, Madam Chairperson, is a problem by
itself. We are looking at a long‑range
capital program to start on the Netley Creek drainage system. In fact, I am waiting with staff, but we have
not had time yet to develop the longer‑term capital program in terms of
how well staged some of these‑‑I went through with staff the other
day. We have approximately 20 of these
projects that are sort of into the mix, half done. Washow Bay area is another one. We have the Dennis Lake issue; we have the
Netley Creek issue. We have a series of
them throughout the province.
Councils in many cases are rightfully getting frustrated
because there is not enough capital money to take and, maybe, not even to do
one total project because some of them are pretty expensive, so we try and do a
little bit here and a little bit there.
As a result, I am not satisfied with that approach necessarily. I think councils are entitled to at least
know what the general picture is.
* (1500)
Having said that, I want to say that my personal preference
is, in the Dennis Lake particular case, to take that water straight east and
tie it into our drain system going east towards the lake instead of going into
the Netley Creek process.
I will not arbitrarily just make that decision. I think when I met with the reeve and
council, I suggested we look at these options.
I am prepared to define these options more specifically with the LGD of
Armstrong, together with Water Resources, logistically looking at the thing
from my perspective as a layman, unless my Water Resources people convince me
differently. They have the same sort of
feeling that I have, that we should take the Dennis Lake water east to the
provincial drainage system. We have
enough other systems that flow into the Netley Creek run, and those are the
ones that basically affect the LGD of Armstrong as well. I personally prefer to have this split.
I am waiting for Water Resources to come forward with more
specific recommendations, and I will not do that just arbitrarily. We will take and meet with the LGD of
Armstrong again once we have a little bit more specific information, and we
will respond to them directly by letter and carbon copy the member.
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chair, I want to thank the minister for
that because about two and a half, three weeks ago I did go out with the reeve
and some of the constituents who live in that area and who have lived there for
ever and ever as they say, and that was discussed between council‑‑some
of the councillors were there and a few of the constituents and the reeve and
myself, and we went over that whole area.
What I am hearing in the minister's idea is pretty well close to being
the same as what they are saying, and I think if the minister's staff and
council or the reeve could get together on that, but also bring in the
constituents whose ideas basically are the ones that we are throwing about with
the LGD to bring to the attention of the minister. I would certainly want to see that.
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I want to give assurance
to the member as well as to the LGD of Armstrong that, as this session winds
down and we have a little bit more flexibility in terms of our time, you know
the ministers from their offices, that it would be my intention to go out first‑hand
and have a look at the situation. It is
always easy to have resolutions on the desk and have people expressing wishes;
I find very often that by going out and looking first‑hand you have a
much better feel for it.
I want to assure the member that I will be out in that area
during the course of the next few months and do a first‑hand look at
it. I will not do it quietly. I will let the LGD of Armstrong know, and we
can talk about it. There will be action
and a course of action developed, and I will let them know what it is.
Mr. Clif Evans: I just want to offer the invitation to the
minister that if he is going to be coming out to look at the drainage systems
in the Interlake, I offer him the invitation of stopping in and visiting with
me, and perhaps I can show him a few other dandy drains that we have in the
Interlake. The invitation is always open
to the minister.
An Honourable Member: Give him a tour.
Mr. Clif Evans: I will be glad to give him a tour. There is no doubt about it.
On another matter, this is on fishing. The minister received a letter June 22, or
the letter was sent June 22 to the minister's office from a Henry
Traverse. It is with regard to a
director's authorization permit. Can the
minister enlighten me on these permits?
Can he indicate just what has to be done by applicants to receive such a
licence?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, the member has me a little
at a disadvantage. I wonder if he could
clarify the licence. He made reference
to it the other day. I have been trying
to follow up the correspondence in my office, which was faxed and not
faxed. I did not have a copy of it yet,
so if he could clarify this a little further, I am prepared to answer.
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chairperson, I will read the letter for
the minister. It is from Henry Traverse. He is president of Goodman Landing
Fisheries. His request is: your assistance in obtaining the permit
declared above for the purpose of selling fish directly to the Gimli Fish
Market. For your information, the four
of us family members hold quotas on Lake Winnipeg, and currently there are no
liens on any of our existing equipment that are provided by loans through CEDF.
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, the member is asking for
my assistance; apparently, the individual is as well. I believe the individual probably knows that
the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation is the one that issues licences to
allow the sale of that. My department
cannot do that, because that is under the jurisdiction of the Freshwater Fish
Marketing Corporation and licences of that nature have been issued.
If there is any further difficulty with it, they should
apply to FFMC; and, if there is difficulty, they can get in touch with my
office, and we will pursue it further.
Licences of this nature have been issued. However, I have to say the member should
possibly maybe check with FFMC himself.
There is a lot of history with the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation
in terms of the marketing schemes, the rough fish, the whole issue itself.
In fact, I just sent a letter to the federal Minister
responsible for Fisheries and Oceans today.
I just want to tell the member that I wrote a letter to the federal
minister because we have a bit of a convoluted system in terms of authority for
the administration of our fisheries. It
is under federal jurisdiction, and for us to implement any changes at all, we
have to apply to the federal government, the federal minister. It goes through the system there. It has sometimes taken up to a year before we
have a decision.
In this particular case with the licence, if the member
wishes to advise them, apply directly to the marketing board; and, if there are
further difficulties, they can get back in touch with me or my deputy.
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chairperson, in closing with this
minister on that, I discussed this with Mr. Traverse yesterday. He had indicated to me that he discussed it
with the director of Fisheries and nothing of that was made mention. So, when I discuss this with my constituent,
I will certainly mention what you have said and indicate what you have said,
and we will go to Freshwater and find out.
If I could get back to the Minister of Highways (Mr.
Findlay), I might throw a little bit of a curve to the minister on this
one. Some years ago, my honourable colleague
the critic for Highways and myself had the terrific opportunity of going up to
Steep Rock at the request of some constituents out there with respect to the
turning lane and the curve approaching 329 to Steep Rock. Now I am not sure whether this minister‑‑or
his department has made him aware of the request‑‑is aware of the
correspondence or not, but it is the junction of 239 and Highway 6. Previous to the turnoff, there are some
dangerous S's‑‑curves‑‑and, of course, with the
development in Steep Rock, a wonderful development in that area, the traffic is
increasing.
My family and I have the opportunity of going there
now. We have been going up there for the
last couple of years. I travel that road
a lot, of course, and I find it very, very dangerous and treacherous. If the minister can enlighten me as to what
his department might do on this or if the minister will get back to me on this
one, I would appreciate one way or the other, or if he wants to ask further,
ask me any questions.
An Honourable Member: First and foremost, how is the fishing?
Mr. Clif Evans: The fishing is absolutely excellent.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, did the member say 329
and Highway 6?
An Honourable Member: 239.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, 239 and Highway 6.
The member, I understand, is referring to the junction
where you make a left turn or a turn to the west of Highway 6 onto 239.
An Honourable Member: Towards Steep Rock.
Mr. Findlay: Towards Steep Rock, yes. I would have to get back to the member. It could be in the program, but I would
prefer to talk to staff about where it is at before I comment to him.
* (1510)
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chair, I did want to put it on the
agenda for the minister's staff. It was
on another piece of paper and I was not able to discuss it with his staff, but
I definitely would appreciate an answer on that. This is since 1990‑91 that the request
has been in, and it could be very, very dangerous.
I do have some questions.
I have been bringing up some of the highways in my area to this
government, to the previous Minister of Highways. I have done it through letter. I have done it through discussing it with him
in private. I have done it through
questions. I have done it through
Estimates, and really not to the satisfaction of, of course, the constituents
and myself. I would just like to
question the minister on some of these and where it is it.
I would like to begin with Highway 234 from Highway 8 to
Pine Dock. When the previous minister
received the portfolio of Minister of Highways in the changes in the fall, I
had indicated to the Matheson Island community and to the Pine Dock community
and the community of Riverton that one of the ways that we should deal with
this issue is to write to the minister requesting a meeting to get support from
the different communities that are involved.
Those letters and the petitions and whatnot were sent to me, and I
brought them to the minister's office directly.
I believe this would have been in early, early fall.
Madam Chair, I just want to enlighten the minister on
234. It is a road that was upgraded to
Beaver Creek, widened and upgraded and left at that, but now the traffic on
that road has increased so much over the years.
The winter road service is used by that road. The people come from Bloodvein, from Island
Lake, from Berens River. They use that
road in the wintertime. The transfer
company uses that road throughout the year.
The communities are growing. They
are using that continuously through the year.
There is a proposal in place that an entrepreneur is
looking at building a fishing resort in the Pine Dock area. It is going to increase the traffic even more
with tourism and that. Over the past
three to four years the community has requested and requested to discuss this
with the minister.
I understand that the response, after the minister received
the letter and the petitions and whatnot, he had indicated to my office, I
believe, and to the communities that there was going to be a meeting with a
certain engineer. In checking with his
department I was led to believe or told that there were some personal problems
within that, which is fine. This is
going back some months now.
Again, I received calls, the minister's office received
calls just in the last three days about the treacherous condition of 234 right
today and last week. The strange part
about it was I received some calls on Thursday, I called his office to express
the wishes of the constituents, and as I get home they are pulling a truck, a
three‑quarter ton truck right up to the top, right up to the cab in mud,
that they had to pull out of 234. They
had to go out and get it, because that is how much it was stuck.
I know the minister hopefully has some answer for me right
now on it.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, I know the member has a lot of
highways that he is concerned about. We
are doing some work on some of them. The
LGD of Fisher, we have certainly been meeting with them, and I think we have an
agreement that is going to flow there.
The one he is talking about, 234, I do not have any further comment or
any other additional comment. I think I
would like to talk to the member privately so we can get from him his version
of where the major problems are, because we are talking a fairly long road
here. We are probably talking‑‑dare
I say?‑‑80 kilometres. It is
a long road. I am sure before we are
finished here today he is going to ask about probably another 80 or 100
kilometres of road. There may be
justifiable reasons for raising all these roads.
I will give him some answers where I have information, but
on this one I would prefer to talk to him privately about the conditions of the
road to see if it jibes with the information I have received through the
department so that we can apportion our scarce resources in a fashion that
meets the greatest needs. Any MLA that
comes to me on the roads, give me the road or the two roads that are the
highest priority, the ones that must be done, because we cannot do four or
five. There just are not enough resources
to go around.
I would ask the member on this one‑‑he is
saying that the traffic count is way up.
We always collect traffic counts every year. I will check today. I do not have the numbers in front of
me. I will check to determine whether
those highway traffic counts have really gone up in reality or whether we have
taken them in the wrong place. I would
like the member's input on that so that we can determine where we would do some
work if some work is not already being scheduled on 234. I know he has some more and we will have to
determine where the greatest priorities are for those ones that are not
currently on a program.
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chair, I will do that with the
minister, but there were indications from the minister's office that there was
going to be a meeting with an engineer‑‑I do not have his name in
front of me‑‑to discuss it with the communities and myself, if so
be it. Basically, what they are saying
also is that the continued maintenance of the road is very important. They are not asking for asphalting from
Highway 8 to Pine Dock. They are looking
for some improvement on the road, up to some provincial standards, so this is
basically it.
I will be glad to get together with the minister, but I
would appreciate the minister following up with his staff as to who was
supposed to be meeting. The
administrator of the Pine Dock community just told me last Thursday, she has
not heard a word from anybody for months.
The minister says that I have a lot of roads in my constituency and that
is true. I have been asking on these
roads since the very first Estimates process that we were able to do after the
election in 1990. I am always asking and
I will continue to ask the status or the proposals for these different roads.
I would like to come back to the Minister of Highways. I know some of my colleagues have
questions. I have a meeting with some
constituents and the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism (Mr. Downey) and
the Minister of Environment (Mr. Cummings) in a few minutes, so I would just
like to ask the minister just how far the proposal on 325, the new portion that
has been proposed from Highway 17 west, where is that at and how soon can we
see progression on that new road?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, I presume the member is talking
about the proposed new extension of 325 straight easterly to Highway 17. We met with the co‑op in the area who
is talking about putting a new location at the junction of 325 and 233. We have talked to him about the extension of
the road and it would be about‑‑it would look to me like about 10
miles from the existing 325 all the way east to 17.
I understand in the community there was some concern that
we were not going to go all the way, we would just rebuild about three miles
worth, but the commitment of the department is to build all the way through
from the bend in 325 straight through to Highway 17. That is the process the department is on in
terms of getting the environmental licence and then proceeding to land
acquisition.
So the process to rebuild that road‑‑and I
believe it meets the desire of the community to do that‑‑certainly
the co‑op wanted the first three miles built to their new location. Now if he is talking about a different
section, you let me know.
* (1520)
Mr. Clif Evans: Madam Chairperson, I am talking about the
proposal not from 233 and a couple of miles that the co‑op and other
proponents are talking about, because 325 west of 233 is another matter
altogether and is an issue that the R.M. of Siglunes and LGD of Grahamdale are
looking at. We are talking about the
proposal that has been to the minister previous and now. The minister's staff has been discussing this
with Mr. Ernest Abas and Mr. Mel Ross about from Highway 17 west, connecting it
to 325 there, a straight new road being built directly through.
Mr. Findlay: That is what I am talking about.
Mr. Clif Evans: Yes, but you are talking about the other
side, coming the other way.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, he is talking from 17
east. I am talking from the west side
going to the same location. We are
talking exactly the same portion of road.
If the member had a map in front of him, he would see there is a jog in
325 straight north of Sleeve Lake, and from that point all the way to Highway
17 which I think he is talking about, we are committed. We are in a process of trying to obtain an
environmental licence, and then if we obtain the environmental licence, you
move to land acquisition on that new road.
An Honourable Member: . . . thought that was done already.
Mr. Findlay: No, I am telling the member that is the
process we are in at this time, acquiring environmental licence, which should
not be too difficult. Then we get into
land acquisition for the new road. It is
a road that currently does not exist. I
am sure we are talking about the same stretch.
Ms. Norma McCormick
(Osborne): I have some questions for the Minister of
Natural Resources (Mr. Driedger). I
would like to follow up where we left off on the Land Information Centre in the
Estimates process. I want to get some
specific information on Remote Sensing and the Land Information Systems
outlined in the appropriation.
I am interested in finding out what is the duplication,
overlap or co‑operation between the work of the Linnet Graphics group and
the people who are currently in the department doing what appear to be some
related activities. Can the minister
advise me, what is the relationship of these activities within the department
to that which is conducted by Linnet Graphics?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I will try and do a little
bit of background history here for the member.
The net concept was developed I think‑‑and the reason I have
a recall about basically how this thing evolved was because we did an opening
yesterday in the town of Steinbach of a geographical information centre, a very
positive thing, but the concept with Linnet was developed, oh, I think in the
'70s. In 1986, this concept was actually
developed a little further in terms of establishing a geographical information
system. Other provinces have tried it at
various levels and it has not been successful.
They have failed.
Since '86, this thing has evolved to some degree where
ultimately there was an agreement that was arrived at between Linnet and the
provincial government. The provincial
government is a 24‑percent shareholder in the Linnet operations. We have input in terms of how it is run, and
there is some funding that is indirectly involved through the departments.
It used to be basically under I, T and T, the Information
Services component with Linnet, and during the last budgetary process, the
decision was made that it would be transferred to the Department of Natural
Resources.
Since that has happened, we think‑‑and this is
not patting the department on the back, but we have been very positive in
making progress in terms of where we are going with the whole information
system to the point where the individual from the Crown Lands Branch, my
director, Jack Schreuder, is the one that is basically co‑ordinating the
information system. By and large, why
the decision of government was to move it into Natural Resources was because of
the Crown land component and my department who basically have a lot of this
geographical information. So since that
time it has evolved in my view very positively.
We have a specific direction. We are trying to get other departments. We have a committee set up of deputies that
basically are working at getting all the various departments to sort of be a
player in this. There has always been a
certain sensitivity in the debate over the period of time in this House about
the information that basically with Linnet is going to be public information,
does anybody have access to it, and that.
That is a thing that has been dealt with because the information can be
put into the system and it is still the control of the department. No information will be released until the
department feels it is proper to release it.
This was a concern as we went into that system all the
time, and departments are very possessive of their information, but basically
the concept from my layman's point of view in terms of what is happening with
the geographical information system is that‑‑I will just try and
give an example. We have Manitoba
Telephone, we have Manitoba Hydro, we have the Department of Highways, the
Department of Natural Resources, Energy and Mines. Each department has accumulated their own
information base, you know, geographic information, et cetera. Actually it seems as if it is duplication and
the information is not available for those that need it and that is why I, like
I say again, from a layman's point of view feel very enthusiastic about the
approach of what we are doing with Linnet and this information system because
it is now put into a general system.
The departments still have control over it, but at least it
can be accessed by municipalities, by governments, by individuals, that
information which is available to the general public. I am just trying to give a little bit of
background because when I first got into the department and I was handed the
responsibility of Linnet or the information services, I was in a jungle. I did not know what I was starting with, but
I feel much more comfortable now. We
have very qualified people by the name of‑‑the Director of Crown
Lands, like I mentioned Jack Schreuder, and Alvin Suderman who has also been
very busy with developing the information system. So when we did the opening yesterday in
Steinbach, in the environmental office, everybody was very enthusiastic.
The agricultural component which also ties into this system
has been opened up in Carman. We are
looking at establishing a few of these information systems in the Department of
Natural Resources, so the system is moving forward and the positive side is
that, by and large, Linnet is out there marketing it to the general
public. We have sold the information
system to Saskatchewan. We have Alberta
and Quebec on‑line that want to buy into our system and buy the
technology. It is being marketed on the
international basis, where we have big customers in the Asiatic countries that
are basically looking at buying this technology and into the system. So after what has seemed a very, very long
slow start, we are at the stage where progress is being made and as more
acceptability of all components and departments, in terms of what we are trying
to accomplish with it, I feel pretty good about it.
Ms. McCormick: Thank you to the minister for that history
lesson, but I am still confused about the relationship between Linnet and, for
example, Remote Sensing and Land Information Systems. These are still a department of the Natural
Resources department. How does Linnet
serve the Department of Environment, for example, Department of Natural
Resources and the utilities you have spoken of?
Does government purchase service from Linnet, or how are those
relationships defined?
* (1530)
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I certainly am not
critical of the member for raising the question as to the relationship because
that was one of the confusing points that I had. With us having 24 percent of the equity into
Linnet, and Linnet is basically an arm of another company, it is a complicated
structure. By and large the arrangement,
we are on the verge of signing another agreement again, another year's
agreement with Linnet as we do on a yearly basis, where we work out a working
agreement between government's Economic Development committee, my department
and Linnet. It is based on providing
information, feeding information into the system and providing certain funding
for that.
For that funding that goes into it, we get information and do
not have to buy it, but Linnet basically, when they market this, we get that
percentage of equity that we have. We
get some of that money back. The whole
purpose initially was to establish a good information system plus a big job
creation factor, I think.
I will try and get the specific information as to the
number of employees because I do not have my staff here, but ultimately the
target is something like 200 people will be employed under the system here in
Winnipeg. It is supposed to be a very beneficial
program and, at the same time, have major economic benefits job‑wise as
well as something that can market and get money back from elsewhere. Each department is challenged for a component
within their budget, I believe, that should tie into the information system to
provide that to the major control system of information, which basically is
Linnet.
I do not know how further to explain the concern as to the
agreement unless I basically bring forward the total agreement and that is
being worked on right now.
Ms. McCormick: In preparing for the questioning in this area
I did search through the Corporations branch, so I have a fairly clear
understanding about Manitoba as a minority shareholder, about I.D. Systems and
the other sort of principal shareholders, but what I now thank the minister for
having a better sense of is the access of information that is gathered under
the umbrella of Linnet is now available to Manitoba. It is almost a quid pro quo that you put
information in and you get it back in a better form.
Another area though I am curious about is the direction
that the department is then moving. Is
it likely that some of these activities that are currently done under the
auspices of the department will eventually move out of government into Linnet,
or do you see that we will retain things like the land information system, the
remote sensing, that government will still continue to do some of this, or will
it be progressively devolved into the external corporation?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chair, the way I see this evolving is,
it is an ongoing thing that will never really stop. The realms of possibility are endless in
terms of what you can feed into the system.
For example, if you take the city of Winnipeg, ultimately the whole
infrastructure system, their sewer, their telephone lines, hydro, everything
ultimately can be there; and, for example, if somebody wants to develop a
business, whatever the case may be, they can go and buy this information, a
private corporation or a municipality, and get all the information they need
related to ground, to water aquifers.
This is what we were stressing yesterday in Steinbach when we did the
opening.
Where we have a lot of interest in establishing hog
operations, the individuals or the municipality can tap into this information
and find out where the water aquifers are, all the information on that, the
soil types in terms of developing a storage facility, and ultimately this just
keeps building. Where it ends, I do not
know, but there is tremendous potential in terms of this thing evolving
further. I could see an ongoing role for
government to continually be part of that, because we have the information base
that basically is required in a lot of cases.
Ms. McCormick: You talked about a growth of employment
within the Linnet system. Are there
currently provincial civil servants seconded into Linnet, or is all of the
staff year growth to be outside of the Civil Service?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, initially, there was not
secondment, but I think some of the information people went to work for Linnet
and are paid under their structure. At
the present time, for our participation in the development of the information
system with the Linnet, my director of Crown Lands is playing a very active part,
as well as Mr. Suderman, so we have people who are basically working with
them. So part of the contribution is in
kind in terms of participating with the company.
I am not trying to oversimplify it. It is relatively complex, the kind of
agreement we have, but from the average layman's approach to it, without
getting into all the details, I think it is very positive. I repeat again, the potential for this thing
as it evolves is just in my mind very positive and limitless in terms of what
can happen there.
Ms. McCormick: Madam Chairperson, I just want to move on to
a question about the Remote Sensing unit.
The objective of the unit is:
"To provide a Provincial Topographic Information Program in support
of management of provincial natural and related resources and the carrying out
of environmental assessments."
Now, for example, an activity like this, who would do
it? Would it be the staff in the Remote
Sensing unit who would actually perform this activity? Or would there in some way be some link back
with Linnet for that?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I am not quite sure if I
understand the question correctly. I
just want to say that the information from my department, for example,
resources in terms of especially my Crown Lands people, the geographic
information that we have on file‑‑I mean, it is not like we are
starting something new. There is
information that has been developed over a long period of time, and this
information, then, is basically fed in.
The system is only as good as the information that it gets,
and this is where from our department being very supportive, we are feeding all
the information that we basically have into it and encouraging the other
departments to do the same thing so that we have a complete network.
I might just say that initially, people like maybe Hydro
and Telephone were a little hesitant about whether they wanted to play a role
in this, but after the announcement yesterday in Steinbach, the people from
Hydro were very enthused and feel that there is a tremendous advantage that can
be gained by everybody using the same information database.
As more feed into this system, and they still have control
of it, much of this information, by and large, is for everybody's use. I mean, it is not something that‑‑why
would Hydro not want to share much of the information that they have with
Telephone, or vice versa, or with other government departments, when people
need information? It is an evolving
thing, by and large, but it is getting to be more positive all the time.
I do not know whether I have answered the question really
in terms of everybody has to give information into there. My department gives what it can. Other departments do the same thing.
Ms. McCormick: I think we are getting closer here. What I was trying to ascertain by using the
remote sensing activity as an example is how the information gathered through
Natural Resources activity is then fed to Linnet for the benefit of private
industry and for other government activity, so I am getting a sense or at least
a better sense, that the activity which goes on within the department becomes
part of the broader information base that is amassed by the Linnet system. So I am prepared to let it go at that.
I would just like to ask another couple of questions with
respect to the progress of the tender package on the Manitoba Lowlands
project. I am just curious if the
minister can advise me of the status of the joint advisory committee and the
selection of the tender for the contract for the Manitoba Lowlands.
* (1540)
Mr. Driedger: Can the member indicate, is this related to
the next national park that we are looking at, the options that are there?
Madam Chairperson, I want to say to the member that
initially there were three proposals that were being sort of considered. A committee was set up between the federal
and provincial governments, and they ultimately reported to the provincial
deputy minister of my department and the deputy minister of the federal
government, who then basically, based on the report that was made, then made
recommendations to myself and to the federal minister as to which areas were to
be considered.
When the reference was made to the park in the Williams
Lake area, which is one of the areas for consideration, at that time the group,
as this information came forward through the system, felt that because the
Williams Lake area specifically as part of the Thompson nickel belt that goes
right through there‑‑and I want to say that by and large the nickel
finds in that particular area in Williams Lake, first indications are that is
higher of quality than even at Thompson.
So the challenge, I guess, that government of the day faces federally
and provincially is where do you basically‑‑to me it is not a
competition between environment and the mining industry but people perceive it
to be that. That is not the case.
Rather, anticipating the controversy that it could have
gotten to be, if we had not excluded a portion of it, not all of it, but that
portion which is part of the Thompson nickel belt, that we would exclude that
portion of it to avoid the kind of conflict, because first of all, the federal
government in establishing a national park is very sensitive that they do not
get into all kinds of big rhubarbs. We
are in the process of establishing the Churchill Park national park; even that
is moving very slowly because of all the things that have to be dealt with.
So it was felt by everybody through the system that we
should exclude that portion that has the high nickel quality in it and, at the
same time, realizing that within certain areas there we have the bat caves,
certain very special areas that we will be designating under the Endangered
Spaces program which, you know, based on my advisers, we can take and isolate
those and put them aside. So it is a
matter of basically evolution to this point.
I get criticized severely by some of the environmental groups that we
have just caved in to the mining industry.
That is not the case at all, but I think in the best interest of moving
this thing forward, I think the course of action that we have taken is
justifiable, at least I have a comfort level in terms of using a common sense
approach to it.
Ms. McCormick: It seems to me, Mr. Minister, this is one
area where we have the tremendous potential for using the geographic
information system data which is gathered up in terms of laying out the
technical requirements for the selection of a site.
My question was intended to elicit information on what is
the status of the process for tendering the Manitoba lowlands criteria, and who
is in fact in control of that process? I
have a sense now that you are saying it is quite a slow process, but I was just
curious about finding out from the minister if in fact that joint advisory
committee has a mandate to continue, or is it now a process which is back in
the control of the federal and provincial governments?
Madam Chairperson: The honourable Minister of Natural Resources.
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I was not trying to play
favourites here by talking with Mr. Speaker.
Because he is a gentleman that basically calls the shots in this House,
when he asks a question I feel compelled to sort of give him a short answer.
To the member and her question, the next step that
basically is taking place after the recommendations came forward, both my
provincial department and the federal Parks department have put out a tender
for consultants. That process has just
basically concluded and I am waiting for the recommendation to come forward in
terms of the consultants that will do the next stage of the studies, basically.
So it is moving forward.
I believe because the federal government was involved, we had to tender
this on an international basis, and I think we even had some consultants
applying from as far away as Mexico, et cetera, but I just have a preliminary
indication that there is a variety of applications that came forward and a
recommendation will be coming forward to me, I expect, within the next 10 days
for the consultants who will then continue on in terms of doing what has to be
done.
Ms. McCormick: That is what I was looking for in terms of an
update of that process.
Now, just one other area, I wanted to question with respect
to the status of the agreement between the Department of Natural Resources and
the association of private landowners in provincial parks. Can you give me some indication as to the
progress of the negotiation of an agreement with respect to these services that
these people get?
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chair, the member opens a whole
Pandora's box here with the kind of question, a lot of history that has
basically been involved here with the private landowners and provincial parks‑‑this
is what we are talking about, right?‑‑because some of these people
have been living there for a long, long time before the provincial parks got
established.
When I took over this department we had‑‑what
happened is 10 years ago the department decided, because these people lived in
provincial parks and were privy to some services, whether it was roads, garbage
or certain services, that because they did not pay any taxes to any
municipality because they did not belong to a municipality, they should pay
certain fees for services rendered. The
billing started approximately 10 years ago.
At that time the majority of the people basically paid. Ultimately, some felt it was not right
because they felt they were paying without having the services defined and
thought it was not right to do this.
Ultimately, the thing ended up in court, and then two years ago or
something like that there was sort of not a clear decision by the court in
terms of whether they were liable or not liable.
Ultimately The Parks Act that was brought forward by my
colleague‑‑the now‑Minister of Agriculture (Mr. Enns) brought
forward The Parks Act, and under that act that we passed last year there was
provision to bill and back‑bill, basically, for these services. It has been a matter of controversy with the
private landowners association, with whom I have met, who basically have been
meeting with my parks people to try and establish an agreement, and we have not
made that much progress with the agreement.
I have to tell the member though that the decision was made that this
was not fair because over half of the people were paying the service fees and
the other half were not.
Subsequently, after many meetings and discussions, a
decision was made that we would take and everybody is going to pay. We cancelled the interest and we are going to
be adjusting the fees of certain individuals, or all the individuals, based on
the best records that we have for services provided, and now we are going to
put the hammer down. We have cancelled
the interest. In fact, where we were
approximately $395,000 in arrears from all these people, we will be collecting
approximately $100,000. Those that have
difficulty with the fees, they can come and we will make adjustments with that,
but everybody is going to pay.
Now some of the private landowners association feel that
they still do not want to pay until they have an agreement, but in my
discussions with the individuals they feel that they will tell us which
services they feel should be entitled to do it, and somewhere along the line
without being, you know, autocratic or too domineering, the decision ultimately
will still be the government's as to how much they charge for what services.
* (1550)
Now, we have never had a good system in the Parks
department in terms of specifically a breakdown of the services. We are trying to establish that, but in the
meantime they will have to pay and we will continue to meet with them to try
and see whether we can come to some agreement.
Some of these individuals, you have to understand, have a pretty strong
opinion that, you know, they were there, they should not really have to pay,
and here comes government levying now.
If you own property, I firmly believe this in principle, that everybody
should pay certain fees for service of property, whether it is roads, whether
it is hydro, whether it is‑‑you know, somewhere along the line you
have to pay if you own property.
They do not quite necessarily see it that way. They feel that their grandfather has rights
because he lived there, but that is not the reality I like. We do not expect them to necessarily pay for
schools, but you have to understand that those who are living there, some of
them are living there on a permanent basis.
It is not just a cottage that they have on private land. They live there and then they want certain
services. It is not an easy question to
resolve, but I am prepared to work with them.
Ms. McCormick: I would like to ask the minister, Madam
Chair, if you can give me some optimistic estimate as when you think that this
agreement might be concluded.
Mr. Driedger: Well, Madam Chairperson, I will try and be as
forthright as I can. This issue has been
in the mix for 10 years, and they have not made much progress yet, but I do not
know whether the member knows Mr. Ryback who is a pretty determined individual
and the chairman of the private homeowners association. I have had occasion to meet with the cottage
owners association from the Whiteshell and other associations as well. My Director of Parks, Gordon Prouse, and some
of my other people within Policy have been meeting with them. I would like to think that unless things get
very ugly in terms of the settlement and people paying their fees, I would like
to see this resolved before we do the final proclamation of The Parks Act which
we are in the process of developing.
Now that is not a definitive answer. I cannot give a definitive answer, but I have
to say that I am receptive to continue to working towards resolving this and
not leave it sit out there.
Mr. Eric Robinson
(Rupertsland): Madam Chairperson, I just have a few
questions here for the Minister of Transportation (Mr. Findlay). This afternoon during Question Period we
asked a question on the Port of Churchill and the western grain transportation
system, particularly as it relates to the Port of Churchill. My question to the minister this afternoon
was whether he or the Premier contacted the Canadian Wheat Board and what
commitment was received by the Wheat Board for this year with respect to grain
movement through the Port of Churchill.
Now the minister indicated 190,000 tonnes of grain has been
tentatively earmarked to go through the Port of Churchill. However, the minister also realizes that in
order for the Port of Churchill to break even, at least 700,000 tonnes of grain
is needed, and last year nearly $2 million was lost because of being unable to
meet that limit.
I would like to ask the minister what plans there are by
this government with respect to‑‑I know that there have been a
number of letters sent to the federal minister concerning the Port of
Churchill, and I want to commend the minister and also the Minister of
Agriculture (Mr. Enns) for doing this on behalf of the Port of Churchill and
the ongoing life of it, but I want to know what alternative plans there are
with respect to ensuring that at the very least Churchill will realize the
700,000 tonnes and, quite possibly, the one million tonnes that were promised
by the Manitoba Liberals in last year's federal election.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, the member maybe should ask his
M.P. from Churchill what he has done to determine if there is going to be a
commitment from the federal Liberal government to get more grain moving through
the Port of Churchill. I confirmed to
him this afternoon that our information is 190,000 tonnes going to South
Africa. The Port of Churchill, Ports
Canada, Canadian Wheat Board are all the complete and 100 percent
responsibility of the federal Government of Canada. I have told the member on more than one
occasion that the consultation or the answers to letters that we get from that
government are anything less than satisfactory, very unsatisfactory.
Now the member asked, what are alternative plans? We will continue to maintain the pressure on
the federal government particularly the M.P.s of Manitoba who have indicated
there should be a million tonnes move through there; that is something we would
support. A 190,000 is not anywhere near
close to it; it is less than 20 percent.
I hope that they understand that the public of Manitoba, the government
of Manitoba will hold them accountable if they do not achieve the objectives
that they used through the election campaign.
I think the member is fully aware that the federal government has not
fulfilled all its commitments; in fact, it has changed its position on many of
its promises during the election. I hope
this does not fall into that same category.
I think the member is fully aware that when we have a
federal responsibility, the federal government must live up to it. There is no way in the world that we can
financially accept the responsibility for jurisdictional activities under their
jurisdiction. There is just no way we
can take the offload. We all want the
Port of Churchill to survive, and we certainly in the future see additional
opportunities of marketing grain into Europe.
The big wall that was built there by the European community over the
years seems to be opening a little bit, and for certain commodities Port of
Churchill certainly is a port of export that has some potential in that regard.
The future opportunities in regard to Russia, very hard to
judge. It looks like they are not going
to be buying any grain this year, period.
These are the comments that come out of Russia; that does not bode well
for Canada in terms of serving that market or any port on the eastern side of
Canada or Churchill.
So, Madam Chair, I have told the member what we know at
this stage. We must all maintain our
pressure on the M.P.s involved, particularly the 12 Manitobans who are elected
as Liberals to fulfill their promise, and I will be meeting this week with the
federal Minister of Transport. We will
certainly maintain our position with them.
We all know that he has made some very strong comments that are not
supportive for his continued commitment to transportation sector, period, in
this country.
Mr. Robinson: I, too, look forward to the results of that
meeting with federal minister in the next few days. One of the suggestions that I made to this
minister, the Manitoba Minister of Transportation (Mr. Findlay), Madam
Chairperson, is whether or not he would explore the possibility down the road,
in the event that this meeting in Ottawa does not turn out in favour of the
Port of Churchill, and consider an all‑party committee, being that they
were all agreed in this House on the viability of the Port of Churchill.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, the member obviously believes an
all‑party committee would have more impact than the government doing its
lobbying with the federal minister, or either the two opposition parties doing
the lobbying with the various M.P.s that they have contact with. I have seen several delegations go to
Ottawa. I have not seen a lot of
positive response to it. I think the
most productive way to be sure that we get our message across is continue to
lobby, through letters and in terms of personal discussion with the M.P.s
involved, and I stress the personal contact with Elijah Harper, the M.P. for
Churchill, with Lloyd Axworthy, a lead M.P. federally for the province of
Manitoba. They have both made
commitments to citizens of Manitoba that we must hold them accountable to.
We must communicate directly with them, and I would
recommend that the MLA for Rupertsland speak to the M.P. for Churchill to be
sure that he understands that we have not let up in terms of the promise. All three parties in this province are on the
same wavelength on this issue, and the federal government owes it to Manitoba,
western Canada, to maintain Churchill in a viable position and maintain the
rail line to Churchill in a viable position for future economic opportunities
for the northern parts of Manitoba, in fact, for all Manitoba.
* (1600)
Mr. Robinson: I think that I am in agreement with the
minister. No doubt, I think that every
effort should be made to ensure the ongoing life of the Port of Churchill, and
I do believe in what he was saying, that we should make every effort, no matter
what our political stripes, to try and secure the future of the Port of
Churchill.
Certainly we have done our work, and being the MLA for that
area, I have contacted the federal transportation minister. Like the minister, I have not received an
adequate response for myself to report back to the constituents that rely on
the Port of Churchill. As well, I have
contacted the local member of Parliament, and local officials in Churchill have
also been in touch with the member of Parliament for Churchill to express their
concern on the uncertainty of the future of the Port of Churchill.
So, yes, we are as well doing what we can, Madam
Chairperson, with respect to trying to assist in ensuring that the Port of
Churchill will be there in the coming years.
Another question I have for the honourable minister is
recently, on January 24, 1994, the producer payment panel issued a report. Has the minister expressed his opposition to
the producer payment panel report which, in my opinion, contains a number of
false statements concerning the Port of Churchill?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, the member, did I hear him
say January 24 of 1994? That was the
preliminary report from the producer payment panel and they have just in the
last two or three days released their final report and recommendations to the
federal minister. It certainly is an
item of discussion at this moment at the Ministers of Agriculture meeting which
is happening here in Winnipeg. All
provinces and the federal government are at the table discussing the report as
it has been put in front of them. To
what extent there is something different in that report relative to January, I
have not had an opportunity to study the whole report. I have seen excerpts from it, but there is
going to be a lot of discussion on an awful lot of items relative to the
comments that are going to be in that report now. I think we should wait and see what comes out
of the discussion involving particularly the western Ministers of Agriculture
and the federal Minister of Agriculture on that final report that they now
have.
Mr. Robinson: Madam Chairperson, to the best of my
knowledge, one of the recommendations in the report of the producer payment
panel was No. 9: It is recommended that
the government complete an assessment of the future of the Churchill elevator
and the role of the Port of Churchill as a grain export route as soon as
possible and issue a policy decision in order to remove the existing
uncertainty.
Now the press release I have here is dated June 30,
1994. In the press release it recommends
a line that Churchill be exempt from the branch line rationalization package
but recommends an early decision on a future Churchill be made recognizing the
cost of shipping grain through Churchill.
I would just like to put that on record, and I agree with the
minister. I would like to have the final
look at the final report before making further comments on that. Certainly it is something that does concern
our members and also our constituents in the community of Churchill.
One final question for the honourable minister, Madam
Chairperson, is the Arctic Bridge agreement and the one million tonnes that the
Deputy Premier promised would be shipped through this agreement. I am wondering when we will see something
come out of this agreement or perhaps the government has given up on this
proposed initiative.
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, the Arctic Bridge concept
was discussed by the Premier with officials when he was in Russia in '91. The current Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson),
who was Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism, and I were there in '92 when a
preliminary agreement was signed.
Subject to that, a consultant was hired to explore opportunities between
the Ports of Murmansk and Churchill, in other words between northern Russia and
Manitoba. That report has still not been
received by us yet. We are still
awaiting that report.
In all due respect, Madam Chairperson, the reports we read
about the state of affairs in Russia are certainly of grave concern to us in terms
of ability for them to do business with us.
Things are not as good now as they were in '92 would be my perception
from what I read and what I see.
The comments from some official in Russia here, I believe I
read them in one of the farm papers last week, were that they would be buying
no grain, which is certainly not good news for western Canada and particularly
Manitoba in terms of opportunities to export some of that through Churchill.
We await the consultant's report. Caribou Ventures was the consultant.
I would just like to say something else to the member. The producer payment panel has put out its
final report. It is recommending that
the WGTA monies be paid to the producer.
I can assure the member that there is nobody who is more astute about
deciding what is to his cost advantage to do.
In other words, a producer will analyze the options where he can export
his grain at the lowest cost to him, in other words, greatest return into his
pocket.
There has been lots of information supplied and generated
over the last few years that would indicate Churchill could compete very, very
well to attract activity. We have to be
concerned about whether the people making the decision in the past whether to
use or not to use that port really takes the true economic picture into
consideration.
I can assure the member that producers are in a position in
the future to have the power to decide where to spend their transportation money
to export their grain. Churchill will
look very attractive to them on the balance sheet. I think that is a bit of a silver lining at
this time, because if the producers see an opportunity to export more cost
effectively through Churchill, they will do what it takes to drive the
decisions in that direction.
I think there are some positive opportunities there. We must all work together as we have in the
past in this House to ensure that the positive opportunities in Churchill are
not lost in the shuffle.
Mr. Daryl Reid
(Transcona): Madam Chair, I have a few questions to the
Minister of Highways and Transportation (Mr. Findlay).
To pick up on where my colleague the member for Rupertsland
(Mr. Robinson) left off a moment ago with respect to the Arctic Bridge
agreement, when we were in the Estimates process the minister made reference to
the fact that there was around a $100,000 contract that had been awarded or
given to Caribou consultants.
Can the minister tell me how much of those monies have been
expended for Caribou? Does he have
available to him information relating to the amount of monies that have been
expended or paid to Caribou at this point in time?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, I do not have the exact
figure. It is a portion of the total
contract. It is not all of the
contract. I would suggest it is in the
ballpark of about two‑thirds of the total contract. If I am not mistaken‑‑I would not
want to be held to this‑‑but if I am not mistaken, the contract was
a little less than $100,000, and roughly two‑thirds of it has been paid,
is my recollection, but I do not have the figures in front of me.
Mr. Reid: Is it possible to get a copy of the contract
that was awarded so that we can have an idea of what the terms of reference
were? My colleague here has already
asked the minister questions about any positive outcome as a result of any
dealings with the Russian government to enhance export opportunities through
Churchill to Murmansk, Russia, and vice versa.
So I would like to know what the terms of the contract were
and, if possible, see a copy of the contract and also to find out whether or
not we got good value for our dollar on this.
Mr. Findlay: In this contract, three departments are
involved and I will inquire to determine if there is a willingness to release
the contract so we know the terms of reference.
I think the member will probably be quite happy with the terms of
reference. Whether we receive the kind
of opportunity we all want to receive is certainly an open question.
* (1610)
Mr. Reid: I look forward to any information the
minister can provide on that and let me know, if possible, if not at some other
time in this House, maybe in writing in the future as time progresses.
I have another question.
I want to switch for a moment to the rail merger issue. I know that the minister has already
indicated that this is going to be on the agenda for the transport ministers
meeting that is supposed to take place in Calgary this week. We had Sypher: Mueller International, which was a consulting
firm that is supposed to be doing some work on the merger issue, and, it is my
understanding, was supposed to report back to the ministers of transport prior
to this meeting taking place.
Does the minister have a copy of the report that
Sypher: Mueller International is
supposed to have available for this point in time since the meeting, I believe,
is supposed to take place tomorrow?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chairperson, no, I do not have it, and
I have not received it. It is supposed
to be presented to us either tomorrow or the next day, I am not sure which day
on the agenda. Certainly, three
provinces, as the member knows, were involved:
Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.
As far as I know, we will be receiving the report in the next day or two
from the consultants, and we will see what it says. I also understand, we will probably have some
comments from the railroads in terms of where they are at. So we will certainly have a greater level of
knowledge in the next two or three days.
Mr. Reid: I know that the time spent was not that great
from when the consulting firm was hired‑‑and looking at the news
release I think it was June 3‑‑so there is not a great deal of time
in there that the company had to come forward with any recommendations or any
advice for the government, but it seems that if they had been agreeable to the
terms to undertake this work for the three governments, the government, the
minister himself should have had some opportunity to review the issues or the
items that would have been brought forward by this consulting firm. So I am a bit disappointed that the minister
would not have had that opportunity to reference the document and to apprise
the House of or make the House aware of any of the items in that.
Quite possibly, then, if the minister is agreeable, when
the transport ministers' meeting has concluded at the end of this week, I would
be interested to see a copy of the consulting firm's report, if the minister is
agreeable to that, so that we might be aware of what issues were identified by
the consulting firm that the three levels of government should be raising in
their meetings that are going to take place.
Mr. Findlay: Well, Madam Chair, certainly I will consider
the member's request. I am not 100
percent positive we will see the report.
We are expecting it. It is
supposed to be there.
The member says why would we not have seen it before we
go? Well, things happen fast and you
have got to think on your feet in this business. Unfortunately, there is an awful lot on our
agenda. I can assure the member the time
allotted for the agenda items that we all have on our table right now is about
a quarter of what we really are going to need.
I am a little disappointed that the federal minister has
not allocated more than two hours in one afternoon to talk with us with a wide
variety of issues that he has opened up in the last few weeks with his
comments, let alone the issues that are already on the table that the member
for Rupertsland (Mr. Robinson) has raised and a number of other ones. If he is expecting great success out of our
meeting, I have to caution him ahead that enough time has not been allotted to
have the kind of in‑depth discussion with 11 ministers that is
needed. My experience tells me that this
meeting will open up a lot of maybe‑‑dare I say?‑‑some
wounds that are going to have to be worked on to get some resolution to some of
the issues that are in front of us, but most of them are not easy.
Clearly, I think I have said before that the CN‑CP
merger is an issue that is on the table out of necessity, and both railroads
are losing money far faster than they can ever afford to do. Eventually it comes back on the user and the
taxpayer in this country to eventually pay those bills. They have got to change the way they do
business in some fashion to move goods in this country in a fashion that does
not allow them or cause them to lose money in the process. It is going to require significant
adjustment, and adjustment is always painful, but we want to be sure that,
whatever adjustment process occurs, both of those competing railroads survive
for the good of all Canadians. We want
to be sure that it does not have an undue negative impact on Manitoba that
exceeds our ability to absorb that impact or we are treated unfairly in the
process.
I think I have also said to the member previously that
there are certainly reasons to think that we will come out ahead in this
process relative to other regions of the country, because this is always going
to be a hub, east‑west, and the opportunities that are going south.
The member probably saw very recently that one of the major
commodities that railroads move‑‑now the biggest market for
Canadian sales of cereal grains, in fact, all grain commodities‑‑oilseeds,
cereal grains, special crops‑‑is the United States. I remember standing in this House receiving
questions from the opposition in the former responsibility saying that the Free
Trade Agreement was important to us, opened up opportunity, not that we did not
already have free trade in agriculture in most of our commodities. I said it creates an atmosphere and attitude
that more activity will go south, and clearly that is what has happened, much
faster than we ever expected. I remember
standing here and saying the U.S. has become more important. It is now the sixth biggest market for
us. Well, last year it was fourth and
now it is first. So what this really
does is change the direction of commodity movement. It requires great change in the way the rails
are operating in western Canada, in fact, North America.
The member is, I am sure, aware that CP now has 30 percent
of their trackage in the United States; CN, 10 percent. It certainly does not serve all the market
areas in the United States, but they have some doors open to them in terms of
running on certain trackage, and I hope they have other agreements to move to
other trackage within the United States.
The direction of trade is changing, and the world is changing. We must adapt. We must adapt in the fashion that is
economically viable for not only the railroads but for the entire industry, and
I feel we are moving in that direction, but the member must be prepared to
accept some change in the way things are done for the betterment of all in the
long run. Sure, there is going to be
some hurt along the way, there is no question.
The government's job is to try and mitigate that hurt and be sure that
we are doing the right things for the right reasons, and he can depend on us to
try to achieve that.
Mr. Reid: Well, the minister raised a lot of points in
his comments. He talks about hurt and I
will pick up on the hurt. One of the
unfortunate parts, though, is that a lot of the people that are going to be
hurt by any of those changes, in any of the shift of the operations from rail
to trucking, are going to be people of my community, and my job here is to
represent a lot of those interests. Even
though the minister says‑‑and the former Minister of Health laughs
at the fact that I raise the issues to represent my constituents. It is something that I have to do. I have to do that because these are people
that‑‑
Madam Chairperson: Order, please.
Point of Order
Hon. Donald Orchard
(Minister of Energy and Mines): Madam
Chairperson, the member for Transcona has just made a remark that reflects his
immaturity and his inaccuracy in statement.
I would ask you to ask him to withdraw it and stick to the facts instead
of this silliness.
Mr. Steve Ashton
(Opposition House Leader): Madam Chair, I
cannot raise a point of order on a point of order. First of all I do not believe it is a
legitimate point of order, but I think whatever the member for Transcona (Mr.
Reid) said was made mildly in comparison to the statements that the Minister of
Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard) made, and I would perhaps urge the minister to
withdraw some of the comments he made. I
do not think this is in the best interest of anyone to get into the kind of
comments the minister made back and forth in the kind of personal insults.
Madam Chairperson: Order, please. The honourable Minister of Energy and Mines
did not have a point of order.
* * *
* (1620)
Mr. Reid: Madam Chairperson, even the CEO of CP Rail is
saying that there is going to be some impact when we change the method of
payment. The minister has talked about
significant changes in the direction that grain traffic has been flowing. We have seen huge increases in traffic flows
to the U.S. We were concerned in the
past and we have raised the issue in the past about the impact that there is
going to be on the Department of Highways and Transportation if we shift from
rail to trucking. It is going to cause a
squeeze on the finances available as we try to maintain and improve the highway
systems. So that is another reason why
we changed.
I know this is a double‑edged sword that if we
improve by changing the method of payments, we improve the opportunities for
the Port of Churchill to export products through the port, because producers
will then have the chance to choose. It
then takes away, because even the CEOs at CP Rail now say there are going to be
some impact by the change in the method of payment where they are going to have
to rationalize their network. With the
rationalization of the network go the jobs.
So it is a double‑edged sword here. If Churchill benefits by the change in the
method of payment because producers select it, which I hope they do, then
railway jobs are going to be put at risk.
My job here is to represent the interests of the railway people in my
community, and that is what I have done.
I am not sure if the minister is aware of this or not, but
when we talked about the merger of the two railways from Winnipeg east, it is
my understanding that just recently the CN Rail received approval from the NTA
to abandon the Graham sub which is in northwestern Ontario. That is the link that goes between the CN
north line and Thunder Bay, Ontario, which means that now the railway will not
be able to ship grain products to Thunder Bay via the north line. It leaves them with the south line which runs
through U.S. territory. So I am not sure
if the CN Rail is planning on shipping all their products via the south line to
Thunder Bay or they are even planning on abandoning or bypassing Thunder
Bay. I am not sure what the long‑term
plan is there. I am bringing this up for
the minister's information so that when he goes to the Transport ministers
meeting that he is aware of this item.
Also, it is my understanding that when we talk about the
merger of the two railway lines and you look at the logic of what the intent
is, CN currently has, out of our regional headquarters here in Winnipeg and the
employees that do the work here, we look after some 1,100 miles of rail network
on CN line east of Winnipeg and only 145 miles west of Winnipeg. So when you take a look at what happens when
you merge those two lines, there is potential for us to lose all of the CN
regional headquarters jobs here in Winnipeg.
The minister, I am sure, already knows from his department
staff how many jobs that we have to maintain and look after that 1,100 miles of
line east of Winnipeg. So we have a lot
at risk here by the merger of those two rail lines. It is not just the maintenance jobs and the
rolling stock equipment through the Transcona main shops or the CP Weston
shops. We have the CN regional
headquarters here in the city as well, and maybe even the CP headquarters jobs,
whatever is left of them. So I raise
that with the minister, and I will leave that for the minister's information.
When I left the Estimates process, I asked the minister for
some information relating to tolls.
There are other jurisdictions in the country that have asked for or have
moved toward private highway contracts, and there are going to be toll roads on
those to pay for those highways. Are
there plans by the Department of Highways to move in a direction where we will
have private companies constructing and paying for those roads as we have seen
in other jurisdictions?
Mr. Findlay: Madam Chair, the member, I know, in the
interest of time, would like me to move on just to the last question, but he
has raised a number of comments along the way.
One of them was raised that I will try to quickly answer, give a comment
here.
He raised a comment, and he used it again here, that CP
executive individuals or senior executives of CP had made certain comments
about change in the method of payment.
My staff have inquired. They can
find no comments from any senior executive of CN or CP with regard to that in
recent time. They have contacted the
public relations department for both CN and CP, and they cannot find any public
or media reports recording any such comments.
Now if the member has something there, maybe he would let me know where
he has found it. The member has
mentioned that senior executives of the railway have said those, so let us see
the evidence.
The member must be aware‑‑he says he is
concerned about jobs for his constituents.
The MLA for Transcona, I am sure, has constituents who not only work for
rail but also are employed in the trucking industry. If we look back, since 1940‑‑and
I have seen the statistics‑‑there has almost been a doubling in the
amount of freight handled by trucks and a reduction of the amount by rail by
about half. So there has been a steady
progression, for the last 50 years, of movement of commodities. What used to be hauled by rail is now hauled
by truck to a greater and greater extent.
Now, one could argue all the reasons why that has happened,
but it is a reality. The total number of
jobs has certainly gone down in recent years in the industry because of
efficiencies, larger units, computerization and logistics and all of those
reasons, but the reality of their future is‑‑just take grain. I mean, it is a raw commodity; it is going to
have to be hauled by something. We will
consume no more 10 or 20 years from now in Manitoba than we do today, and we do
grow more and more. We grow a wider
variety of commodities which require more specialized types of transportation
probably, dare I use the word, a little less efficient way of moving the
product because we do not have 100,000 tonnes of one thing, you have 10,000
tonnes of 10 different items. As we move
more into the States, it take more trackage or more roads, longer distances,
more jobs, in other words, of moving the commodities to market today than what
was the case 10 years ago.
So the jobs are going to be somewhere in the transportation
industry. Now the game is going to be,
who can most cost effectively and performance‑wise deliver the product
from the seller to the buyer? But there
are going to be jobs in between; no question there are going to be jobs, rail
industry or trucking industry. [interjection] The member says, how many? Well, it is going to be a matter of what is
the most cost‑effective way to do it, because you cannot say to the
farmer he must pay more, more, more of his gross income toward transportation
costs to guarantee jobs. The issue is,
they must do the job efficiently, effectively toward their existence as a
job. There is no question there are
going to be products hauled. Now, we say
in Manitoba, let us do more value‑added activity, processing, conversion
of the raw cereal grain into meat, processing the special crops, and on it
goes, and haul more value‑added commodity and create jobs here in
Manitoba. In the broad sense of a raw
commodity that is taken from the land, we do something with it.
I have to tell the member that exporting raw commodity is
exporting jobs. We should be doing the
jobs of value adding here. It creates
jobs, and a job is a job is a job in my mind.
Some of them are more higher value than others, but eventually, we
export a product, we absolutely export a product. There are going to be real jobs, trucking
jobs or air cargo jobs in that export business.
There is no question, but we are definitely in an evolution to doing
things differently. It is cost driven,
and the producer is taking less and less in the form of income because of
higher costs beyond his farm gate. They
must come under control. So that is the
broad picture.
The member is worried about loss of jobs. I say we must work hard to create
opportunities for new jobs, new high‑tech jobs, in one form or
another. That is going to be our mission
in the next few years. It is the mission
of the entire industry. I think we can
succeed at it, provided we get on the wavelength that the future is
unfolding. There is an old saying: The highway to the future is always under
construction. I think that is very, very
true.
Madam Chair, now to get back to the basic question, private
roads. Currently, I am not aware of any
toll roads in Manitoba. How the public
can afford to continue to supply the necessary resources to build all the roads
that the public needs in the future is certainly a very open question. We support very strongly a national highway
program so some of the $4.5 billion of fuel taxes the federal government collects
is actually spent on some road somewhere in Canada. Currently, they spend about $200 million on
roads, collect $4,500 million, so there is a big gap that they do not return to
the road network.
In Manitoba, as we do the calculations, the total revenues
collected from roads and vehicle registrations is very much in balance with our
expenditure on roads in terms of construction and maintenance. So our record is clean in terms of, the
revenues we collect go to the road system.
Federal government has a very dirty record, and we want them to commit
to a national highway program so that we can source some funds to do more
construction than we do today, because as the member knows‑‑I am
trying to think of the right terminology.
TRIP Canada has said that in order to maintain our roads, in terms of an
analysis, we should be spending about $136 million a year. We spend $110 million. Now, I think that is pretty good, pretty close,
but clearly the National Highways Program would supply to Manitoba something
like $30 million a year. There we could
fill in. We could actually be keeping up
in terms of maintenance and reconstruction, keep up with the need in the
province of Manitoba. I do not think any
other province is even as close as we are to achieving that. But, if we had some federal money, it could
be done, and I think that is the right way to go if we are going to spend more
money on infrastructure renewal and upgrading in the province of Manitoba.
* (1630)
Mr. Reid: I have put some things on the record to give
the minister some notice about questions I had intended to ask when we moved to
concurrence. One of the questions I had
asked at that time had to do with graduated licensing because the department
had given some indication that they were considering graduated licensing just a
short time ago. I am wondering if there
has been further work or there is further intent on the part of this government
to move towards a graduated licensing system for Manitoba.
Mr. Findlay: I have looked at the statistics of our young
people in terms of their record as drivers.
There is no question there is a higher accident rate for those under 19
than for say people 30 or 40 years of age.
The purpose of graduated licensing is to restrict everybody getting
their licence in some uniform fashion.
Madam Chairperson, I want to tell the members of the House
that when we look at the statistics, the problem area is the young male between
16 and 19. The young female driver in
the same age category has a tremendously better driving record. Now, the NDP is promoting graduated licensing
and saying we should negatively impact all those young people at 16 who are
entering their first opportunity for a driver's licence. I say it is unfair to do that. If we have people that are causing trouble,
then let us focus our laws to respond to them doing something wrong, whether it
is speeding or racing or whatever it is, as we did we with auto theft and auto
vandalism in this particular session of the Legislature. I do not think that we should‑‑and
I speak for the young female drivers‑‑subject them to more
restrictions to obtaining their drivers licences, because their record is very
good as drivers, very good, very responsible.
So I do not think that I want to be an advocate of the
current definition of graduated licences, which says we will make it another
three months, six months, or one year longer for everybody to obtain their
first driver's licence. I say, let them
prove themselves, let them go through the current process of a one‑year
probationary licence, then they get the full licence. But, if you do something wrong, whether it is
alcohol or speeding, whatever it is, then invoke the laws and take away the
driver's licence, but do not treat everybody negatively just because they are
in a certain age category. That is where‑‑although
graduated licensing sounds like a good idea, think of how it negatively impacts
those young people who have done nothing wrong.
(Mr. Marcel Laurendeau,
Deputy Chairperson, in the Chair)
I believe in the principle "innocent till proven
guilty." That is why we have done
the auto theft/auto vandalism to attack a certain problem. I think it is a good thing for society to do
that. I hope it succeeds in reducing the
incidence of those activities, but in terms of tougher drinking‑and‑driving
laws, we have clearly done that, in terms of Bill 3‑‑what, three,
four, maybe even five years ago now. In
terms of trying to be sure that the roads are safe, the statistics do prove
they are getting a little bit safer.
I think the laws to restrict who drives should be targeted
at exactly those people who cause the trouble.
Graduated licensing, unfortunately, does not target exactly at the
people who cause the trouble.
The circumstance‑‑I think I have given the
member the figures before‑‑is that of 670,000 people who have
licences in the province, at any given time about 27,000 are on suspension for
one reason or another. That is an awful
lot.
We do catch a lot of people along the way. Unfortunately, some of them still drive. That is a problem. How do you catch them? Certainly the police, in the process of doing
their work, continually attempt to pick them off. Anytime you have the ALERT program, you sure
pick some of them off.
Our position is, graduated licensing does not target the
problem. Our position as government is,
if there is a predicted problem, a certain action in society that is offending
the rest, we want to target the laws at them.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I thank the minister
for the information, because I was concerned that when the department started
talking about this issue some time ago that the government was actually going
to move in that direction. I just wanted
to clarify what their policy intent was.
Now that we have clarified that issue, the government now
does not appear that they are going to be moving in that direction. I know the silly former Minister of Health
thinks that these questions are not important, but I think that they are, and that
is why I asked them. I am just trying to
do my job to the best of my ability.
Whether he likes it or not, I am going to continue to do that.
I had also asked some questions relating to the cost
recovery for the Photo Licensing program and what monies are benefited or
profited by the continuation of the $4‑per‑year additional licence
fee. I want to know which monies are
reaped from continuation of this program.
I had given that question to the minister by way of advance notice when
we concluded the Estimates process.
Mr. Findlay: Hopefully, these are the numbers the member
is looking for. Our total annual salary
and expenditure cost for renewing the photo licences at a quarter of them a
year, in other words, once every four years, is $1.9 million. That is our cost. The revenue generated from the $4 licence is
$2.68 million. So the government is
recovering its cost.
Mr. Reid: I thank the minister for that
information. The minister was also going
to provide some information relating to carriers, trucks and trip inspection
reports, facility audits. He was going
to give me some statistics on that. I am
wondering if the minister has that information available as well. Maybe if he has it, he could just send it
across for my information.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Deputy Chair, what the member is asking
for is a little bit more than what I have right in front of me at the moment,
so I would prefer to send it to him at a little later date. We will compile the information. He suggested trip inspection reports, costs
and that sort of thing, so we will send that information over.
Mr. Reid: I am also interested in information relating
to the Taxicab Board, and I had asked the minister for information relating to
Bill 24 implementation. I am wondering
if the minister can tell me what the plans are with respect to that piece of
legislation and also if we are taking any steps to improve the safety for those
that are currently driving taxicab vehicles in the city of Winnipeg. There still appears to be some safety
concerns. There are some ways in which
taxicab drivers that are in distress can signal, but I do not think there is a
general public awareness of the process of utilizing the roof light on top of
the vehicles. I am wondering if there
are some means or some studies that the government is undertaking to look at
improving the safety for those that are operating those vehicles.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, the member asks about
proclaiming a certain bill that was passed a year ago. I told him in Estimates that as government we
are relatively pleased with the improved attitude out there in the
industry. The performance and some of
the hassles that were there before are either diminished or maybe resolved, and
I think a lot of the credit for that goes to the Taxicab Board and the way they
are approaching things in terms of the input they are receiving from the
taxicab drivers. Clearly, as long as
things are going well, there is no need to rock the boat.
I think we need a little more time for the process of the
new board to continue to do its work with the industry. In regard to personal safety‑‑I
think he is referring to personal safety of the drivers‑‑clearly if
there are ways and means to make things work better, the Taxicab Board is the
jurisdiction to deal with. They can work
with the industry to do certain things, to standardize the way things are done
in some fashion, like the member says with the light on the roof or whatever. If there are ways to do things, I can assure
him that the Taxicab Board is more than willing to work with the industry or
with the local police officials to improve safety in the work environment for
those individuals.
* (1640)
There is a retired police officer on the Taxicab Board at
this time, and surely we have an opportunity through him to have input to,
certainly, the Winnipeg police, who are the jurisdiction most responsible. So I think things have improved
significantly, and I am confident it can continue that way because I like the
attitude of the Taxicab Board. Truly,
the less the minister's office is involved in this industry, the better
everything is. The more the Taxicab
Board works with the industry, the better it is for all the players. That is the way it is progressing, and I
expect it to continue to work that way.
Mr. Reid: I am happy to hear that things are moving
along relatively smoothly with the Taxicab Board in its relationship with the
taxicab industry. I think that was the
general direction we wanted to go when Bill 24 was being debated in this House
and when it was at committee. I hope
that we do not have to implement that piece of legislation. I had also asked the minister to provide me
with some information relating to the cost recovery for the Taxicab Board
operations and the other board operations, including the Motor Transport Board,
the Highway Traffic Board and the Licence Suspension Appeal and Medical Review
Committee Board as well, because in the past Estimates, we had talked about
moving the Taxicab Board itself to full‑cost recovery.
It only seemed to me to be fair that if we are going to do
that for one board, we can do it for the other boards as well instead of trying
to single out one particular industry and the people that have their employment
through that.
I am wondering if the minister has that information
available, with respect to the cost recovery.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, with regard to the
Motor Transport Board, the expenditures are $470,000, and the revenues and
regulated fees‑‑we are talking about the current budget‑‑are
$158,000. So expenditures still exceed
revenue by $312,000 for the Motor Transport Board.
With regard to the other boards, I would have to get the
information and send it over to the member at a later date.
Mr. Reid: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I look forward to
receiving that information from the minister.
There were some grants that the Department of Highways and
Transportation gives to various organizations in each budget year: Manitoba Safety Council, Canada Safety
Council, Traffic Injury Research Foundation, and Society for Manitobans with
Disabilities Inc. Does the minister have
the information relating to the dollar value of the grants that were given this
year for those organizations? It is my
understanding that one of those organizations is receiving substantially less
than they have in prior years, and I want to know if the same applies to other
organizations as well.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, the one is receiving
substantially less. I am sure the member
is referring to the Manitoba Safety Council.
The amount of grant that they received was reduced 50 percent last
budget, 50 percent this budget. [interjection] It was communicated to them two
years ago, the former minister tells me, and at this current time in this
budget, the grant to them is effectively zero.
They are an agency that we use very, very regularly,
consistently through DDVL, the Division of Driver Vehicle Licensing, in terms
of sending people over to take courses.
The people that take those courses pay a fee, and the purpose, what we
felt that the Manitoba Safety Council, in terms of the fees they charge, could
cover their full cost. Clearly we send
them the clients, and they set the fees in order to balance their budget.
The last time I talked to their executive director they
felt they were doing okay in terms of living in the new environment without the
provincial grant. They certainly were
pleased that we continue to send them the clients in increasing numbers, and
for public safety reasons we do that.
They are charging fees appropriate with their costs and are able to
recover through their fee schedule the costs of running their courses, in other
words, doing their business.
So that is an agreement that was struck between the
government, the department, and the Manitoba Safety Council. I think we have eliminated the subsidization
of their operation. They have charged
the fees so the people whom we send over as customers are paying the cost, and
I think that is the fair and reasonable way to operate.
Mr. Reid: I am sorry.
I did not catch the last part of the minister's comments, Mr. Deputy
Chairperson. I had also asked the
minister for information relating to grants to other organizations. I am wondering if the Canada Safety Council,
the Traffic Injury Research Foundation and the SMD are receiving grants and
what dollar values.
Mr. Findlay: I do not have the exact figures in front of
me, but to my recollection, they are all the same as the previous year.
House Business
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Deputy
Chairperson, I would like to suggest that committee temporarily interrupt its
proceedings so that Mr. Speaker may resume in the Chair so that we can
determine whether there is unanimous consent of the House to waive private
members' hour. If there is, Committee of
Supply can immediately resume sitting to consider the matter now before it.
Mr. Deputy Chairperson: Is there leave then to allow me to call in
the Speaker and temporarily interrupt proceedings, and then we will proceed
after the Chair gives us leave? [agreed]
Call in the Speaker.
IN SESSION
(Mr. Marcel Laurendeau,
Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): I believe, Mr.
Acting Speaker, that there is unanimous consent of the House to waive private
members' hour and to sit beyond 6 p.m. this evening.
The Acting Speaker (Mr.
Laurendeau): Is there leave to waive private members' hour
and sit beyond 6 p.m.? [agreed]
COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY
(continued)
Supply‑‑Capital Supply
Mr. Deputy Chairperson
(Marcel Laurendeau): The committee will come to order.
Mr. Clif Evans
(Interlake): Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I would just like to
finish up with the Minister of Highways (Mr. Findlay). I know my colleague from Swan River has a few
points to make.
I would just like to put on record for the minister that I
am requesting, if he wants to either take it from Hansard or make copies now
himself, certain roads that I would like an update on and what the department
is planning on these roads. I would
appreciate that instead of dragging this out now.
* (1650)
I was going to mention Highway 329 to the minister, and
that is from Highway 326 west to Highway 17.
At certain points that road is probably in the same kind of condition if
not worse than 234 in certain spots.
Highway 231 between Highways 7 and 17‑‑and I do know that
there are proponents, as the minister mentioned earlier‑‑about
Highway 325 from Ashern east to 329, the general maintenance on that road, and,
of course, upgrading of that road.
Also, to the minister, I would like some response as to the
condition and any proposed work and maintenance that has been or has not been
done on Highway 513 from Gypsumville to the Dauphin River reserve. The calls are constant on that road, and I
would certainly like to see the minister do as much as possible with the
maintenance on that road and the upkeep.
Perhaps we can see some projects down the road to improve further than
what has been improved on that road.
I want to bring to the minister's attention also a letter
that I received from the Little Saskatchewan Reserve from Chief Shorting. It goes back to June of '93. He had written to Mr. G.W. Stary in Dauphin
in June of '93 requesting that certain roads, main market roads around that
area are in bad shape. He called me just
last week indicating that he has not received any word on his request to do
something about the conditions of the roads in the area. He mentions market roads 52, 53 and 56 and
that he had spoken with Mr. Stary and is waiting, waiting for an answer to his
request.
On one last note, and I would like the minister to respond
to this, Highway 417 from Highway 6 west to the main road on the Lake Manitoba
reserve. The minister has received
letters from myself, letters from the R.M. of Eriksdale and from chief and
council from Lake Manitoba reserve requesting that this road be put back on the
program and that the government of the day respond and do something about
getting 417 back on line. I would just
like to know what the minister is proposing to do about Highway 417 from
Highway 6 in Eriksdale and west to Lake Manitoba reserve.
Hon. Glen Findlay
(Minister of Highways and Transportation): I
guess, if this was the world of magic we would instantly just fix everything
overnight, but the member, I am sure, is aware of reality. It takes a lot longer to fix all the roads he
just talked about. We will respond from
Hansard with all the different roads he has mentioned with regard to an update
and where things are at. Some of them
are in various stages of activity.
I want to specifically mention just briefly to the member
the situation around road 417. There had
been attempts to do some work that was initiated way back in 1982. The request at the time‑‑in order
to widen the road through the reserve, they had to have access to the
land. I do not know whether the member
is aware of it or not, but the band consistently refused to make the land
available. So the department's hands
have been tied for some time in order to upgrade that road through the
reserve. We understand recently that the
band has changed its position and is prepared to make the land available. So the member can chastise the department for
not doing something, but I want him to know the department is not completely at
fault, okay?
There is a letter going out talking about the various
sections of the road. I think the road
is divided into three sections from Eriksdale, first 24 kilometres and the next
13 kilometres to the band office and then the remaining almost 5 kilometres to
Highway 68. There is going to be a
letter going out talking about each of the sections. Clearly, the member also has to realize that
since we are on reserve land, for a good portion of this there is a cost
sharing that must happen with the federal government.
The traditional cost sharing is 60‑40‑‑60
federal and 40 provincial. That is a
requirement. We are not the only player
in this game and we would certainly expect the federal government to
participate in a positive sense with us.
So we are proceeding now that we understand there is an agreement for us
to acquire the land. We have to proceed
with the federal government to get them to cost share, and on things shall go.
I do not want the member to try to indicate the department
is consistently at fault, not doing their homework. Their hands are tied in two different
ways. One of the logjams seems to have
been broken now. Maybe we can get on
with doing some things that are good for his constituents.
The vehicle count on the road, the first section of the
road west of Eriksdale, has been increasing.
So it is starting to warrant activity.
We do keep track of counts on a lot of roads. The member has a number of roads he has
mentioned that maybe the number of vehicles per day is not quite what is
necessary in competition with the roads in other regions of the province to
have attention given to them, but we will send an update on all those roads.
The one that he mentioned, 513, is divided into eight
different sections. Different portions
have been constructed over the last five, six, seven years, but there is always
another section that is urgent today.
When somebody asks for it, they forget that we have already done two or
three sections.
The member has to give us a little leniency in terms of
being able to live within the restrictions the taxpayer gives us. I think we do spend a lot of money on capital
construction of roads and on maintenance.
We will never be able to satisfy everybody all the time, but we will
always be prepared to discuss and compare options as to where we can most
effectively spend our money to improve the roads for all Manitobans.
I will send the member an update on a wide variety of roads
and am prepared to sit down and discuss with him, as I said earlier, where he
believes the most urgent priorities are, and we will go from there.
Ms. Rosann Wowchuk (Swan
River): Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I know we have spent
quite a lot of time on highways, but I have a few questions that I would like
to ask the minister about a few particular roads. If he cannot get the answers to me today, I
would be just as happy if he would get them to me in writing.
There are a couple of roads in my constituency that I have
written to the minister about, one of them being 269 in the Ethelbert area
where they are trying to get a by‑pass around the community. There is a dispute between Water Resources
and the Highways department as to whether or not that by‑pass should go
ahead. It is very important because
there is no alternative access out of the community if there should be a
problem with the bridge coming out of Ethelbert which is a very old, narrow
bridge.
I would ask the minister if he would look into that and
correspond with me and with the community as to how this Water Resources,
Highways department problem can be resolved.
In the Ethelbert area, there is also 273, a road that the
R.M. of Ethelbert has been trying to get improved. Again the Water Resources department
indicates that there is a problem with drainage.
It appears in both those cases it is a matter of one
department passing the buck onto the other department. The improvements of roads are being held up
in that area.
So, in both of those, I would ask the minister if he would
look into those and correspond with me and with the R.M. of Ethelbert as to how
those two issues can be resolved.
Perhaps in the next year we can see both those projects go onto a road
program, but they keep getting stalled because of a water problem.
* (1700)
The other issue that I want to raise with the Minister of
Natural Resources is the road into Pelican Rapids. Two years ago the previous Minister of
Highways had indicated that there would be continuous salt applied onto that
road into Pelican Rapids. That has never
happened. There has been some reason for
delay of that, so if the minister can look into that, I would appreciate an answer
on that.
As well, I read in a press release in one of the newspapers
in Swan River that the Lenswood Bridge is going to be built this year, but when
I checked with the department it is not going to be built. It is just a feasibility on the approaches. So if the minister could indicate what the
time frame is on the Lenswood Bridge‑‑that has been a bridge that
has come up, I think, for the last, about 15 years. It always seems to surface at election time,
and it comes on as a promise again. It
is not fair to the people that they should be delayed.
There is a desperate need for that bridge. I think the minister was out and looked at
it. It is a very narrow bridge. People in that area are adding 15 to 20 miles
in some cases onto their trip to another piece of land because the bridge is
just too narrow for people to get their equipment on. With the change in equipment that we have
right now, I think the minister understands why that bridge has to be looked into.
Those are the four roads on which I would appreciate some
response from the minister, and, as I say, not necessarily today. The other issue is the Cowan subline. The minister said he would be communicating
with the federal government, with the railways, on keeping that railway open or
taking it off any list which might discontinue services. We have not heard from the minister whether
he has had any firm commitment from the federal government on that.
I think the minister recognizes that with the activity that
is going on in the Swan River area right now, this railway is vital to that
operation of the plant should it proceed.
We would like to know whether the federal government is committed to
keeping that railway‑‑or whether CN is committed to keeping that
railway opened so that we can proceed with the economic development in that
area, particularly with the proposed Louisiana‑Pacific plant. If it is built, that railway is a vital part
of it.
I would ask the minister if he could look into those few
areas and respond, not necessarily today, but I would look for answers in those
areas.
Mr. Findlay: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I have noted the
member's requests, five of them here certainly.
On the first three, on 269, 273 and the road to Pelican Rapids, I will
respond to her in writing. I do not have
the information in front of me. I was
not aware of the dispute she is referring to with Water Resources, but clearly
we will attempt to find out what the problem is, what the dispute is. Any dispute should have resolution, so we
will communicate with her.
With regard to the Lenswood Bridge, the member is exactly
right. I have visited the bridge. I have travelled it; I have seen it. I know exactly what she is referring to. With today's equipment, yes, there is a
problem‑‑a clear problem.
The bridge is old, it is restrictive to what can get over it, and the
alignment of the road is just not consistent with the kind of road we want
today. It is winding, bending and I
think certainly a safety hazard for anybody who is travelling. The majority of that road‑‑what
is the road number?‑‑268. I
have visited it, and we have it in the spring program this year.
I can assure the member it is a commitment that we have
made that will be fulfilled, and the member can go back and say that. When something is in the spring program, the
general process is it is announced, the industry knows the project is out there
and it will be tendered sometime in the next year. It does not mean we instantly build it this
year. There is a process of getting the
specs, doing the tendering and then it happens.
The member for Swan River can rest assured that we will follow
through. I personally speeded it up to
get it into the spring program for this year so that is a commitment to Swan
River that is going to be kept. She can
depend on that because we are the kind of government that does live up to our
commitments.
I also would like to just briefly comment to the member on
the Cowan sub. We have written letters
to the federal Minister of Transport again and again. It is one of those letters that has not had a
response. We do not know yet what
position the federal government is going to take on it. Clearly, the member talks about Louisiana‑Pacific
and I think she used "should it proceed" or "if it
proceeds." I think the verb is
"when it proceeds."
When‑‑because the rail will be important to
Louisiana‑Pacific in terms of moving product out of that particular plant
and I presume also into the plant. We
certainly raised that with the federal government. From when the original washout occurred, that
is kind of new information. Really we
are talking initially about movement of grain, and now we are moving grain and
other commodities, particularly associated with Louisiana‑Pacific, so I
think it adds further reason as to why that line should be kept. We hope the federal government will see it
that way and respond in that context.
With regard to the first three, I will respond in writing
to the member. I have given her a very
clear, strong indication on item 4, and item 5, again, we will deal with the
federal government.
Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I look forward to
those responses. The minister says he is
going to deliver on that Lenswood Bridge.
I really hope so. He says he has
made a commitment, and we will hold him to that commitment. The only reason I raised the election
promises is because I remember, back in 1986, that bridge was promised, and the
people of the area know that. They have
had this bridge promised so many times and announcements made, and I would not
want to see them disappointed. The
minister indicates he is going to deliver.
I hope he does.
With regard to the plant, I sincerely hope that plant is
built. We are waiting to see whether or
not. The only reason I say, if the plant
is built is because we are waiting to see whether or not this government is
going to issue them a licence to proceed.
That is the reason.
The Environment Commission and ultimately the Minister of
Environment, that is where it sits, so that was the only reason I said if. My hope is that very soon, we will see
something. However, I have some
questions for the Minister of Natural Resources. Just as with Highways, there are many
important issues in rural Manitoba. The
Department of Natural Resources has a great impact on my constituency, and
there are a few issues that I want to cover off.
I want to talk to the minister, first of all, about the
fishing industry. The minister was in
Swan River earlier this year‑‑I believe it was in February‑‑to
meet with the fishermen on Lake Winnipegosis, and at that time the fishermen
raised some very serious concerns, and the minister said he would address
them. One of them was the restocking of
the lake, and they talked about the low income that they make off that lake,
the difficulties they are facing.
They talked about the Fairford dam. They asked the minister to look into that
issue, and the fishermen also felt that they were not involved enough. They were being closed out of some of the decisions
that were being made, and the minister had indicated that he would be getting
back to the fishermen. A while ago, I
had some of the fishermen call me and say that they had not had any response
from the minister.
Now, I believe that the minister has met with the fish
advisory board, but I do not believe he has corresponded back to the many
fishermen who were at that meeting. So
the question I have of the minister, first of all, is, what has been the result
of that meeting, and what has happened with restocking of Lake
Winnipegosis. I understand that there is
some work that was done this spring.
I want to ask the minister who was in charge of that
operation, of the work that was done there, what kind of work was done on Lake
Winnipegosis as far as catching spawn, what is happening and how much money was
allocated for the project on Lake Winnipegosis.
Hon. Albert Driedger
(Minister of Natural Resources): Mr.
Deputy Chairperson, I almost got away.
The member places some valid questions on the record,
though I take some sensitivity in terms of the fact that communication has not
taken place, because since that meeting where I gave certain undertakings‑‑I
thought it was a good meeting. It was an
eye opener for me, of course, and the fact that the group up there felt very
strongly. When things get tough, of
course, they look for something to happen on the positive side.
Since we had that meeting, and they were critical of my
biologist and some of the stocking programs that had taken place in the past,
and I told them, well, I am prepared to entertain working together with them in
terms of setting up a permanent fish hatchery for Lake Winnipegosis.
* (1710)
What has happened since that time is that‑‑because
the time was too short for us to set up a permanent fish hatchery for Lake
Winnipegosis for the coming year‑‑we had the advisory board
basically take the initiative and make contact with the various fish
hatcheries, and we released a whole bunch of spawn into Lake Winnipegosis this
spring.
The member says there was no communication with the
commercial fishermen. I just received a
copy of a letter that was sent by Parker Burrell who has taken some of the
ownership of trying to get some consensus from the commercial fishermen in the
area and also is sort of the head push in terms of the stocking program that
took place. The challenge I put before
them was that, because they do not have much confidence in the way my
biologists are running it, they should take ownership of the fish
hatchery. My people will give their
expertise and they are supposed to take the responsibility for it.
Like I say, we are looking at the possibility of having two
fish hatcheries, one at the north end and one at the south end, that are going
to be on a permanent basis that are basically going to be run by the
associations. They are tying in also
some of the other organizations like the game and fish associations who want to
have a role to play in there as well.
What I have asked for basically is some financial
participation from the commercial fishermen.
I think a proposal has been floated around to them at the present time
that they contribute a cent a pound maybe for pickerel and maybe half a cent a
pound for the rough fish, other species, into a fund which I will participate
in funding through the fish enhancement program and other programs and
establish a permanent‑type fish hatchery.
The cost of a permanent fish hatchery could be in the area
of $80,000 to $100,000. To me this
project is very, very crucial because I regard it as a pilot project. We are looking at doing this kind of
arrangement with other communities as well where the interest is there to work
in that direction.
I noticed the other day in my Estimates that the member for
the Interlake (Mr. Clif Evans) already was alluding to the stocking
programs. I am prepared to work with any
organization to establish these things.
My biologists, by and large, feel that stocking is not the most
successful thing to do. I feel strongly
that it is, and that is a personal view.
If you look at what has happened in the States, for example, they have
been very successful in stocking a lot of their lakes.
Whether it is for commercial reasons or sport‑fishing
reasons, many of our lakes are having difficulties. We are moving forward in terms of developing
this kind of scenario. It is a shared
scenario where basically they will take ownership of it together with as much
expertise as they want from my department and funding through the fish
enhancement program and whatever other programs I can get to try and establish
these kinds of arrangements.
This has been communicated to the commercial fishermen in
that whole Lake Winnipegosis area. They
all have a copy of this letter. I saw a
copy of the letter that has gone out basically outlining all of these things.
The other issue that the member raised was the Fairford
dam. We have people from Lake
Winnipegosis who, by and large, still challenge the government, saying that the
fish ladder at the Fairford dam is not working well. We had them out there monitoring it, people
from Lake Winnipegosis. We also had the
people from Lake Winnipegosis involved in catching of spawn for the fish
hatcheries.
In terms of the Fairford dam, it appears, and we are
prepared to consider it, that maybe the fish ladder is working, but we think it
is not maybe adequate enough. We might
have to look at establishing another one.
I have instructed my staff to take and work together with the commercial
fishermen to see whether we can set up another fish ladder, because from the
personal experience of the people that came out there and monitored it, they
say they were backing up, they were backlogged on the fish ladder. We will try and resolve that as well.
The other issue that was raised with me at that meeting was
the problem with the cormorants, the crow ducks. This is an escalating problem basically, because
they are a protected species at the present time. I know there is a group that is wanting to
raise the issue with the federal ministers to see whether we could give some
discretion in terms of starting some control program. It always gets to be a very sensitive
issue. I can remember the discussion
between the member for Swan River (Ms. Wowchuk) and my predecessor the member
for Lakeside (Mr. Enns) on the crow duck issue.
It is getting to be more of a problem. I just heard as late as today that on some of
the Great Lakes the commercial fishery has really taken a nose dive. A lot of the blame is put on the crow ducks.
I know the sensitivity that the people feel about the crow
ducks in the Lake Winnipegosis area.
They feel that they have contributed to a great extent to the depletion
of the fish and the lake.
Without trying to create a problem, but we had the same
situation that basically developed with the beaver problems in the province,
where all of a sudden they escalated to the point where there were over a
million beavers. We had nothing but
problems with municipalities, departments with the beaver problem. We are in the process of making the announcement
for a beaver control program again.
Ultimately, I suppose, maybe I will try and work through
the sensitive areas of maybe developing a control program for the crow ducks or
the pelicans‑‑not pelicans, cormorants.
I think, after the meeting I had with the group out there,
which I considered, for myself, an informative meeting, letting them tell me
what they want, what they need, I am prepared to give them a lot of ownership
in terms of the responsibility of the lake itself and work together with them
to see whether we can restore what used to be a very positive fish business out
there. [interjection]
The member asked how much money was basically
involved. At this stage of the game, for
this spring's program, they have identified certain rearing ponds or rearing
lakes which at one time government was doing.
We have given them some funding to take and do the necessary work on
some of these rearing ponds, and I will allow them to do it instead of my
biologists to do it. To date, I think we
have expended something like $25,000, but that is minute compared to what we
have to look at in terms of setting up the fish hatcheries. That is being developed right now.
We are looking at seeing whether we can get various
organizations to make applications under the fish futures program, under some
of the other programs, with their financial participation as well. I mean, if it is going to work they have to
have some involvement in it, other than just managing. They also have to have some financial involvement
with it, and then I think it will work.
So we are evolving the plan at the present time, and I feel
very positive about it. I want it to
work. I have told them I want it to
work. I regard this as a pilot project,
because if I can make it work there, I can make it work in other lakes in the
province.
Ms. Wowchuk: I thank the minister for that
information. The minister indicates that
the letter has gone, and if that letter has gone, I am pleased to hear that the
other fishermen have been contacted.
About two weeks ago, there was one other fisherman who contacted me who
said he had heard that there was a program going on and that Parker Burrell was
in it and Mr. Fleming was involved in it and they were getting money to do some
of the work, but the other fishermen did not know what was going on. So I am pleased then that the minister has
indicated‑‑
Mr. Driedger: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I want to just
clarify that so there is no misconception.
The information was not sent from me.
It has been sent by the advisory group to all the commercial fishermen
bringing them up to date as to what has happened and asking for their further
input to the advisory committee. It was
not myself who sent the letter, but the communication has gone out to the
groups.
Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I will be back in
contact with those who contacted me to see whether they have received the
letter, because I think that they should be all involved in it.
The issue of the hatchery is certainly something that the
fishermen of the area have long wanted.
I am pleased that the government is finally recognizing that the
hatching of fish has to happen in the local area, and it should be a means of
economic development for local people rather than having the stocks brought in
and not handled properly as they have been in many cases.
* (1720)
The minister raised a couple of other issues that I want to
touch on. He talked about the beaver
control. The minister is well aware that
the people in the LGD of Mountain are very disappointed in the decision that
this government made. First, the previous
Minister of Natural Resources put in place a program that was supposed to cover
half of the costs of the beaver control, but there was no indication given to
the LGD, or to other areas, that that money was going to be capped at a certain
level.
Now I know that money is not open handed, but that was not
the message that was given to the people in the LGD. They spent a tremendous amount of money and
then they only got, I believe, $2,500 from the government versus the $30,000
that they had spent. They were thinking
that they were getting half from the government.
Now this minister has changed his mind and has pulled back
all that funding. The municipalities
have been caught in a bind because they did not budget for‑‑they
were anticipating that half of these costs would be picked up by the
government, as was promised by the previous minister.
There are a lot of problems with beaver control out there,
and I have written to the minister asking him that he reconsider that position
at least for the short term until there is a new policy out, because the
municipalities have not budgeted for this extra money and they are going to be
in an unfortunate situation.
I would hope that the minister indicates that there is
going to be a beaver control program coming out very soon. I look forward to hearing what that is,
because certainly with the low prices of furs that we have right now, the
beaver are becoming an increasing problem and one that the municipalities are
feeling that they cannot bear the cost of.
In fact, the municipality of Mountain is saying, well, if
the government is not going to give any money, we are not going to put any
money into it, and the farmers and the local people are ending up picking up
that whole cost, or having no supports there and we are having farmland being
flooded.
It is like everybody is passing the buck. Nobody is taking any responsibility. I think that the government has to take some
leadership here. If they are coming
forward with a policy, I look forward to hearing that.
The minister talked about the management of, you know,
involving people in resources in the lake.
It is a good idea to involve other people, but I wonder where the
government is on their co‑management of resources. I know the minister has had a call from
someone he knows very well, a Duane Whyte from Swan River, whom the minister
knows fairly well, I believe, who has some serious concerns about how resources
are being managed. He has asked this
government to show some leadership in the area of co‑management of
resources, and this is something that the government has talked about since I
have been here. Since 1990, I have heard
them talking about co‑management of resources, but they have not done
anything. This government has not pulled
people together, whether it be managing of the fish stocks, whether it be
managing of the wildlife in the area.
I ask the minister why he has not addressed that concern of
the co‑management of the resources and pulled the people together to the
table to deal with it. They have done co‑management. We hear about the project in The Pas where we
have co‑management and it is working very well, but this government is
not moving in that direction. I ask the
minister whether or not he will consider it, and why he has not taken the
initiative to set up co‑management groups to deal with the various lakes
in the Duck and Porcupine Mountains and the management of wildlife in that
area.
(Madam Chairperson in
the Chair)
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, I think the member should
be a little bit more cautious when she makes accusations about things not
having happened. She covered a whole
realm of things here, and I want to respond, but I will start with the last one
first.
When she talks of co‑management, we have
approximately 20 co‑management agreements in place right now, species
specific. We are working, and I gave the
assurance to the aboriginal people that we would be looking at expanding this
on an ongoing basis.
We have 20 co‑management arrangements in place right
now through the province. I am very
supportive of further developing that concept, because that is the only way,
basically, that we can take, I think, and ultimately retain the wildlife
resources, fish resources, that we have out there, because if you have the
local people participating and being part of the program, then it is going to
be much more effective than having the heavy hand of government telling them
how to do things. So I am very receptive
to that end of it.
I want to basically go back to the beaver control
program. The member said that I
terminated the program. I would like to
maybe explain to her that at the time when my predecessor was there, it was
almost an ad hoc program where they said, well, listen, there is a beaver
problem; we will cost‑share. But
there was a limit of two and a half thousand dollars at that time. It was not an open‑ended thing.
The concern and why I think there was a limit put on it was
because what happened was that certain municipalities were sort of playing on
the edge in terms of whether they were doing the right thing or not because
councillors were putting in mileage to go and check to see whether there were
beavers.
What had happened, because the beaver problem escalated
dramatically and the Department of Highways and I, together with the Manitoba
Trappers Association and my department, developed a controlled program where we
paid Manitoba Trappers Association $35 for every beaver that was taken,
providing that it was a problem beaver.
They worked together with my department at that time, departmental
staff, and the program worked well.
There was a lot of money paid out through the Department of Highways,
through the Trappers Association, to do that.
When the fur season started, we terminated the program, but
we let the municipalities know that this is the deadline for applications. You know, they could put in their bills up to
two and a half thousand dollars, and most municipalities did. However, at the time when I had developed a
program under Highways with the Manitoba Trappers Association, the Union of
Manitoba Municipalities also developed the same concept program with the
Manitoba Trappers Association. There
were only about five or six of the municipalities that ultimately utilized the
program, and they were just getting into the swing of it.
What happened was that we felt that we needed a broader
approach to this thing between the Departments of Natural Resources, Rural
Development and Highways and the municipalities. We set up a working committee. We said the program would terminate at the
time when the fur was prime and that I would have a program in place by the 1st
of April in terms of the beaver control program.
Unfortunately, to the member, I have to say, we are way
behind, but we set up an association between government people, the Union of
Manitoba Municipalities and the Manitoba Trappers Association. They were supposed to work out a pact that
was going to be acceptable. The Union of
Manitoba Municipalities is really not that critical. If the member says some of her councils are
unhappy with it, they should check with their people who are basically on the
committee doing the negotiations.
Ultimately, negotiations broke down because the UMM
basically said, we will not pay more than 30 bucks, and the Manitoba Trappers
Association said, we need 50 bucks as a bounty basically. I should not use that word, but 50 bucks. The discussions finally broke down and I have
been trying to salvage the thing and am now going to be in a position where
hopefully within a week I can announce a program. Unfortunately, it will not be including the
Manitoba Trappers Association at this stage of the game because they have
walked.
We will still be announcing a program and it is very
necessary that we do. I have a request
from the MTA to meet with them and we will meet with them to see whether we can
still get this together. I told the
Manitoba Trappers Association that it was not really a big money raiser for
them, but at least they could make some money maybe doing that.
Incidentally, I might say that the fur prices are getting
better. It is starting to strengthen and
ultimately I think that will be more uptake in terms of the trapping because, when
you see the increase from 300,000 to 400,000 up to over a million beaver, they
are not a problem just in one or two places.
They are all over, including in the city. In fact, the member for Wolseley (Ms.
Friesen) came up and said they had a problem with beaver right here on Omands
Creek or something like that. It is all
over the province so we are trying to deal with that. We are trying to develop a program that is
going to help control to some degree until the prices come up. I was hoping the Trappers Association could
maybe just see their way through to come to some agreement with the UMM for the
bigger picture which is basically us working with MTA in terms of trying to
promote the fur industry in Europe.
The program should be announced hopefully within a week to
10 days and UMM will then be making the announcement to all their members.
* (1730)
Mr. Clif Evans: I would just like to make some points with
the minister and put on record and request that the minister respond to the
points that I make here for him instead of prolonging this. There are other members who wish to discuss
other issues.
I am pleased to hear that the minister is hopefully getting
involved with hatcheries. It is a very
big issue, becoming even a greater issue in my own constituency. I have had responses from Dauphin River,
Fisher River, Riverton, Waterhen area who want to begin this program
again. It is extremely important. What the minister hears from his department
on the one hand and what he hears on the other hand basically what I am getting
to is to listen to the fishermen who are in the area. They are the ones who are in the know as to
how much fish there are and what the future of fishing is around Lake Winnipeg,
Lake Manitoba, Winnipegosis, et cetera.
But I would like to make the minister aware that I have
been requested to ask this minister the background and the reasoning and what
occurred to shut down the Dauphin River hatchery.
This community, Madam Chair, has been discussing this with
me since 1990. I am a proponent of it,
and I feel that it is very, very important.
Just as the minister, I do not believe in what the bureaucrats say, I
hear what the fishermen have to say.
Dauphin River hatchery was going quite well. What happened to it is before my time, but I
would appreciate the minister providing me with as much information as he has
and can obtain on the Dauphin River hatchery.
The new chief and council that are there want to continue
with this and want to get that hatchery.
The building is there. There
would probably be very little extra cost in getting that hatchery moving. So I would appreciate the minister getting
back to me on that, and specifically what plans his department has for
hatcheries and spawning areas.
I was pleased to see Natural Resources come to Riverton
some weeks ago and just do that with the spawning and that in the Icelandic
River, another important part of our system.
I would also like the minister‑‑when I met with
him some weeks ago I had written to the minister and asked him what he was
going to do with the request by Mr. Gus Propkofsky [phonetic] on the level of
Lake St. Martin. He indicated to me at
that time that there was some legal problems or court problems and that he
would get back to me on it the first opportunity available. This is going back about two months ago.
I would appreciate a response from the minister as to where
that is. I have been getting calls and
letters from Lake St. Martin Reserve, Little Saskatchewan, Mr. Propkofsky
[phonetic], who support their proposal.
They feel that the level of Lake St. Martin should be up a couple of
feet. So I would like the minister to
get back to me on that so I may respond to these people.
As far as Jackhead dam goes, I spoke to the minister a
couple of days ago about the Jackhead dam situation. He indicated to me that he thought that
something was happening. Well, the very
same day, an hour later, I received a letter from the deputy minister to
Jackhead. I have spoken with the
Jackhead people this morning. They have
indicated that as soon as they can get their council together to meet and
discuss the whole situation that they would be requesting me to approach the
Minister of Natural Resources (Mr. Driedger) and the Minister of Northern
Affairs (Mr. Praznik). Let us finally
get together.
Let us get this thing resolved, and let us go ahead with a
very important proposal, again, for the Lake St. George area, for the Jackhead
Reserve, for the fishing, for the cottagers and for the economic benefit of
that community. So I would hope that the
minister would be able to respond to these requests of mine at his first
opportunity.
One last thing, and I would appreciate the minister's
attention and response to this. I have
in front of me a complaint about the fact that a wayside park, the Dawson Trail
wayside park, a few years ago was put up for private tender to operate, to be
operated by private individuals, something I am not in favour of.
It seems that the initial proponent, the initial person who
put his proposal in, did not continue with the park, did not do anything with
it. Subsequently, he, in turn, sold it
to another individual who has since done nothing with the wayside park.
I would appreciate the minister making him aware of this
complaint, and I would appreciate the minister looking into this. I will follow up with correspondence on
this. If that is the case, if, in fact,
there is a wayside park that was supposed to be a wayside park, and the Natural
Resources department wants to privatize these wayside parks, well, that is one
matter. The other matter is the
complaint of people, that the person who has purchased this land is doing nothing
with it, using it for private land use only, and I feel that that is
wrong. I will get more information to
the minister, and I would appreciate his response to that.
I would also just like to make a comment which is that I
feel the minister should be dealing and negotiating in good faith with the
Private Landowners of Manitoba. They
have been to see him. They have a
proposal in place. They have met with
him, and as yet, no concrete results have come out of their discussions with
the minister. I would certainly like to
know where the minister is and where the department is in their deliberations
with the association and the concerns that these landowners have, and I will
certainly be getting back to the minister for a response to that at the first
opportunity.
One final thing. I
have a letter from the LGD of Armstrong stating that they are in process of
doing some land exchange with the Department of Natural Resources in the
LGD. Their indication to me was that
they feel that it is not moving at a speed that they would like to negotiate
on. We are talking upwards of $764,000
in values that must be exchanged for other parcels, and they would like, I
guess, to have this matter probably dealt with on a speedier basis.
So with those remarks, I will certainly get back to the
minister with some of these others and appreciate his response to these. Thank you very much.
Mr. Driedger: Madam Chairperson, the members say that I do
not have to respond to it. I think I
have to respond, because the member, between the Department of Highways and the
Department of Natural Resources, I think, has aired every problem that he could
imagine for the last two or three years and put it on the record.
I just want to tell the member that with all the ones that
you have listed, if I miss some of them, you know, it is being monitored right
now. We will try and get some responses
and try and get them out to him. He made
reference to the fact that two months ago, he had a delegation in and they had
not heard from me yet. Well, I might
tell the member‑‑and then he goes in the next breath and says that
already‑‑you know, he raised the issue of the Jackhead dam. It is in progress.
Through the system itself, it is not unusual that it
sometimes takes up to two months to get a response by the time they do the
investigation. If I get a letter and
send it through the system, until it gets back, the investigation is done, it
comes back through the system, it is not unusual that it takes a little bit of
time.
* (1740)
I do not know whether any department is faster than mine,
but we invariably get the information back.
I will take many of the issues that he has put on the record. We will take and address them. I will try and respond by way of letter on
that.
At the same time, you know, the issue of the Crown lands
exchange, might I just suggest that the department with my director in there,
Jack Schreuder, has been complimented on the speed at which they have basically
done a lot of the cleanup and moving forward in terms of doing an exchange
which basically took forever at one time.
So I make no apologies for the speed at which we are moving, when we
certainly are doing it. In most cases,
the LGDs feel very positive in terms of the speed at which we have been doing
these exchanges.
I also might say, at the same time, that our policy
basically with Crown lands is that we are not averse to selling Crown lands to
lessees. If they have an agricultural
lease on it, we have no problem with selling it. You know, that is well received out there as
well. So when the member is looking at
bringing forward a series of problems all the time, he should also take and
think of some of the positive things that are happening out there.
An Honourable Member: Be positive, be happy.
Mr. Driedger: Yes, that is right. Don't worry, be happy.
You have good government, and I want to say that you have
good government again after the next election because we will still be here.
In conclusion, I know other people want to get in on the
discussions, but I just want to say that we will try and address those issues
that he has on there. If not, he has
never been averse to taking and phoning or coming to my office and that kind of
arrangement will continue. If I miss
some of these points, I know that he will bring them to my attention. Thank you.
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Madam Chair, my
question is for the Minister of Environment.
For a number of years in the province, various groups and organizations
and indeed political parties have debated the pros and cons of an environmental
bill of rights. There are a number of
jurisdictions in the United States that have them. There are also a number of jurisdictions in
Canada that have moved in this direction.
My question for the Minister of Environment is whether or
not he or the government department has in fact studied the issue of a
legislative instrument, an environmental bill of rights, and whether or not the
department has produced any thoughts, any papers, on that issue as it might
apply in Manitoba.
Hon. Glen Cummings
(Minister of Environment): Well, Madam Chair,
this could probably evolve into a rather lengthy and cerebral discussion of an
environmental bill of rights versus environmental regulation versus principles
of sustainable development, and all of the intricate relationships that can be
developed and debated.
I would prefer, however, to more directly address the
member's question, which is that there is consistently review of what is going
on in other jurisdictions that occurs within the department. I can tell the member that I have had some
exposure‑‑in fact, more than some.
I have had a fair bit of exposure to discussion that surrounds whether
or not an environmental bill of rights is an appropriate direction to take or
whether there are other establishment of principles and statement of principles
that can address and provide the direction, essentially, and the protection, if
you will, that flows from the development of a bill of rights.
There is constantly a two‑way battle, which I think
the member would probably cheerfully acknowledge, that in establishing a bill
of rights, there are certain other‑‑whether it is in the area of
environment or whether it is in other areas, there can be dynamics that arise
that probably are not always, in the long run, beneficial in providing the best
long‑term planning and direction.
I think of the changes that occurred in this country over the years in
the development of that thinking.
If the member is asking, are we on the verge of introducing
a bill of rights, obviously, at this stage in this session, no. Have we considered or had discussion
internally, particularly within my department and in my own office? Of course, we have discussed it. I think I would be, however, less than frank
if I did not indicate that I am not, at this point, sold on the idea that it
would be an appropriate item to put at the top of the environmental
agenda. It is not that it is not fair. It is just that we have other very important
matters.
Mr. Edwards: Madam Chairperson, I appreciate the comments
of the minister. Clearly, it is an issue
that has been debated over a length of time by many in the environmental
community, in the business community and certainly in government circles.
As the minister knows, the member for Radisson (Ms.
Cerilli) introduced for first reading‑‑I believe a couple of years
ago‑‑an environmental bill of rights. Last year, approximately just a little over a
year ago, I, as the then‑Environment critic for our party, also proposed
an environmental bill of rights. When I
went to have that bill drafted‑‑and I want to put on the record
that I did very early on in this session seek through Legislative Counsel to
have a bill put forward for this House to consider in substance‑‑what
I was advised by the Legislative Counsel was that the appointment of an
environmental commissioner, which is an essential part, in my view, of the
environmental bill of rights, even though we went through it in some detail,
their view was and their recommendation would have been that it would not have
been totally without cost and therefore would not be a bill that I could bring
forward.
Madam Chairperson, I sought at great lengths to avoid
that. I was unable to do it in my
dealings with the Legislative Counsel, and because I did commit to bringing
forward a bill in this session and wanted very much to do that, I want to table
with leave and have the minister review the proposal which I put to Legislative
Counsel. This is a simple document which
I would ask him and his department to take under advisement as the gist of the
bill that I would have brought forward had I in fact been able to. I do not suggest that this represents all
that may need to go into a bill. It is
obviously a starting point and represents, as I say, the essence and the gist
of what would have been in that proposed act.
So I want to table that for members of the House, obviously
not in a clause‑by‑clause format but in a synopsis of what the bill
would have been. I would ask the
minister to consider that and also to consider the merits of an environmental
bill of rights which, in my view, in our party's view, would seriously enhance
the rights of Manitobans on issues of environmental concern. I do not think, in my view, in my opinion,
that it would result in some of the things which its detractors suggest it
would, undue delay and cost.
What I see currently is a system burdened by undue delay
and costs and a system that is largely not working because of course it is
difficult to achieve a consensus and regularity across the nation on
environmental regulation.
I believe that in a move to environmental rights, putting
rights into the hands of people is a good idea and is generally a direction
which I and our party support. I think
that this bill, with proper controls, has been successful in jurisdictions
around North America. Obviously we need
to learn from their experiences, some good, some bad, but I think the general
thrust is good and that a properly tailored bill taking into consideration some
of the perceived and now known downsides in other jurisdictions could work.
So I leave that with the minister at this point. I did want to put that on the record as a
specific recommendation of our caucus to government. Unfortunately, because of the difficulties in
dealing with Legislative Counsel on this issue and the recommendation they came
forward with, we were unable to put it forward in a clause‑by‑clause,
but I believe we have done the next best thing and invite all members to review
the document that has been tabled today.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Mr. Cummings: I appreciate the brevity of the member's
remarks, and I will try and respond in the same vein.
The national round table had some considerable discussion
about laying down principles of sustainable development as opposed to
establishing an environmental bill of rights.
You might argue that is not a black‑or‑white
question, it is not an either/or question.
I know that the national round table has received a paper and will be
discussing the long‑range plans of the present federal government
regarding an environmental commissioner versus an environmental ombudsman
versus an environmental bill of rights.
I would only want one thing on the record. You know, it is so difficult for anyone to
say that they have a criticism of a bill of rights. How can you criticize rights? What happens so often‑‑and the
Leader of the Second Opposition (Mr. Edwards) is probably more aware of this
than anyone else in this House, given his training. It is so very easy then for decisions to be
taken out of the hands of policymakers, as it were, and put into the courts
very often.
* (1750)
I have to ask the question, and maybe it is a rhetorical question,
but clearly you have to ask the question:
Is this a situation where the courts are always the final arbiter of
decisions, or does a country and governments of whatever stripe, on behalf of
the people, make decisions within a policy framework and within the rules that
are laid down under environmental law?
I think it is only fair that those comments be put on the
record. No one should interpret either
my comments or anyone else's as ones of opposition but simply words of comment
about this being not necessarily a simple road.
Mr. Edwards: Yes, it is accepted. It is not a simple road.
I simply say to the minister that all of those cautionary
notes he puts on the record and the statements about the questions that he has
asked are ones that have been around for a long time, are ones that have been
kicked around really on this continent in various jurisdictions for a number of
years. I and our caucus have gone
through them and have made a decision that an environmental bill of rights is
the way to go. That was something we
came forward with a year ago, and so I leave those comments on the record for
the minister.
Obviously, they feel differently. However, I do invite him to review the
document that we have tabled today as to what it establishes, because, of
course, it does establish an environmental commissioner as opposed to first
recourse being to the courts. Thank you,
Madam Chair.
Ms. Norma McCormick
(Osborne): Madam Chair, I have a few questions for the
Minister of Environment as well.
Following the Estimates process, I went back and examined
an issue that there was considerable dialogue between the member for Radisson
(Ms. Cerilli) and the minister on. I
wanted to pursue what I understood the minister's response to be and test it
against some information that I have come to find since. It is with respect to the public hearings for
the Norwood Bridge.
The minister had indicated, I believe, in Estimates that
there had only been one letter received requesting public hearings at that
time. Actually, in the context of the
Environment Estimates debate, I had understood that was a letter which had come
forward from the Choices group. I have
since learned that there had been a letter communicated last fall from the
Mayfair community which I do not believe was connected with the Choices letter.
I am wondering if the minister can indicate, because this
letter written to the minister by Barb Sarson and delivered to the minister, I
think, on the final day within which she was entitled to bring her concern
forward‑‑she indicates that she had written to the minister last
fall. I would like the minister to
indicate whether he has responded to Ms. Sarson with respect to the holding of
public hearings on the Norwood Bridge project and whether or not he or his
department have made any decisions about whether this will be referred to the Clean
Environment Commission.
Mr. Cummings: As I heard the Minister of Natural Resources
(Mr. Driedger) indicate earlier, sometimes the paperwork shows up at very
appropriate times. I have in front of me
my response to Barbara Sarson, dated in July, dated today over my signature.
It says, I am in receipt of your letter, wherein your group
is appealing the decision of the director.
It lists the project and the file number. Your appeal is under review, and you will be
advised within seven days of a decision being reached in accordance with
Section 27 of the act.
I think there are three different letters that I have
signed today. The information that I
gave the member during Estimates‑‑I think we are possibly confusing
when the time frame had elapsed for appeals to the director's decision as to
pose whether or not there were letters that came in during the period that the
director was reviewing the project.
(Mr. Deputy Chairperson
in the Chair)
During the period that the director was reviewing the project,
there was, to my knowledge, only the one.
Now, I can double check about Ms. Sarson's letter, if she had
corresponded earlier. I do not see a
date here that I can link that to, although it might be in the bottom part of
the file. It is on Fort Rouge School
letterhead, but nevertheless, there was very little request during the period
of time that the director was reviewing the project, very little interest or
very little promotion of the idea from within the public, that it should go to
public hearings.
Since then, when his decision became known, there were
several who appealed, saying that I should overrule his decision, which is
within the power of the act for the minister to do. The problem we have, frankly, is probably
more of perception than it is of reality.
Those who are appealing and those who made presentations in the previous
period, when the director was reviewing the proposal, primarily referred to
matters that they saw of concern which did not fall within the purview of
either the director or really of The Environment Act.
Now, The Environment Act is pretty flexible and can be
stretched, but sometimes, I think that some discretion needs to be exercised
there as well. The difference that
people consistently raise and one which I think I have some responsibility to
consistently explain is that there is considerable difference between the
Charleswood Bridge situation, where there was a new bridge, and there was never
a proper environmental assessment, nor was it put into a proper process before
the decision was made that it should be put through the process, and ultimately
a hearing was called. This replacement,
the Norwood replacement, has gone through the process. It is still in the process. So it is simply now a decision as to whether
or not the appeals that we are receiving relate to something that the
environment process could properly deal with.
I understand the frustration of the community. I am not giving them the back of my hand,
figuratively, or dismissing their concerns.
But, unfortunately, they are not going to get a traffic study out of an
environmental hearing. Our experience in
the Charleswood review seems to be mirrored here in the concerns that are being
brought forward. People are not talking
about the problems that this will create in relationship to the river or the
bank's stability or the navigable waters situation, but more to how is the
traffic flow going to be managed.
Therefore, without predetermining what my decision is going to be, I
have to indicate that is very much the type of issues that seem to be coming
forward. I would hope that the people
who are bringing forward their concerns will take those concerns forward to the
city.
One of the arguments that has been put forward is the
question about should this replacement not wait until it is shown how it fits
into Transport 2010, the plan that the city is working towards. I suppose that the city will have to in the
end answer that question. I cannot,
however, in my own view see how the city can do without that bridge, and the
bridge is in lousy shape from an engineering point of view. The city is going to have to deal with it, or
it is going to have to start facing load restrictions.
So we are caught with a little bit of an unponderable and a
no‑win situation in the eyes of the local community in terms of whether
or not they think they can impact the traffic flow that will approach that
bridge through The Environment Act. I
would suggest it would be very unlikely that we can address that through The
Environment Act, because once you get past the immediate area of the bridge,
that is very much city jurisdiction and city responsibility. While I might well want to give them some advice,
I would think that I would be very quickly told in the reverse not only by the
city, but probably the community, that they want to decide that and they should
be talking to the city about how they decide that.
I will sit down and wait for further questions, but I do
want to put on the record that I think it is quite unfortunate that some
members of City Council believe that this hearing process would answer their
concerns. I am not looking to attribute
blame or to cause difficulties for them.
I am simply saying it is a problem that the city planning process, I
believe, is equipped to deal with. It
still is not going to be satisfactory if the community is unwilling to have the
volume of traffic in its community or in its area. The Environment Act, however, at least at
this point, I have not concluded is the best vehicle for them answering that
concern.
* (1800)
Ms. McCormick: I appreciate the minister's perspective on
this, and I think that there are some differences of opinion when we talk about
environmental impact. I guess the
question as to the rerouting of traffic routes through a community is, without
question, going to have an impact on that community.
The community is concerned that it is being seen as a
throwaway. So I will take back the
minister's words at face value that you are not intending to just pass this
off, that you will consider the information put forward in Miss Sarson's
letter, and that if you have further advice to give to the community, then we
hope that they will take it in the spirit that you intend it to be given.
I want now to ask some questions with respect to the
Manitoba Hazardous Waste Management Corporation. We understand that memos have been sent to
the existing staff indicating that their future beyond the 14th of July is
dependent on the signing of the deal with the IEI group. I want to determine from the minister,
further to the questions that were asked yesterday in Question Period, what the
minister understands with respect to the nature of the financing of the deal.
I have been informed that the potential purchaser has gone
to the Bank of India for the securing of a line of credit, and I would like to
get some information on this rather unusual arrangement. Does the minister have any information as to
why there is no local lending institution interested in this project?
Mr. Cummings: Yes, I certainly can dispel what might be uneasiness
given that there is a story out there that the investors will be seeking money
from a state bank other than within Canada or the United States.
To begin with, the conditions of the sale are that a letter
of credit shall be assigned and guaranteed by one of Canada's major banks. So they have to meet that condition, no
matter what.
I can tell you that, probably without fear of retribution,
I think, if you were to inquire with any one of the major banks in this
country, that they would tell you that the State Bank of India is probably a
heck of a lot safer than most of the state banks in the United States and that
they would sooner do business with it.
I am not well versed with the world banking situation, but
one should not assume‑‑you know, we hear the term Japanese dollars,
or we hear other terms referring to German money coming in. The bottom line is this deal will be closed
in Canadian dollars, and it will be supported by legitimate operating interests
or it will not close.
Ms. McCormick: Another area of concern has been raised
earlier, and that is with respect to Immigrant Investor money. This is another sort of rumour on the street,
that the choice of the Bank of India is a way of levering money that would
otherwise be unacceptable, given the Manitoba government's position on the
Immigrant Investor Funds.
I guess I want to add into this a concern that has been
raised fairly early in the process by Mr. Sherwood, representing the Crown
Corporations Council. You will know that
I had written some letters to him and that I had expressed some concerns about
the progress of this deal. Mr. Sherwood
is on the record challenging the ability of this Toronto‑based consortium
to finance a deal of this magnitude, and I want to tie these two things together
to determine whether or not, in fact, the minister knows if there is Immigrant
Investor money going into this. There
are remaining concerns with respect to the Crown Corporations Council with
respect to the ability of this IEI group to pull a deal together.
Mr. Cummings: Yes, the answer is, of course, fairly
simple. As I understand the conditions
of Immigrant Investor monies that are allocated anywhere in this country, they,
in fact, have to be allocated within the conditions of the jurisdiction in
which they are sitting, so there is no way that Immigrant Investor Funds
allocated for Manitoba could somehow surface in a foreign bank and then come
back through another investor. So I
think we can fairly quickly and logically put that rumour to bed.
The second part of your question‑‑you said,
given our approach to Immigrant Investor dollars or given the relationship, I
actually find it very discouraging that other jurisdictions in this country are
actively pursuing Immigrant Investor dollars, that they are courting Immigrant
Investor dollars through the Immigrant Investor Fund in Victoria and all
through the province of B.C., as one example, and yet in Manitoba, every time
the words "Immigrant Investor Fund" are raised, I have to say that
there is an aura and, in fact, criticism raised from opposition benches about
any possibility of that money being invested in anything in this province.
So I am not going to stray into the debate about
appropriate use of Immigrant Investor funding.
I am just saying as a matter of principle, is it not rather odd that
other jurisdictions in this country under Liberal, NDP administrations are
courting immigrant investor dollars but nobody wants to touch them in
Manitoba? An interesting concept‑‑I
think that we might all want to ponder that a little bit.
The second part of that, of course, is that I am not
discouraged in terms of IEI being able to complete the investment. They always said that they had an
investor. They always said that that
investor would be backed up by eventually moving the investment into a
situation where there were more local investors.
I do not want the member to interchange the term local with
immigrant here. I am talking local. I am talking people who‑‑and
there are lots of people, private investors who considered putting together a
syndicate here in the province, who might well want to become partners down the
road.
* (1810)
As I say, I am not uncomfortable, nor do I lack confidence
that this will close. On the other hand,
I am also saying that if something does not cause it not to close, we have a
quarter of a million dollars of the investors money that does now belong to the
province through the Hazardous Waste Corp.
So we are in a very secure position.
The deposit is very much at risk if this project does not now proceed,
so I am confident that they will make every effort and they will achieve that,
given the fact that they have been able to demonstrate to me at least and to
those who are looking after this on behalf of the Hazardous Waste Corp. that
they will proceed to closing, but one will call it closed when the signature is
on the line.
Ms. McCormick: Mr. Deputy Chair, yesterday the minister I
believe took as notice an intention to check on the status of the improvements
and deficiencies that were identified during an inspection conducted by the
Department of Environment. In his
response yesterday the minister indicated that he understood this was an event
of a month ago. My information is that
it was about two weeks ago that this unfolded.
I would be interested in knowing whether the minister has
in fact checked out whether the local resident community of the people involved
in the co‑management process have been informed of the deficiencies.
Mr. Cummings: I have not been able to check to see if that
has been completed. I think I am talking
about the same matter that the member is referring to. It was sometime in June, June 20 or something
like that, that the information was conveyed to the corporation.
I have asked my staff in my office to review this, the
situation, and I am looking to see if I have the material here. I have not got myself up to date any more
than I was yesterday if I were to be completely candid with the member, but I
can tell you that the fact that this is being handled as it is is certainly not
any different and may in fact be a little more forceful than it would be with a
private organization, because there is every intention that this will not be
seen as a lax enforcement but, more importantly, that the company is not seen
or being allowed to operate in a lax manner.
I think, when we review the details of this and knowing the
details of what has occurred over a period of time out there, in fact, some
runoff water on the surface that has not been adequately contained can be
viewed as a spill. Now that is not, I do
not think, what we are referring to in this case.
I said in the Estimates, and I think the member will probably
remember that I said, that the question that the opposition should be asking is
not whether or not the corporation is doing business in a particular way. The more important question is whether or not
the Department of Environment is now moving without impediment as a regulator
and is treating the corporation, now that they are starting to operate as they
have in the last year, in a more independent and competitive manner.
Certainly, I say that in light of the volumes. The volumes have risen dramatically this last
year as opposed to the year before, volumes of business done. If you want to judge it by dollars or any
other criteria, the amount of work that the corporation is doing has grown
considerably over the last year, perhaps the last two years, I suppose, would
be a more accurate reflection. So asking
the rhetorical question, I believe I can now say that here is an example of the
fact that the Department of Environment is acting in an appropriate manner and
not in a collegial manner, which would be a greater problem if that situation
or that perception should ever develop.
Ms. McCormick: Mr. Deputy Chair, with respect to the
operation of the corporation and its changing status and apparent disconnection
from government, I am interested in knowing what are the regulations or the
rules around the classes of determining who does work for the corporation.
We have been learning of a concern with respect to a
project that is going on, on behalf of Repap in northern Manitoba, in which
there was a tendering process, and subsequently work awarded to people who
apparently had not gone through that up‑front process.
I have entertained myself quite well over the last three
months having discovered the untendered contract system on the legislative
computer system, and yet have never found anything for the Manitoba Hazardous
Waste Management Corporation, at least not lately, on that untendered contract
system.
Is the Crown corporation required, according to the regulations
which govern departments, to report on untendered contracts? If so, how is it that this Repap project
seems to have been let to someone who was not part of that initial tendering?
Mr. Cummings: I am going to do something that probably I
will regret. It is my understanding that
they are not required to, but this was also the topic of some of their review
that the Crown Council and the Auditor have been involved in. I do not think I have my briefing note
here. Probably the member has the Auditor's
report in front of her and can answer the question herself more
accurately. The fact is I think my
answer is the appropriate one. The
matter that you are referring to, I am not sure that I could speak to it. I am not fully familiar.
I am aware of the process that we entered into, not so much
with individual contracts but the fact that the remediation program at Repap is
being undertaken not with the cheapest technology that might be available to do
the job, but it is being undertaken jointly with the federal government in
order to attempt some technological advancement in terms of fungal remediation.
I am not technically able to comment beyond that, except
that the federal government was not prepared to jointly fund the original
proposal that Repap had accepted with the Manitoba Hazardous Waste Corp., but
they were, in fact, prepared to co‑support the more expensive program
because there is deemed to be information that can flow from that.
Obviously we have a unique situation. If it can be made to work successfully in
what is a less‑than‑hospitable climate then that is probably a
technology that will get used. It is a
technology that Manitoba Hazardous Waste Corporation may use only in a limited
amount, but the fact is it ended up costing the Province of Manitoba less
because, through the shared agreement, Manitoba was responsible for the clean‑up
costs from money to come from the sale of the corporation.
Of course, we ended up saving some dollars by doing it this
way, although we are using what is, I believe, not a fully proven technology.
Ms. McCormick: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I think the technical
process the minister is speaking of is bioremediation. It was a bioremediation project. I am not as interested on getting detail on
the specific process of the choice of the company that wound up doing it as I
am about the policy around untendered contracts.
* (1820)
If I could just ask a direct question, does the minister
believe that the process for the publication of untendered contracts ought to
apply to Crown corporations, and in the new corporation partially owned by the
province, if that process should continue?
Mr. Cummings: I would have to state quite emphatically that
I would not expect the new corporation to be subject to the same mechanisms as
a Crown. The government will be a
shareholder in a company that will essentially operate as an independent
private entity. They will be subject to
all the rules and regulations and agreements that were drawn up between the
community and the government and the licence, but the monitoring and the
reporting mechanism of that corporation would not be the same requirements as
we would put on a Crown.
I think it is quite reasonable to expect that there will be
some significant private information that will be part of that company, and I
would not expect that they would be reporting as we would expect our
departments to report.
If the member is asking me to enunciate the existing policy
on untendered contracts through the Crowns and whether or not they are subject
to reporting, I believe that is still subject to some debate between us and the
Auditor. I do not think there is any
great disagreement, but I think I can state with some certainty that the new
entity, the new Manitoba environment centre, will operate as a private company
would out there, and we will be the shareholder through the existing format of
the Hazardous Waste Corp., by the way.
Ms. McCormick: Mr. Deputy Chairperson, I just have two more
areas to pursue. One is with respect to
the minister's current use of the word "Manitoba environment centre"
as opposed to corporation. Can the
minister advise us as to whether or not clearance has been given for the new
corporation to be given the name Manitoba environmental corporation?
Mr. Cummings: I think that was a slip of the lip on my
part. They likely will be known as
corporation as opposed to centre.
Ms. McCormick: My final questioning is in the area of the
volume of sale.
The minister indicated earlier that part of the move of the
corporation toward independence was an increasing volume of business. Can the minister confirm that this momentum
is continuing?
I know in the Estimates process we talked about the sale of
the soils remediation really flagging.
Another area which was a big infusion of capital or rather of revenue
into the last operation was the PCBs, which were, in fact, kind of a one‑shot
deal as well.
Does the volume of sales continue to build, or are they
remaining in a stalled situation?
Mr. Cummings: The member has pointed out two areas that
were obviously‑‑well, to start off I will deal with the PCBs. That was a one‑time very opportune deal
that was made, one for which we will, I think, for several generations probably
be quite appreciative of the Province of Alberta.
The soils, I would expect that they will continue somewhere
in the same range that they have been.
Although I have to indicate there is undoubtedly some resistance on the
part of oil companies to move land, unless they have a sale for it. There are a number of sites out there that
probably will be moved, but they are not being moved at this particular
juncture, and that may well affect the long‑term volumes.
It has always been understood that the soil remediation
facility would probably put itself out of business in the long run, because
eventually you will get down to smaller‑‑or not completely out of
business, but it will reduce. It will
not be the main part of the business. It
will be simply an ongoing and possibly quite steady portion of the business.
I need to get to the nub of the member's question. It is my understanding that the volume of
business, using the transfer facility that is available, that the corporation
has been able to be quite competitive and is continuing to build its volume of
business through that centre, which of course leads to the next development
that we need to have. That is why we are
seeking the $20‑million worth of investment, which is to developed the
ability to treat more of this material rather than transshipping it.
Ms. McCormick: I just have a final question that the
minister by his response promised me to ask with respect to moving on to the
next development. Given that the deal is
expected to be transacted and complete by the end of July, when could we
reasonably expect construction to begin on the new facility?
Mr. Cummings: Certainly in August. Let me put on the record why that seems to me
to be quite possible. The fact is, when
the arrangements are signed, the investors will have $20 million tied up in a
letter of credit in a Canadian bank, and I am sure they will want to do
something with it as quickly as they can, because it is not able to be used for
anything except to support and be there to back up the construction of the
facility. In other words, time value of
money all of a sudden will become very important to them, and that, along with
the commitments that are in the agreement, will drive them very quickly to
begin construction.
Ms. Jean Friesen
(Wolseley): Mr. Deputy Chair, I have a question for the
Minister of Environment as well.
Today in the House I tabled a number of petitions. I do not know if the minister has had a
chance to read them yet. I expect his
staff may well have looked at them, but it was a petition which I believe has
been signed by over a thousand people, mostly in my constituency, and it
represents the work of a number of volunteers in an environmental
coalition. I understand that they were
able to gather these signatures very quickly.
So it is an indication, certainly, of interest and concern.
The petition asks the minister to consider that the amount
of junk mail and unwanted advertising is expanding in Manitoba and Canada, and
they believe, for example, that the amount of junk mail has doubled in the past
five years. The concerns of my
constituents are that much of this advertising material is printed upon
nonrecyclable paper. What they have
asked their government to do, the government of Manitoba, is to write to the
federal government to request the federal minister responsible for Canada Post
to consider bringing in legislation requiring all unsolicited mail and flyers
use recycled materials.
Mr. Deputy Chairperson, this, I believe, is not just a
concern of those people who were able to sign the petition, but it is a concern
of many households in Wolseley, and I know that as I go door to door there are
many signs, sometimes written by children, sometimes from the Canadian
newspaper companies, which indicate that this particular household does not
want junk mail, does not want flyers. It
is a very widespread concern, and I am sure it is not just in the community of
Wolseley.
There is a City of Winnipeg by‑law on this, as I am
sure the minister is aware, but there are also many difficulties with enforcing
it, and obviously Canada Post has a responsibility to deliver mail which is
sent through Canada Post, and that is an international responsibility which
must be adhered to. The City of Winnipeg
by‑law also requires one to post a notice at the entrance to one's
property, not just on the door. For many
people, particularly those in apartments, that is quite difficult.
So I think what the constituents here are trying to do is
to come at this from another tack and to try and ensure that at least those
materials which must be delivered are based on recyclable paper. It is an interesting way, I believe, of
ensuring that the market for recycled paper expands, and that in expanding that
market there may be an opportunity to bring down the price, and I think we do
know that in most cases recycled paper, which in fact I use for all of my mail
and literature to residents, certainly is a little more expensive, but I think
it is something which my constituents certainly approve of.
There are other ways, of course, of expanding the market
for recycled paper, and one, of course, is by government purchasing or by
purchasing by large corporations.
* (1830)
So what I wanted to do this evening is to ask the minister
what kind of policy he is pursuing on the use of recycled papers to expand that
market and possibly bring down the price of recycled papers, secondly, whether
he is also prepared to respond to this petition and to write to the federal
minister and to request the federal minister to consider bringing in federal
legislation for recycled materials.
Thirdly, I also wanted to follow up on a question I believe was asked of
the minister earlier in the session, I think a few days ago, where he talked
about the initiatives that his government was taking in this area and if he
could perhaps give us some more detail at this time on the use of recycled
papers in particular.
(Madam Chairperson in
the Chair)
Mr. Cummings: Yes, I am not sure that I have seen the
petition, but I understand the principles the member put forward, and from the
sound of it, it is a petition I would not have much problem supporting,
frankly.
There is some background to this that goes beyond just the
question of whether or not flyers are printed on recyclable material. That in itself is an interesting approach
because most people who have approached my office are talking about the need to
reduce the amount of unsolicited material that comes through our boxes rather
than‑‑here, I now have a copy.
I do have this, I am sorry.
The unsolicited material that we find in our boxes is
becoming quite burdensome, and there are some figures that were published not
very long ago that demonstrate, I think it is, about $200,000,000 that the Post
Office receives in revenues for delivery of this material. The reason I have no problem with this
approach or with this suggestion is that this ties very directly into the
problem that I have had in bringing together a multimaterial recycling program,
because the Canada Post is probably the one area that we are going to have the
most difficulty getting co‑operation in contributing any revenue to a
program.
Number one, a federal authority, a federal service, we are
probably not capable of levelling a tax against them without a considerable
amount of constitutional wrangling. I
think the payroll tax is a demonstration of the problems that can arise in
trying to get those revenues out of the federal government. However, the Post Office is expected to
operate more independently of government.
I have had communication with them. They sent me their environmental policy, and
they said a number of comforting things, but they did not say the cheque was in
the mail either. If they are not
prepared to contribute in some way toward the elimination of this material from
the wastestream, then the next logical step is, would they be prepared to
require that it be printed in a more environmentally friendly way so the
material would be less of a problem in the wastestream? I do not have a problem with that.
Paper is well known to be one of our biggest
wastestreams. It is also well known to
be, in terms of tonnage, one of the wastestreams that will probably have some
value if we can get the less valuable papers out of it; either that or we have
to have some fairly expensive de‑inking processes.
I am not sure that either one of us can technically answer
what this paper means in the de‑inking process and whether having it on
recyclable paper at that point would make much difference. It seems to me, in the de‑inking
process, there are an awful lot of things that we do not think of as recyclable
today that might be, but we do not have that capacity, so that is almost an
academic discussion.
In terms of paper as a whole, if the member was looking for
some response from me in terms of getting the recycling program going in this
province, cardboard has, interestingly enough, got a market of its own right
now and is actually being sought. Just
this afternoon, I had someone in the industry tell me that might well be a
blip, something the same as $9 canola was in the farm community this summer.
I am not sure I share that view, because I do not see
cardboard packaging being reduced dramatically.
I do not know what would have created the demand today that would not at
least have some ongoing demand over the next year, other than the fact that
there may be virgin product that suddenly becomes cheaper priced that will
impact on that.
Our intention is that we will move from what will be a
fairly rigid and regulated approach at the front end of our program into a
situation where we invite the industry.
We intend to invite them right from the start, but the industry will
gradually assume more input and more real input in the sense that we would
start to move the products to more of a true‑cost accounting, in other
words, those products that are recyclable and do have value when they come out
the other end, that that value starts to be recognized in what it costs them to
go in in the front end: aluminum, the
first obvious example; good old newsprint being another, because we believe
that that market is going to continue to grow; glass being an example of a
product that is likely going to be penalized in the long run or at least is
certainly not going to get a lot of relief from being considered a problem in
the recycling loop, if you will.
Other products will be on either side of that balance, if
you will. Certainly, I think aluminum is
way over on this side, and I think glass is over quite a ways on the other
side. Canada Post and the problem that
is raised there and the issue that is presented as part of this petition is in
fact one of the areas that we acknowledge there probably is going to be a
problem. But I am not going to wait to
solve this problem to get the program going.
We are going to get the program going and we will attempt
by whatever way we can to get Canada Post in the loop. It certainly is our intent to request other
companies producing flyers within the province to contribute on a per‑tonne
basis. So we are automatically going to
have a problem if we follow that track, because it is all of a sudden going to
be more cost competitive for Canada Post to put it in, because they will not be
contributing to our recycling program.
We will certainly be conscious of not creating that
inequity. I am hopeful Canada Post will
contribute, because I think‑‑and it would be not difficult at all
to get all members or all parties in this Legislature and others across the
country, if our program starts to take hold and I think it will, to say Canada
Post cannot morally stay out of the loop any longer.
Whether it is Autopac and Hydro or Telephone here in the
province, nationally Canada Post is going to become a lightning rod and they
will have to respond. Frankly, I throw
out a challenge to my Liberal colleagues.
Unless they want the federal Liberal government to start getting a black
eye over its lack of commitment toward the environment, then they are going to
have to get to their Crown, i.e., Canada Post, and tell them they better get on
board because all of a sudden they will be discriminating against Manitoba
producers who are producing flyers, and who are going to be paying toward the
removal of them from the wastestream, and we will have a national Crown that is
not.
Ms. Friesen: I want to thank the minister for that
response and to indicate that I certainly, myself, will be writing to Canada
Post and, as the minister suggested, would invite other parties in this House
to do the same.
I wanted to take this opportunity to congratulate Mr.
Graham, my constituent, for all the work that he has put into this and the
number of volunteers that he was able to marshal to go door to door literally
over many hours in the constituency.
Ms. Marianne Cerilli
(Radisson): Madam Chairperson, I know that the pile of
dead trees on my desk may cause some concern for some of my caucus colleagues,
but I will try to keep my questions very short and brief. I am sure there is a good amount of recycled
paper in this stack of files here.
* (1840)
I do want to ask the minister some questions, a couple
flowing from the debate I have heard since I have been in the House this
afternoon. I will start off with the
topic that the minister was discussing with the member for Wolseley (Ms.
Friesen).
I just want to ask one question with respect to the WRAP,
the Waste Reduction and Prevention program, and it has to do with the third‑party
financing. I have had some discussions
about this with the minister, but I want him to give me some assurance now that
there is not going to be a problem with having an entity created that is going
to require corporations to pay money to a third party, to a party other than
the government, and if this is, in fact, a novel situation or a new kind of
approach, and if there is not some risk involved and if there is a legal
opinion that the government has with respect to this type of third‑party
financing for the recycling program that the government is embarking on.
I have had this raised with me from people in the
community, and I again would just like the minister to clarify that in the
debate today.
Mr. Cummings: I just got a word of caution from the
Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson). No,
I would be quite willing to discuss this issue.
It is a different way of dealing with the problem. I acknowledge that and accept the challenge
that goes with that, frankly, because the alternative is a bureaucracy, and I
say that with respect for those who work in the bureaucracy, but when you are
talking about civil service establishing a program and running it, then you
have built into the tax base a situation where you have to either have it
within the base expenditures of government funded by tax dollars, or you have
to take all of the revenues that in this case we would be talking about for
recycling into government or, thirdly, I suppose, you would take portions of it
and claim them as a legitimate overhead to government.
The bottom line is that we want industry to be comfortable
with using their initiative and their business acumen, if you will, to make
this process work. This is not intended
to be a hostile takeover although, frankly, I would think that there were
probably some in the community, given the comments I made on the record and the
reaction of some of the members of CPIPSI, that they might well make that
interpretation, but that is not at all where we are headed.
When CPIPSI made its proposal after having met with Grocery
Products Manufacturers, their suggestion was that industry would run the
program, that they would accept voluntary contributions within their
organization, but they did say that there was one rider on that, and this is where,
quite frankly, we were unable to reach an agreement that was satisfactory to
all parties. The rider on that was that
the WRAP legislation, because it is a fairly unique piece of legislation, in
fact, fit very well with the concept that they had of an industry‑run
recycling system.
Now, how can a government regulation be seen to be that
compatible with a private sector initiative?
Well, it comes about this way.
The private sector was unable to get everyone within what would be
considered the broad reaches of a multimaterial recycling program. They were not able to get them all
voluntarily in the tent. So they said,
that is okay, we have got our own membership in the tent; now we want
government to regulate those who are not in the tent. That makes sense. It has got to be a level playing field, but
frankly, if you are going to regulate one portion of an industry, it is a
little bit unfair to say you are not going to regulate another unless you give
them an exemption. That exemption is
then based on whether or not they are contributing a fair and equal or a
proportionate amount.
The program would be that the private industry would set
the levy, and they would, through their own program, allocate money as to what
they thought was the appropriate contribution for that levy, but government
would be required, probably in the long run, to collect the levy from those who
were not voluntarily in the program and then forward that money to the program.
Secondly, as I have indicated on the record before, in
negotiations with the city, they were unable to reach an agreement as to what
was an appropriate level of support to run the type of multimaterial recycling
program the city, the province and, I think, GPMC thought was appropriate for
this province. So it came down to the
fact that if government‑‑we had no agreement over the total
dollars. Government was not going to set
the levy, but government would be responding by collecting a levy that would be
set by an outside group. So we began to
have a mishmash that was sort of the reverse of where we are now.
The decision was made that if government was going to
regulate, then government should in fact have some significant input into what
the levy was going to be. There was no
agreement over the dollars, so we felt that in the early stages, there was
going to have to be some protection to the municipalities and in fact more than
in the early stages, and any program in the end was going to have to have an
ongoing commitment to a clear and understandable cost that would be
appropriated to the municipalities. That
can be done if this program lies within the realm of the regulation as we have
laid it out and will allow contracts to be written. Now, who should write those contracts? Should it be the Department of Environment or
should it be a group on behalf of government who manage the program?
Criticism by members opposite, as a matter of fact, as I
recall, was that there was possibly a problem with development of markets, and
if industry was not in the loop, we would not have any hope of developing the
markets that needed to be developed in order to dispose of or to properly
recycle the material.
My hope, my expectation, in fact, something of which I have
a very high level of confidence and expectation of, is that the implementation
and management group that will operate this fund will have representation from
government and industry, and industry will gradually have more and more input
over the next three years so that they become, not only full partners, but
probably move more into proactive development, because they have everything to
gain and nothing to lose.
There is obviously a fear up front from any industry if
they believe they are going to be regulated in an area that they previously did
not have a cost, but if we acknowledge the changes that have come in our
society, where products need to have a value attached to them so they are
removed from the wastestream‑‑I believe we have reached that stage
in the development of our communities.
The public is no longer willing to accept that if they buy a product and
they send it to the landfill, that does not cost them anything. It is costing them anyway. They are paying it through their taxes,
through their city or municipality, in the cost of managing that wastestream
and the cost of managing the landfill, plus we are losing an asset. We are losing a product that has value.
* (1850)
For environmental reasons, we need to stop burying products
of value or disposing of them without getting the value back out of them. Those are the principles that are the
underlying part of this, and all of those principles need to be considered when
we talk about the fact that we are going to have an arm's‑length
organization that will receive monies, that government will have set the levies
for.
I believe it is a happy marriage in the long run of
industry, government and environmental concern that will end up, not only doing
the right thing, but creating jobs in the process, creating a much different
climate in this province, and particularly in the city of Winnipeg, for
management of what has been some very large volumes of recycled material that
are not being properly handled.
Ms. Cerilli: It sounds then, from that answer, that the
minister is quite confident that this is not a new experiment that is going to
cause some problems from a legal point of view.
I want to move to another issue that was just discussed, an issue that
we did spend some time on in the Estimates.
I am quite concerned about the minister's answer with respect to the
traffic study at the City of Winnipeg. I
would ask the minister if he would not admit, by authorizing the environmental
assessment to go ahead on the Norwood Bridge prior to the study being completed
by the City of Winnipeg on traffic flows, that he is not giving up any
authority that he may have to ensure that there is environmentally sustainable
traffic planning at the city. That is
question one.
Further to that, if he has any assurance from the city that
the concerns that have been raised in the community, which he believes are not
under the purview of The Environment Act, are those in fact going to be
addressed through some kind of public process through the city? We could debate, like we did in Estimates, if
these urban planning issues are in fact environment issues, but we will not get
into that here. Those are the two very
specific questions I would ask the minister to answer.
Mr. Cummings: I will try and keep my answer as brief as
possible. I have gone through the
explanation already on an earlier question on how I saw the area of
responsibilities unfold. I do not
believe that we have compromised the process in any way, No. 1. If the question is, can you hold up the
environment licensing process until the city does something, then I would
suspect that we will be still here in the year 2,000 debating whether or not
everybody has done everything that they needed to in relationship to this
project.
I am somewhat concerned that some councillors feel that
they thought hearings under The Environment Act would have somehow got them off
the hook or answered their questions for traffic flow. That, unfortunately, is not likely going to
be the answer.
Now the member said she had a two‑part question. I think I answered the second part. I would like her to repeat what she was
referring to in the first part, because if she was implying that the system or
the process was somehow shortened, I disagree.
Ms. Cerilli: I think the minister answered the first
question. What I was getting at is the
minister has some authority right now under The Environment Act, which includes
the city of Winnipeg which would include this bridge, to ensure there is going
to be environmental considerations because he holds the ticket on the
environmental impact assessment.
We have a study going on in the city that is going to make
recommendations with respect to traffic flow, and I guess the suggestion that
we have been making on this side of the House is that you should not be putting
the cart before the horse and allowing major bridge reconstruction before you
have the study from the city. Even if
there is an environmental assessment that goes ahead, the minister can make a
decision to issue the licence or not, and that should be done based on full
information, as much information as is going to come along. I would hate to think that we are going to
have all this kind of construction go through and then have some new
information come forward from the traffic study.
The other question I was asking has to do with the minister
playing what I would call interjurisdictional hide‑and‑seek with
the city on their process of public input and review of some of the urban
planning issues. I think that I will
just leave it at that.
I want to move on to another area. The minister, I think, in his relationship
with the city, could ensure that there be some protection and some
consideration if he believes that the city has its own process that could
handle some of the concerns which are coming from the community.
I want to ask the minister if he has familiarized himself
with the federal court ruling with respect to the sewage lagoons at Oak Hammock
Marsh, and if from that ruling which, as I understand it, the judge clearly
stated that sewage lagoons are provincial responsibility‑‑all the
concerns should be dealt with at the provincial level‑‑if there are
going to be any implications from that with respect to sewage lagoon
construction going on in the province and the way it is being handled up to
this point where municipalities are dealing with this area in what seems to be,
because they do not have a lot of environmental regulations at the municipal
levels, which seems to be in a way that is not in keeping with concern for the
environment, sustainable development or what I would think is a forward‑looking
approach.
So I want to ask the minister that and then follow that
with another question with respect to sewage lagoons.
Mr. Cummings: This minister has a little longer memory than
the member for Dauphin (Mr. Plohman).
Madam Chair, the question about Oak Hammock and whether or
not there are implications from the court ruling, the answer is quite simply,
the implication is that the position of the Minister of Natural Resources (Mr.
Driedger), the process that the Department of Environment put the project
through here have in fact been able to demonstrate that they were adequate and
that they can continue their responsibility.
Well, I think for the record it should be shown that the
members opposite still believe that even though it has gone through the court
system in Manitoba, it has gone to appeal at the federal level, that they are
still scoffing at the fact that the courts ruled in a particular way. I might be unhappy if they were to all of a
sudden come around and say how great they thought this project was, because
then all of a sudden I would be uncomfortable with the colleagues that have for
so long done everything they can to discredit this project, one of the best
projects in North America, by the standards of many people who go through there
these days, and the members opposite are still wishing that it could be somehow
pilloried through the court system. What
an abuse.
Point of Order
Ms. Cerilli: Madam Chairperson, the minister is, I think,
not using this time to answer the questions that are asked. I specifically asked how that is going to
affect future locations of sewage lagoons in the province, and we do not want
to, I think, tread into the Oak Hammock Marsh issue at this point.
I would ask the minister to just answer the question. There are lots of people here with lots of
questions to ask, and we want to get going.
Madam Chairperson: The honourable member for Radisson does not
have a point of order.
* * *
Mr. Cummings: Are there any implications for Manitoba from
the court ruling? No.
Ms. Cerilli: I have had an issue raised with me with
respect to a sewage lagoon that is going to be sited in the R.M. of St.
Clement. It is a human waste lagoon that
is going to go half a mile north of Sunset Beach, half a mile from Lake
Winnipeg. It is going to have its flow
impacts, potentially, I would say, but very likely, considering the wind
direction and the flow of the water, onto Grand Marais and Grand Beach. This to me does not make a lot of sense in
terms of maintaining what are huge tourist attractions for the province of
Manitoba.
* (1900)
I would ask the minister if he would commit to giving me
the criteria that were used by IDS engineering when they selected this site for
the sewage lagoon in this R.M. and to ensure that there was environmental
consideration of the effect on the lake and the beach and the beach users and
an area that has been developed, I would say, relying on the water quality of
the shoreline along Lake Winnipeg on that eastern side of the south basin.
I am not convinced that there are strong enough guidelines
from the province on siting these types of lagoons, and I would like for the
minister to clarify for me what requirements the selection process would have
to ensure that we are not setting ourselves up for a disaster here.
Mr. Cummings: Madam Chair, I am not sure that I could or
that I should attempt to report as to the criteria that I believe would be
required. I am certainly prepared to
take the question as the member has put it as indication that she would like
further information and background on what is occurring in that location. I would be more than glad to supply it. I do not have specific information on that
site at my fingertips, and I would have to rely on the environment officer in
that area to send me the information.
Ms. Cerilli: I thank the minister for agreeing to send me
that information. Given the season, this
is the summer season, beach season, there are a lot of people who are going to
be up there wanting to use that beach.
This is a very big issue of concern to the communities that I mentioned,
and I would just ask the minister if he would commit to do this immediately, to
supply myself, and I will, as I am sure he is aware, forward on to the
community the criteria that are going to be used for siting sewage lagoons in the
province of Manitoba, so that we know that they are looking at the geology and
the flow of effluent that is going to be dislodged into water bodies like Lake
Winnipeg.
Mr. Cummings: Well, I am tempted to ask the member where
she thinks the combined overflows from Winnipeg went yesterday and the day
before.
Madam Chair, the bigger question is one that has been
raised by this member and by others as to whether or not there are appropriate
operating standards for lagoons in this province; and secondly, the other
question, which I think has even greater implications for all of us, is the
question that is being asked by some, and I think a small number at this point,
who are suggesting that lagoons should be eliminated.
I really wonder if that is now the position of the official
opposition which they will be putting forward in the next short while, a
position that says that all lagoon construction shall cease in this province
and that any human effluent from here on would be treated mechanically or biologically
and not‑‑with no discharge.
Ms. Cerilli: One final question‑‑if the
minister, given his answer, would ensure that future lagoons of this type are
going to be given due consideration, given that the minister is currently
undertaking, as I understand it, a study to see if in fact these sewage lagoons
are treating sewage and working properly in Manitoba.
Similar to the questions with respect to the Norwood
Bridge, are we not continuing to put the cart before the horse if we proceed
with the kind of developments where we are not sure what the environmental
impacts are? Should we not wait until
the proper studies are done and then use that information for an informed
decision with respect to either siting, which I think also is an issue, and the
type of sewage treatment that we are going to use in the province? Thank you for your time.
Mr. Cummings: Well, a little knowledge, whether it is on my
part or on anybody else's part, can be dangerous. The implication has always been out there
that lagoons are not functioning and that they are destroying our environment.
I would only like to put on the record the one shining
example of something that should never have happened in this province, and that
is when the Dunnottar discharge flooded out a family. It should never have happened, but the
accusation under those circumstances that there were certain levels of
pollution that were discharged from the lagoon‑‑extensive testing
showed that the water picked up the contamination as it ran down the
ditch. It was more contaminated one mile
down the road than it was when it came out of the lagoon. So I suggest that this becomes a circular
argument pretty quickly.
Mr. Doug Martindale
(Burrows): Madam Chairperson, I have a couple of short
snappers for the Minister of Environment.
In the Burrows constituency, the new federal virology lab
is under construction. I think we are
all pleased that we have this investment in Manitoba. It is surrounded by residential
neighbourhoods on all four sides, and I think that it is an improvement in
terms of the visual effects in the neighbourhood. I know that in the past, the residents
complained about the dust from the city Works and Operations yard and from the
noise of trucks. So I think overall it
is an improvement for the neighbourhood.
I would like to ask the minister if there is any kind of
environmental problem as a result of any kind of emissions into the atmosphere
or the sewers or any waste products from that building. Who has the jurisdiction over any environmental
problem regarding that building? Is it
the provincial government or the federal government, and a similar question,
who monitors any waste or effluent from that building and that operation?
Mr. Cummings: This was all clearly laid out in the conditions
of the licence, and as I understand it, there are no discharges that should be
of concern. Certainly, it is meant to be
a contained facility.
Secondly, in terms of environmental responsibility, I think
we are looking at an area of shared responsibility. I would have to research with my department
as to who is doing what in terms of the precise monitoring and checking of the
site. The City of Winnipeg, of course,
also has enforcement officers who would be involved.
This is rather an unique facility. I do not anticipate that it will be one that‑‑in
fact, it will be an exceptionally safe facility, given the conditions that were
put on it during the environmental licensing.
Ms. Friesen: My questions are for the Minister of Urban
Affairs.
I want to ask the minister about an issue that was raised
in the House recently. It deals with a
park that runs through my constituency and which I am sure the minister is
familiar with, and that is Omands Creek.
* (1910)
Omands Creek is partly in St. James constituency and partly
in Wolseley, but certainly the residents of Wolseley have been very concerned
about the future of this park for a long time.
During the 1980s, when concerns were expressed about the possibility of
building over the park and of the development and interpretation of the
northern section of the park, the provincial government‑‑it was an
NDP government at that time‑‑did step in and I think helped to
create the northern section of the park, now known as Bluestem Park, which has
had considerable interest and activity on the part of both provincial
governments, that is, the one that succeeded as the present government.
There has been interpretation done there, natural heritage
interpretation, which has added to the enjoyment and use of the park. Certainly, in the last I think eight or 10
years, it has become an area, a city park, an urban park, a long, very
attractive gully which has been increasingly used by members of the very close
neighbourhood.
I am sure the minister is aware that there continue to be
problems threatening the northern section of Omands Creek. During the late 1980s there were indications
that a commercial enterprise planned to build over the creek. At that time, the former member for Wolseley
did introduce a piece of legislation or an amendment to existing legislation to
prevent this. This was at a time of a
minority government, and that received support of both opposition parties and
was passed.
Subsequent to that, Madam Chairperson, when the present
government assumed a majority, it did take steps to change this situation,
first of all to devolve the responsibility for waterways to the City of
Winnipeg. At that time, that was Bill 35
in 1991, I did propose amendments similar to those of a previous member for
Wolseley to protect Omands Creek from buildings constructed across the
creek. Those were not passed at a time
of a majority government. The city was
supposed to proceed to creating a by‑law that would deal with buildings
and construction over waterways.
Subsequent to that, in 1992, in Bill 78 the provincial
government, I believe, recognized that the city had not moved to create the by‑law. The province indicated that that by‑law
should be created and that the city should have hearings before that by‑law
was developed.
As the minister knows, there are again threats to Omands
Creek. I believe, on Friday of this week
it does come before a city planning committee, and there is a proposal to build
not from one side of the creek to the other, but a proposal for, I believe, a
parking lot this time‑‑not an office building, but for a parking
lot that is cantilevered out to some extent to the edge of the riverbank and
possibly at certain times of the year, given the size by the way of the creek,
does vary considerably during the spring to perhaps the driest season of the
summer. It does seem to the residents of
that area that the creek is again threatened, and it is not clear what the by‑law
procedures are going to be for that.
I wanted to ask the minister about that. First of all, has the city, to her knowledge,
created that new by‑law dealing with rivers and streams? Secondly, were there public hearings at that
time? Subsequent to issues raised in
this House this week, has the minister had conversations with the city, as she
suggested she might be able to do, over this issue?
Hon. Linda McIntosh
(Minister of Urban Affairs): Madam
Chair, the city has not proclaimed the by‑law which they are obliged to
proclaim. We have discussed this on
numerous occasions. They have been made
aware of the fact that they are behind in their obligation in this respect.
The city was behind in a couple of its obligations. One was the City of Winnipeg French Language
Services; the other was the Ombudsman; the third was this one. They have now, within the last few months,
complied with the French language requirement.
They have just recently complied with the Ombudsman, and I am looking
for soon compliance upon this one, although I have not yet seen a draft of a by‑law
on this topic. I do have an appointment
request with the mayor. It has not been
set yet. I know they are having a
hearing on Friday.
I have at various points discussed this whole issue of the
property owner's rights, the changed expectations, the protection of the
waterways and parks and natural lands. I
have indicated that perhaps a land swap could be made where the owner could be
given property of equivalent value in trade for the particular land that is
under discussion here. My initial
response to that from the city was a negative one. That request will be formalized before too
long, and I will be asking for some other kind of reaction on that.
I do have a piece of property in mind that perhaps could be
a suitable trade if they were willing. I
have not seen the proposal that is going forward on Friday. All I know about it really is what has been
in the newspaper. I do not know if the
City Council has received it as a document in preparation for their hearing on Friday
or their meeting on Friday. That is
where it stands right now. I hope by
tomorrow that we do have an appointment set for the mayor and I to discuss
this. Today just was not possible for
the two of us to get our heads together on this issue.
Ms. Friesen: Madam Chairperson, I want to thank the
minister for that and I am very pleased to see her interest in the possibility
of a land swap and of extending the public park area, because it is a park I
think which the province has considerable interest in. I think the province has done a very good job
of natural and historical interpretation in that urban park and particularly in
an area which is so close to the inner city.
There are very few parks of that natural cast, and it is one I think
that is very well used.
I am glad to hear the minister's response on the issue of
the by‑law because I thought perhaps it was something I had missed, that
in fact they had proclaimed a by‑law that somehow I had not paid
attention to. I do want to make the minister
aware of some comments that I made at the time that the previous Minister of
Urban Affairs brought in the legislation requiring that by‑law.
The actual wording of the act suggests that the city must
bring in a by‑law with public hearings, but it does offer them‑‑as
I thought at the time‑‑an escape hatch by having an escape route
that says if there is an individual or a personal interest in the‑‑I
should read the actual exact indication.
The phraseology of the proposed by‑law says that they
must hold public hearings if the rights of any person are to be involved. My concern at the time was that persons are
not necessarily communities, and I am concerned about the city's interpretation
of that. If the minister is meeting with
the mayor, I hope that she will draw that to her attention. This was when I was speaking on June 24,
1992.
The other area that I had concern of in that by‑law
was the French translation. The French
translation is a little more ambiguous than the English. It does say in the French translation that‑‑the
quotation actually is, ne brime aucun droit, and "droit" has two ways
of being interpreted, as right or law.
So there is an ambiguity which I asked the minister about
at the time. There was nothing put on
the record which actually straightened out that ambiguity. It may be that, legally, the ambiguity that I
am seeing is not there in the words.
Perhaps if the minister would confer with the previous Minister of Urban
Affairs to see what judgment was given at that time or what advice was given at
that time.
I wanted to again draw to the minister's attention the fact
that I believe that the residents of Wolseley are very, very strongly opposed
to building over waterways, whether it is directly across or whether it is
cantilevered across, and that public access to the whole of that gully and to
the whole of the waterways of that gully would be considered very important to
my constituents. I wish the minister
well with her meetings with the city.
* (1920)
Mrs. McIntosh: I thank the member for her comments, and I
will be certain to ensure that her comments from Hansard are taken under
consideration when the topic is discussed.
Mr. Dave Chomiak
(Kildonan): I just had a couple of questions of the
minister responsible for infrastructure renewal.
An Honourable Member: If you are short half a bridge, ask John‑‑
Mr. Chomiak: If we are short a bridge, I know where we can
dismantle one. It is soon to be
constructed in the south end of the city and could help fund many other activities.
Probably, members of this House will be surprised to learn
that statistics from the Manitoba Disaster Assistance Board indicate that in
last year's floods West Kildonan had the greatest amount of claims in the
entire city of Winnipeg. In fact, West
Kildonan had almost half of all the claims of the city of Winnipeg, far in
excess of any other region of the city.
Consequently, the sewer and water structures in West Kildonan are quite
deteriorated and have had numerous claims from residents of the area as to when
projects are going to be developed to redevelop the infrastructure,
specifically the sewer and water in our area.
I note from the statistics that I have from the
infrastructure project that virtually no sewer and water projects are being
undertaken by infrastructure in the West Kildonan region.
Can the minister outline why that is, or if he has any
indication as to that?
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): I think the member
knows the process that was utilized in terms of allocating the dollars under
the infrastructure agreement. The total
agreement over the next two years is a $205‑million program with
contributions coming one‑third from the province, one‑third from
the federal government and a third from either a municipal government or
another organization.
At the very outset, in consultation with the federal
government, we allocated that money into three pools, so to speak. We allocated $60 million to the City of
Winnipeg for them to come forward with their recommendations in terms of what
we call traditional municipal infrastructure requirements, sewer and water,
streets and so on. We allocated $60
million to rural Manitoba, and we allocated the $85 million to Strategic
Initiatives.
So, within the $60 million, we are relying on the City of
Winnipeg to outline for us their greatest area of need, their highest
priorities. Within that area they had
set aside $20 million for sewer district relief programs. They have highlighted four major sewer
district areas. The member is
correct. The West Kildonan area is not
one of them.
So we continue to work with the city in terms of what their
highest priorities are with the amount of money that is available under the
current infrastructure program. These
were the priorities they provided us with within the dollars that have been
allocated. We will continue to work with
them to determine what they do as being the highest priorities under the
traditional municipal elements.
Mr. Chomiak: I thank the minister for that response, and
my only comment is that I think‑‑and obviously I have a vested
interest in this insofar as it is the area I represent, but given the
statistics from the Manitoba Disaster Assistance Board, I think the city has
made some wrong decisions with respect to the allocation of the funds for the
infrastructure sewer and water, as demonstrated by, again, damage in the end of
the city that I represent during the recent rains and floods, but I thank the
minister for that response.
Ms. Friesen: I have a question for the Minister of
Industry, Trade and Tourism.
Madam Chair, this is a question that was raised with me by
a constituent recently, and I said that I would ask the Minister of Industry,
Trade and Tourism, if there was time in concurrence.
This arose out of the celebrations of Canada Day at The
Forks. There was a very large
crowd. It was a very successful day, as
I am sure the minister is aware, but one of the unfortunate aspects that my
constituent pointed out was that the new tourism building was not open. I think she was there at around nine
o'clock. She pointed to the number of
out‑of‑province, out‑of‑country cars in the car park,
obviously a large number of people who had come in for the Pink Floyd concert
and other events of that weekend and who were there at The Forks, and the new
tourism building, with its staff and its leaflets and its ability to introduce
people to the wider aspects of Manitoba was not open.
So I wanted to ask the Minister of Industry, Trade and
Tourism about that, about the opening hours at The Forks, and whether he would
consider on long festival days like that whether it would not be an advantage
to the province to keep that office open, at least as long as the regular
commercial establishments at The Forks are.
I say this having looked at the opening hours of other
offices of Tourism. The ones at the
Legislature, for example, are now closed on weekends, which is not something
which happened before, so this is the only opportunity that people would have
who came in on the weekend for special events like that.
So I wonder if the minister perhaps has some reflections on
that and whether it would be of benefit to the province to keep that open.
Hon. James Downey
(Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism):
Madam Chair, I appreciate the question from the member for Wolseley on
behalf of her constituent.
Let me assure her that I think it would be appropriate to
provide service to the public to the greatest extent possible. There is a fairly substantial investment in
the facility that is there by both the provincial and federal government. It is there to provide information and
service to the public.
I will take the question basically as an advisement from
the member and look into what we could do to further accommodate the public and
make sure that we could do that.
It makes good common sense to try to provide a greater
service. We have set some targets that
are fairly ambitious for the tourism industry in Manitoba, and we believe that
with the response we are getting with some of the advertising, particularly in
the United States and the advantage that we have with the U.S.‑Canadian
dollar difference that we do have a tremendous opportunity.
I will certainly take a personal review of the situation as
it relates to hours that are open and try to work to accommodate the general
public.
Mr. Gord Mackintosh (St.
Johns): I have a question to the Minister of
Industry, Trade and Tourism.
Just following on the Committee of Supply which discussed
the Immigrant Investor Fund on June 13, I am wondering if the minister would
advise the committee if there has been an evaluation by his department of a
revised plan for the Ramada Renaissance project by the Lakeview group since we
last discussed this on June 13.
Mr. Downey: Madam Chair, I am not aware of any specific
revisions. I know that there have been
discussions. I am not sure as to what is
in the department as it relates specifically to any changes to that project
that he refers to. If there has been any
substantial information that is different than what he received during the
committee process, I would be prepared to provide it for him in a day or two.
Mr. Mackintosh: I go back to the letter tabled by the Leader
of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) on June 13, a letter signed by the Director of
Investor Reporting for Lakeview, which references a preferred downsizing of the
project from 167 rooms. That letter
states in part: "We have written
the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism for the Province of Manitoba,
asking for approval to downsize the project.
We have asked the province to advise us of its position by June
13."
I am wondering if the minister did advise Lakeview by June
13 as requested.
* (1930)
Mr. Downey: Yes, Madam Chairperson, I believe that has in
fact taken place. One of the concerns
that I guess I would be fair in putting on the record is that before any major
change with an investment were to take place, there, I believe, has to be
appropriate approval by the investors.
That was one of the conditions which has been placed on that, and it has
to show economic activity and benefits for the province of Manitoba. I believe that would be the kind of response
it was given. I do not know exactly what
it was, but I believe that was the kind of response that was provided.
Mr. Mackintosh: Can the minister advise the committee whether
the province has approved any continued development by the Winnipeg Ramada
Renaissance group?
Mr. Downey: Not at this point, Madam Chairperson.
Mr. Mackintosh: Can the minister advise the committee whether
the government has given any approval subject to investor approval?
Mr. Downey: Madam Chairperson, I think I also added that
it has to demonstrate economic viability and/or economic benefits for the
province of Manitoba, as well as the investor approval. I believe I am accurate in those comments. Again, I will put a caveat on it.
If there is further information which should be provided to
the member as it relates to this, I am quite prepared to provide that within a
day or so.
Mr. Mackintosh: Just to clarify then, is the minister saying
that the department has or has not conducted an analysis of the economic
benefit of a revised proposal from Ramada Renaissance?
Mr. Downey: Madam Chairperson, I do not believe there has
been any further in‑depth work done as it relates to a revised
proposal. I think, at the outset, there
was a report, in general terms, done by the industry indicating in fact the
questionable need for any additional hotel rooms in the city of Winnipeg as it
relates to any investment. That is a
concern that has been brought to me by some of the hotel industry people at this
particular time. I am certainly aware of
their concern, the fact that it could well cause further difficulties with the
hotel industry we already have.
As far as any detailed further review of a new proposal, I
do not believe there has been any in‑depth work done, but certainly
knowledgeable as to what the desires are, I believe, of the Lakeview group.
Mr. Mackintosh: Would the minister provide to me a copy of
any correspondence sent back to Lakeview in response to its request for the
government's position by June 13?
Mr. Downey: Madam Chair, I will take a look at the
correspondence, and if it is able to be tabled without in any way jeopardizing
the province or the individuals, the investors, I will take under consideration
the provision of that material for the member.
Mr. Mackintosh: Would the minister advise whether the
government has given any approval, conditional on investors' approval or not,
regarding the Ramada property on Pembina Highway south?
Mr. Downey: So I do not misinform the House, Madam Chair,
I will provide that information to the member, as I said, with the other
information he has requested.
Madam Chairperson: Is the committee ready for the question?
Some Honourable Members: Question.
Madam Chairperson: Is it the will of the committee to adopt the
motion? Agreed?
Some Honourable Members: Agreed.
An Honourable Member: On division.
Madam Chairperson: On division.
The motion is accordingly adopted.
Committee rise. Call
in the Speaker.
IN SESSION
Committee Report
Mrs. Louise Dacquay
(Chairperson of Committees): Mr.
Speaker, the Committee of Supply has adopted a motion regarding concurrence in
Supply resolutions passed, directs me to report the same and asks leave to sit
again.
I move, seconded by the honourable member for Sturgeon
Creek (Mr. McAlpine), that the report of the committee be received.
Motion agreed to.
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), that this House concur in
the report of the Committee of Supply respecting concurrence and all Supply
resolutions relating to the Estimates of expenditure for the fiscal year ending
March 31, 1995.
Motion agreed to.
* * *
Mr. Ernst: Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the Minister
of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), that Mr. Speaker do now leave the Chair and the
House resolve itself into Committee of Ways and Means for raising of Supply to
be granted to Her Majesty.
Motion agreed to, and the House resolved itself into Committee of
Ways and Means for raising of the Supply to be granted to Her Majesty with the
honourable member for Seine River (Mrs. Dacquay) in the Chair.
COMMITTEE OF WAYS AND MEANS
Supply‑‑Capital Supply
Madam Chairperson
(Louise Dacquay): Order, please. Will the Committee of Ways and Means please
come to order.
We have before us for our consideration the resolution
respecting the Capital Supply bill. I
would remind members that as the 240 hours allowed for consideration of Supply,
and Ways and Means resolutions has expired, pursuant to Rule 64.1(1), these
resolutions are not debatable.
The resolution for Capital Supply reads as follows:
RESOLVED that towards making good certain sums of money for
Capital purposes, the sum of $181,355,000 be granted out of the Consolidated
Fund.
Shall the resolution be passed?
An Honourable Member: On division.
Madam Chairperson: On division?
The resolution is accordingly passed on division.
Supply‑‑Main Supply
Madam Chairperson: We also have before us for our consideration
the resolution respecting the Main Supply bill.
I once again remind members that as the 240 hours allowed for
consideration of Supply, and Ways and Means resolutions has expired, pursuant
to Rule 64.1(1), these resolutions are not debatable.
The resolution for Main Supply reads as follows:
RESOLVED that towards making good certain sums of money
granted to Her Majesty for the public service of the province for the fiscal
year ending the 31st day of March, 1995, the sum of $4,892,067,100 be granted
out of the Consolidated Fund.
Shall the resolution be passed?
An Honourable Member: On division.
Madam Chairperson: On division?
The resolution is accordingly passed on division.
* (1940)
Committee rise. Call
in the Speaker.
IN SESSION
Committee Report
Mrs. Louise Dacquay
(Chairperson of Committees): Mr.
Speaker, the Committee of Ways and Means has adopted a resolution regarding
Capital Supply and a resolution regarding Main Supply, directs me to report the
same and asks leave to sit again.
I move, seconded by the honourable member for La Verendrye
(Mr. Sveinson), that the report of the committee be received.
Motion agreed to.
INTRODUCTION OF BILLS
Bill 30‑‑The Appropriation Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): I move, seconded by
the Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism (Mr. Downey), that leave be given
to introduce Bill 30, The Appropriation Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant
affectation de crédits), and that the same be now received, read a first time
and be ordered for second reading immediately.
Motion agreed to.
SECOND READINGS
Bill 30‑‑The Appropriation Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): I move (by leave)
seconded by the Minister of Education and Training (Mr. Manness), that Bill 30,
The Appropriation Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits), be
now read a second time and be referred to a committee of this House.
Motion agreed to.
INTRODUCTION OF BILLS
Bill 29‑‑The Loan Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): I move, seconded by
the Minister of Environment (Mr. Cummings), that leave be given to introduce
Bill 29, The Loan Act, 1994 (Loi d'emprunt de 1994), and that the same be now
received and read a first time and be ordered for second reading immediately.
Motion agreed to.
SECOND READINGS
Bill 29‑‑The Loan Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Justice (Mrs. Vodrey), that Bill 29, The Loan Act,
1994 (Loi d'emprunt de 1994), be now read a second time and be referred to a
committee of this House.
Motion agreed to.
* * *
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), that Mr. Speaker do now
leave the Chair and the House resolve itself into a Committee of the Whole to
consider and report of Bill 25, The Statute Law Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994,
(Loi de 1994 modifiant diverses dispositions législatives en matière de
fiscalité); Bill 29, The Loan Act, 1994 (Loi d'emprunt de 1994); and Bill 30,
The Appropriation Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits), for
third reading.
Motion agreed to, and the House resolved itself into a committee
to consider and report on Bills 25, 29 and 30, with the honourable member for
Seine River (Mrs. Dacquay) in the Chair.
COMMITTEE OF THE WHOLE
Bill 25‑‑The Statute Law Amendment
(Taxation) Act, 1994
Madam Chairperson
(Louise Dacquay): The Committee of the Whole will come to order
to consider Bill 25, The Statute Law Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994 (Loi de
1994 modifiant diverses dispositions législatives en matière de fiscalité).
Does the honourable Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson)
wish to make an opening statement? Does
the critic for the official opposition wish to make an opening statement? The critic for the second opposition? No?
We shall proceed to consider Bill 25 clause by clause.
An Honourable Member: Page by page.
Madam Chairperson: We shall consider Bill 25 page by page.
Shall Clauses 1 and 2 pass‑‑pass; Clauses 3(1)
and 3(2)‑‑pass; Clauses 4 and 5‑‑pass; Clauses 6 and 7‑‑pass;
Clauses 8 and 9‑‑pass; Clause 10‑‑pass; Clauses 11 and
12‑‑pass; Clause 13(1), page 10‑‑pass; Clauses 13(2),
13(3) and 14, page 11‑‑pass; Clause 15‑‑pass; Clause 16‑‑pass;
Clauses 17, 18, 19 and 20(1) on page 15‑‑pass; Clauses 20(2),
20(3), 21, 22, 23 on page 16‑‑pass; Clause 24‑‑pass;
Clauses 25, 26 and 27‑‑pass; Clause 28‑‑pass; Clauses
29, 30, 31, 32‑‑pass; Clauses 33 and 34‑‑pass; Clauses
35, 36, 37 and 38‑‑pass; Clauses 39 and 40‑‑pass;
Clauses 41, 42, 43 and 44‑‑pass; Clauses 45, 46 and 47‑‑pass;
Clause 48‑‑pass; Clause 49, 50, 51 and 52‑‑pass; Clauses
53, 54, 55 and 56‑‑pass; Clause 57‑‑pass; Preamble‑‑pass;
Title‑‑pass. Bill be
reported.
* (1950)
Bill 29‑‑The Loan Act, 1994
Madam Chairperson: We shall now proceed to consider Bill 29
clause by clause. Does the minister wish
to make an opening statement?
Clauses 1, 2 and 3‑‑pass; Clauses 4 and 5‑‑pass;
Clauses 6 and 7‑‑pass; Clauses 8, 9, 10 and 11‑‑pass;
Clauses 12 and 13‑‑pass; Schedule A‑‑pass; Schedule B‑‑pass;
Preamble‑‑pass; Title‑‑pass. Bill be reported.
Bill 30‑‑The Appropriation Act, 1994
Madam Chairperson: We will now consider Bill 30, The
Appropriation Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits), clause by
clause.
Clauses 1, 2 and 3‑‑pass; Clauses 4, 5, 6‑‑pass;
Clauses 7, 8 and 9‑‑pass; Clauses 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14‑‑pass;
Schedule A‑‑pass; Preamble‑‑pass; Title‑‑pass.
Is it the will of the committee that I report the bill?
[agreed]
Committee rise. Call
in the Speaker.
IN SESSION
Committee Report
Mrs. Louise Dacquay
(Chairperson of Committees): Mr.
Speaker, the Committee of the Whole has considered Bill 25, The Statute Law
Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994; and Bill 29, The Loan Act, 1994; has directed
me to report the same, and Bill 30, The Appropriation Act, 1994, and asks leave
to sit again.
I move, seconded by the honourable member for Sturgeon
Creek (Mr. McAlpine), that the report of the Committee of the Whole be
received.
Motion agreed to.
REPORT STAGE
Bill 25‑‑The Statute Law Amendment
(Taxation) Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move
(by leave), seconded by the Minister of Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard), that
Bill 25, The Statute Law Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 modifiant
diverses dispositions législatives en matière de fiscalité), reported from the
Committee of the Whole, be concurred in.
Motion agreed to.
THIRD READINGS
Bill 25‑‑The Statute Law Amendment
(Taxation) Act, 1994
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): I move (by leave),
seconded by the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), that Bill 25, The Statute
Law Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 modifiant diverses dispositions
législatives en matière de fiscalité), be now read a third time and passed.
Motion agreed to.
REPORT STAGE
Bill 29‑‑The Loan Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the government House leader (Mr. Ernst) (by leave), that Bill 29,
The Loan Act, 1994 (Loi d'emprunt de 1994), reported by the Committee of the
Whole, be concurred in.
Motion agreed to.
THIRD READINGS
Bill 29‑‑The Loan Act, 1994
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson) (by leave), that Bill 29,
The Loan Act, 1994 (Loi d'emprunt de 1994), be read a third time and passed.
Motion agreed to.
REPORT STAGE
Bill 30‑‑The Appropriation Act, 1994
Hon. Eric Stefanson
(Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the government House leader (Mr. Ernst), that Bill 30, The
Appropriation Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits), reported
from the Committee of the Whole, be concurred in.
Motion presented.
Mr. Speaker: Agreed?
Some Honourable Members: No.
Mr. Speaker: No?
The question before the House is that Bill 30, The Appropriation Act,
1994; Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits, reported from the Committee
of the Whole, be concurred in.
Voice Vote
Mr. Speaker: All those in favour of the motion, say yea.
Some Honourable Members: Yea.
Mr. Speaker: All those opposed, please say nay.
Some Honourable Members: Nay.
Mr. Speaker: In my opinion, the Yeas have it.
An Honourable Member: On division.
Mr. Speaker: On division.
* (2000)
THIRD READINGS
Bill 30‑‑The Appropriation Act, 1994
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the Minister of Finance (by leave), that Bill 30, The Appropriation
Act, 1994 (Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits), be now read a third
time and passed.
Motion presented.
Mr. Speaker: Agreed?
Some Honourable Members: No.
Mr. Speaker: No?
The question before the House is that Bill 30, The Appropriation Act,
1994; Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits, be now read a third time and
passed.
Voice Vote
Mr. Speaker: All those in favour of the motion, please say
yea.
Some Honourable Members: Yea.
Mr. Speaker: All those opposed, please say nay.
Some Honourable Members: Nay.
Mr. Speaker: In my opinion, the Yeas have it.
An Honourable Member: On division.
Mr. Speaker: On division.
* * *
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, would
you call Bill 4 for third reading.
Bill 4‑‑The Energy and Consequential
Amendments Act
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): I move, seconded by
the Minister of Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard), that Bill 4, The Energy and
Consequential Amendments Act (Loi sur l'énergie et apportant des modifications
corrélatives), be now a read a third time and passed.
Motion presented.
[applause]
Mr. Jerry Storie (Flin
Flon): I want to thank all honourable members for
the applause. After that show of unity,
I may change my mind.
Mr. Speaker, I was asking my caucus colleagues earlier
today‑‑I said, how do you sum up 13 years involved in the political
process? My Leader said, hopefully,
quickly. [applause] More spontaneous applause.
Mr. Speaker, I thought of, how do you begin this
process? I thought of maybe becoming the
Joe Biden of the Manitoba Legislature and misquoting some Charles Dickens. This job is not easy. In the first line of the Tale of Two Cities: It was the best of jobs; it was the worst of
jobs. I think that sums up being a member
of the Legislature and perhaps of being a member of any House in any
parliamentary democracy in any country.
Mr. Speaker, I wanted to cover a number of topics besides
Bill 4. I know that you are going to be
listening very carefully and be calling me on my relevance in my remarks to
this bill, so I will be saying "Bill 4" several times throughout my
remarks. It is quite, I think, fitting
that my final comments in this Chamber be on Bill 4 because, as members know
here, besides representing a northern constituency which has suffered both the
consequences of Hydro development particularly but also has received some of
the benefits of the development of our hydro resources in the province of
Manitoba‑‑and I do want to make some remarks on Bill 4.
I wanted to begin by saying that this Chamber affords
individuals a unique opportunity and one that is, although sometimes squandered
over the course of a political career, regardless of how short or how long,
most individuals in this Chamber, regardless of their political stripe, end up
making a contribution that is of note.
It is not always of note to those outside this Chamber, because I think
quite often the process that we undertake is not very well understood.
I recall not too long ago, when Arlene Billinkoff retired,
discussing this with a number of journalists, a number of reporters, who have
been and still are, in some cases, reporting on legislative business, and it
always struck me as odd how incomplete‑‑I think that is probably
the polite way of putting it, their view‑‑their perspective on what
we do is. I do not think, until you are
a member, until you feel the pull and the push and the vagaries of political
life, can you really understand what we‑‑and I use that term
royally; I mean, all of us in this Chamber, not just the opposition in this
case‑‑feel that it is a unique business.
Mr. Speaker, certainly in the last 13 years I have had my
share of ups and downs, as many members opposite have. The political process can be unusually kind
and unusually cruel and usually is, and that is, I think, a given. But I wanted to begin by saying, perhaps
putting on the record, and this may be somewhat, I guess, parochial and self‑serving,
but I do want to put on the record some of the things that I think have
challenged this Legislature and the province over the past decade and a half
almost, some 13 years plus, 14 years since I began the nomination process, and
perhaps talk about what some of the victories, at least from my perspective,
have been in this Chamber.
I had the privilege, I guess, of becoming part of a
government in 1981 that was faced with a recession, as this government has been
over its course, its tenure, and, Mr. Speaker, at a relatively young age, I was
fortunate enough to become involved in the cabinet, part of Executive Council
and first as Minister of Housing. One of
my first duties as Minister of Housing was to begin a program called Homes in
Manitoba Program, which was a $50‑million program, which we believed at
the time would do some of the things that the infrastructure program and the
announcements of the last few weeks, we hope, will do, and that is, create some
jobs in the province. We introduced rent
regulations which this government has continued and a number of other things
during my service in that capacity.
A number of years later, as Minister of Northern Affairs, I
was involved in something that I am perhaps most proud of, and I believe that
our government was proud of, and that was the conclusion of a series of negotiations
with the bands in Manitoba, some 61 bands; and, as Minister of Northern
Affairs, I signed an agreement in 1984 which resolved for the vast majority of
bands, for every band save two, I believe, the treaty land entitlement question
which had plagued our province and our country for more than a hundred
years. That agreement was signed by me
on behalf of the province, signed by a federal representative before the 1984
election, Mr. Speaker, and I am proud to say that many of my colleagues, some
of whom are here, the member for Thompson (Mr. Ashton), the former member for
Churchill, Jay Cowan, were deeply involved in that, and the negotiations took a
long time. I believe the current
Minister of Northern Affairs (Mr. Praznik) may be involved now in negotiations
to finally see that agreement implemented, put in place.
(Mr. Marcel Laurendeau,
Acting Speaker, in the Chair)
Mr. Acting Speaker, for myself and for my constituency,
this is not simply solving a matter of conscience. It is not just solving a historical
problem. It is solving a practical
problem, an economic problem, a community development problem for many of the
communities that I serve, because in one community alone in my constituency,
the community of Pukatawagan, the Mathias Colomb Cree Nation is entitled to
more than 100,000 acres by virtue of the fact that it signed a treaty many,
many years ago and never received the land to which it was entitled.
As a result of that, the band, quite rightly, I think, in
the minds of most people, has resisted the infringement of economic development
from the outside of its resource area, and that scenario was played out all
across the province. It played out in
Portage la Prairie; it played out in the Roblin‑Russell constituency and
every other constituency, I think without exception, in the province.
So, Mr. Acting Speaker, I was pleased to have been involved
in that, and I hope that the next Minister of Northern Affairs and the next
federal Minister responsible for Indian Affairs Canada will resolve that
problem and put in place a solution that is satisfactory to everyone.
Mr. Acting Speaker, my tenure in the Department of Business
Development and Tourism was quite short, but I did have the privilege of
signing the largest tourism agreement between the Government of Canada and the
Province of Manitoba in our history, some $30 million, and I am very proud of
that agreement and some of the things that we accomplished, including the Imax
Theatre, the film Heartland, the first Manitoba‑made Imax film. I had the opportunity to remind the current
Minister of Industry, Trade and Tourism that the money that was used to develop
the Idea Centre, the tourism centre at The Forks, actually came out of the
agreement that we originally signed in 1985.
* (2010)
Mr. Acting Speaker, one of the things that we also were
able to accomplish, I guess, in those years was, I think in part, to recognize
the contribution to tourism that the North has made, and highlighted, in a
number of tourism brochures and venues, sports angling and wilderness adventure
and those kinds of activities which form a major part of the tourism draw in
northern Manitoba.
Mr. Acting Speaker, I was, for a short period of time,
Minister of Education and was the minister who formally created the task force
to review the high school curriculum, a process that I took seriously, and the
Minister of Education (Mr. Manness) announced today some further reforms in the
field of education, some of which I support, and some of which I look forward
to perhaps implementing with perhaps this minister or perhaps another minister,
but the bottom line is that that process, particularly changes to the high
school curriculum, the high school program, I think, were important and needed
to be done, and we have much work to do across the province and across the
educational spectrum in this province.
Mr. Acting Speaker, one of the other activities that I was
involved in and am proud of was the post‑secondary forum that was a
national forum in Saskatoon in 1987.
That forum was co‑chaired by the Minister of Education of the day
and Brian Segal, who is now the president of Guelph university and the editor
of Maclean's. It was one of the
opportunities, one of the few national opportunities that we have had as a
province, I think, to make the point, and I have made it on many occasions,
that we are the only industrial country in the world that has no national
perspective on post‑secondary education.
I recognize that constitutionally the provinces are given that
authority, but I make the point that, notwithstanding the Constitution, we have
very little chance of co‑ordinating and making efficient our post‑secondary
education system if we continue to do as we see fit as provinces without some
sort of a national perspective.
I always argued and I will argue today that by virtue of
the funding arrangements between the federal government and the province, that
in fact the federal government has a great deal of say in post‑secondary
education both in terms of our institutions and in continuing education, but it
is never recognized and there is no formal mechanism for co‑ordinating
that, and I think that is a shame. I
challenge the current and the future Ministers of Education to work to resolve
that and to find a way around the limitations imposed by our Constitution. I guess one should not say that our
Constitution imposes limitations, but I think in this case that it does.
I also had the opportunity to serve as the Minister of
Energy and Mines. In that portfolio, one
of the principal successes was the decision on behalf of the government of
Manitoba, the government of the day, to become involved with HBM&S in
Callinan mine. It was at a time when
over many years the copper and zinc prices had been low and the company had been
floundering, to say the least, needed new reserves of ore and simply could not
find a private sector partner, a private sector investor, and came to the
province as a last resort, Manitoba Mineral Resources, and requested
assistance.
Mr. Acting Speaker, we did become a partner with HBM&S,
purchasing a 49 percent share in that particular venture. It provided a moment of relief in that
community because of the importance of beginning the process of finding a new
orebody to supplement the ore that was coming then from Trout Lake.
Those are some of the things I guess that stick in my mind
as positive, apart from the process itself and being involved in the decision‑making
process of the province. Being involved
in government, obviously, is a lot more gratifying than sitting on this side,
and there is not anybody over there who would not agree. That does not diminish or belittle the role
of opposition. It is simply a different
part of this job. I think for most
people carrying ultimately the decision‑making levers or having the hands
on the levers is much more satisfactory.
Mr. Acting Speaker, there is a job to do over here and
members over there have done it. Members
on this side have done it, and it is still an important part of the job. I would not say I would have missed it if I
had not had the opportunity, but on the other hand, you know, in the fullness
of time I think it is joyful to experience all roles. We will leave it at that. We will just leave it at that, I think.
An Honourable Member: It teaches you humility before you go back
out to the salt mines.
Mr. Storie: Yes, that is right. It teaches you humility.
I did want to just sort of continue on the question of
mining because clearly‑‑and this is going to be as nonpartisan as I
can make it‑‑the last six years have not been kind to mining
communities.
Notwithstanding what the government sees as a legitimate
and persistent effort to help mining activity in the province, and I know the
Minister of Energy and Mines (Mr. Orchard) feels that way, the fact is that the
industry in general has not performed well in the last five years and that
communities, in my constituency in particular, have been affected quite
severely.
The community of Lynn Lake has gone from a community of
3,000 at one time to a community of probably 700. The community of Snow Lake, although there
are signs of life again because of the involvement of a gold mining company, is
still struggling and has gone from a community of 1,800 to probably 800,
perhaps a few less.
The community of Flin Flon itself has lost some 600
employees in the last few years and, over the last 10 years, probably 1,000
fewer employees at HBM&S right now, and that has had an impact on our
economy. Although we are in many
respects a single‑industry town‑‑we have other industries
that are important‑‑the community is hurting. Individuals have lost a great deal in a very
short period of time.
I do not think that anyone in this Chamber, and I certainly
hope no one in this Chamber, has ever experienced the kind of trauma that the
people of Snow Lake experienced in November of 1992, when the value of their
homes, their life savings, went from $60,000 to $2,500 in the space of about
six weeks.
For those who have worked a lifetime in the mine and who
had looked forward to retiring in some sort of dignity in a community that had
resources and wealth and activities and services, to see those disappear before
their eyes in a matter of months, can only be described as devastating.
Mr. Acting Speaker, those communities struggle on. They have found some sort of inner
strength. They have relied upon
themselves to a great extent, and they continue to struggle. There is some optimism in those communities
today, and that is gratifying as well.
I guess my point of departure with respect to how I view
the situation in the North, and perhaps the governments to some extent, is in
the way that we deal with those kinds of catastrophes. Perhaps that is why I have been all my life,
and continue to be, a social democratic, because I believe that the government
has a role to play in, not only supporting the economic activity, the
development of the economic base in the first instance, but also has an active
role to play in ameliorating situations where action is required, where pain is
being felt.
We have some anomalies in the way we view various
industrial activities in this province.
I have said this on other occasions, and it bears repeating.
* (2020)
I have chastised and spoken from my seat on many occasion
across the way about the different way we view mining as an industry, and
farming. Mr. Acting Speaker, we are
talking about commodities that are sold internationally, that are traded
internationally. We have a very thorough
system of supports for agriculture in the province of Manitoba, in Canada. That is not true of many other industries,
certainly not true in the case of the mining industry.
Perhaps a more directly parallel situation is the area of
fishing. The fishermen in the province
of Manitoba contribute significantly to the economy, many, many millions of
dollars, employ at least 2,000 people in northern Manitoba. Overall, the federal and provincial
government contributions to that industry are quite minute, a few hundred
thousand dollars, less than $300,000.
The federal government has discontinued all transportation
support to the fishing industry. When
you compare that to the hundreds of millions of dollars annually that are used
to support the shipment of grain, there is some inequality there.
We are talking about an agricultural product. We are talking about a form of farming,
resource harvesting and, yet, we do not treat it quite the same. We have not provincially and that is a
criticism that goes back many, many years, and we certainly do not nationally,
except perhaps for ocean fisheries, but inland fisheries is a different thing.
Mr. Acting Speaker, those are the some of the things, the
challenges that we have yet to face.
I guess the other facet of serving in this Legislature
which is unique, at least in the case of northern MLAs, is the distance we live
from the Legislature and the distance that the constituents in Flin Flon, my
constituents, live from the services that are provided to Manitobans by the
government.
I wanted to reference a couple of things because there is
an old saying that says that you can never really understand what someone is
going through until you have walked a mile in their shoes, and that is nowhere
more evident and more true than in the case of northerners. I suppose someone could argue it is the same
with farming, if you come from rural Manitoba, but there are so few people, so
few people, including in this Chamber, who have had the joyful experience of
working till five o'clock in Leaf Rapids and driving back to Winnipeg for a
meeting the next day. It is 13 hours
over gravel roads for at least part of that road, the worst gravel road in the
province, incidentally.
If you want, if you are the MLA for Flin Flon, and you go
to Tadoule Lake, you fly to Thompson and drive to Leaf Rapids and charter into
Tadoule, and it takes you at least six and a half hours flying time and three
hours of driving time, and it is a challenge.
It is not just a challenge for the MLA, it is even more of
a challenge for the people who need services, and if there is one that I wish
everyone here could experience on a more personal level, it is the issue of access
to health care, because for most people, and I include most people in the
community of Flin Flon, accessing health care is very easy. You walk down to the clinic, and for most
people, accessing primary health care is pretty easy. Your doctor refers you to the hospital. In many communities in Manitoba, there are
surgeons and there are anesthetists and there are not generally
specialists. Most of the specialists, I
think, are centred in a couple of communities, primarily Winnipeg, but it is a
service that because I guess of the political sensitivity of it, because of the
importance of that service to us as Canadians, I think too many of us take for
granted.
Obviously, as we become more sophisticated, as health care
becomes more sophisticated, as doctors rely on more sophisticated technology,
as doctors rely on more and more specialists to diagnose and to treat illness,
the accessing of medical services is a serious, serious problem, and it is a
serious handicap to northern residents.
That is more true of the more remote you are.
Mr. Acting Speaker, we need to make sure that the basic
services‑‑and they include obviously health care, but they also
include education, they also include Family Services‑‑are equally
accessible.
We do not have a constitution in Manitoba. We have a Canadian Constitution that talks
about equitable services across the country, but we do not have that kind of
constitution in the province, and maybe we should have. If we are not going to have a constitution,
then we have to have sort of some consensus that it is important to maintain
those kinds of services. It is important
at least to try to make sure that there is some sort of equality when it comes
to accessing those services.
I referenced education, and I have mentioned on other
occasions my involvement some 21, 22 years ago with the BUNTEP program. I actually taught‑‑one of the
first, it was not called BUNTEP at that time, it was called IMPACTE, but it was
the forerunner to the BUNTEP program in 1972.
(Mr. Speaker in the
Chair)
I can tell you‑‑and these statistics have been
used in this House on other occasions‑‑that the province of
Manitoba has an enviable record in taking particularly northern residents and
training them in the professions to enable them to become doctors and social
workers and nurses and doctors and engineers.
I know that people have talked about the record of those programs in
that they supply something like, you know, 50 percent of all the aboriginal teachers
come from the BUNTEP programs in Manitoba; 60 percent of the aboriginal nurses
are trained in our ACCESS programs; and 100 percent of the aboriginal doctors
come out of ACCESS programs in Manitoba.
I am very proud of those programs, and the support of those
programs. To give whatever credit may be
due to the Minister of Education (Mr. Manness) and the government, they have
continued to support, albeit more modestly, those programs. The federal government, I think, should be
called to task for failing to live up to the original mandate, the original
goal of those programs.
Mr. Speaker, those are just some of the things that I think
continue to affect the northern part of the constituency. Those programs and their importance I think
cannot be overstated. I do not think we
will realize how important they are until we find ourselves losing the best and
the brightest, the most talented and capable in those communities. Perhaps it will be too late when we recognize
the damage that we have done by undermining those programs.
There is an old saying that the unfortunate thing about
human beings is that they seldom see the writing on the wall until their backs
are against it. We need to be, I think,
a little foresighted with those particular programs because they are important
to all of us in the long run.
Mr. Speaker, one of the other things that is important to
northern Manitoba is the details and the content, the substance, of Bill 4,
energy. I did want to mention, without
wanting to boast, one of the most successful things that has happened in the
last decade and a half in the province of Manitoba was the construction of the
Limestone Generating Station.
I have watched the progression. I have watched the transformation of
attitudes about the Limestone Generating project, not only in this Chamber, not
only in members opposite but even in the press.
I remember writing letters to the editor, challenging some editorialist
who will remain nameless, whose initials are F.C., who continued to say this
was a boondoggle and that Limestone would never make money. He kept referring to the fact that this was a
sensitive set of negotiations because he said in his article that this deal
hinged on the price of coal. Mr. Speaker,
it is providing revenue to the Province of Manitoba.
* (2030)
I wanted to talk more about the history of Hydro
development and some of the problems that it has created. Even members of my own caucus, I think, are
sometimes unaware of the scope of the Hydro development projects in the
province of Manitoba. The Limestone
project and even the Conawapa project, which we supported and the government
was pursuing, Mr. Speaker, that project would have been good for the province
of Manitoba.
The question, I guess, is whether what the Minister of
Energy (Mr. Orchard) is proposing in Bill 4 is going to allow us to make the
kinds of decisions that have been made in the past to develop our hydroelectric
energy in a rational and systematic way.
The Hydro projects that were developed in the '70s have
caused some communities, a handful of communities in northern Manitoba,
significant damage. South Indian Lake in
my constituency, Mr. Speaker, as an example, probably one of the most affected,
has clearly had mixed benefits and mixed results from this agreement. It sort of boils down to a situation where
the damage unfortunately has been done.
The water power reserve has been created and South Indian Lake is that
water power reserve in the main.
Mr. Speaker, the question now becomes whether we develop in
a consistent and environmentally sensitive way the remainder of the generating
stations on the Nelson River, whether that can be done and whether we can
realistically and in a financially beneficial way export the power from
that. I believe that can be done. I believe that is a resource that may, in
fact, be yet untapped for the province of Manitoba. I would argue, however, that we need to
change The Manitoba Hydro Act, and perhaps we need to rethink some elements of
Bill 4.
Mr. Speaker, one of the reasons I believe that we are being
left in a dangerous situation and left in a situation where we do not have the
control of our destiny with respect to energy sale is because of the
elimination of the Manitoba Energy Authority.
I know that this bill intends to refocus the question of energy, energy
development, energy conservation, with the Department of Energy and Mines, but
I believe that we need more than a department that becomes a regulator of that
activity. I believe that we need a
department that perceives or understands the real value of that for the long
term for the province of Manitoba, and I hope that happens.
I want to conclude by saying some thank you's. Mr. Speaker, we say often in this Chamber
that this is a difficult, a time‑consuming, sometimes thankless job, and
in some respects it is. The bottom line
is that no member of this Legislature, regardless of how self‑sufficient,
ever really did it by themselves. The
fact of the matter is that there are dozens and dozens of people along the way
who have encouraged and supported and held up and loved and many other things
to make us successful. I am no
different.
I want to begin, of course, by thanking my wife and
family. Betty has been a consistent
partner for all of these years. Without
the kind of support, without a home base where one feels comfortable and can
actually relax, this is very difficult.
Needless to say, the political friends that you make,
particularly the supporters in your caucus and, in my case, two leaders that I
want to recognize. The former Premier of
this province, Howard Pawley, and my Leader, Gary Doer, have encouraged me and
supported me and shown a great deal of confidence in me. For that, I am very grateful. Their friendship means a great deal to me,
Mr. Speaker.
I have had several caucuses over the years. My current caucus is as supportive and
talented a group as I have ever served with, and I am privileged to have served
with them. But, I remember fondly some
people who were here and who did their best for the province of Manitoba, who
suffered some of the joys and the trials of this occupation. Their contribution should not go unnoticed,
and for their contributions to my success and some of my achievements, as
limited as they may be, they should be recognized, because no member of the
front bench, no member of the government, does it all by themselves. They need the support of their colleagues and
their Premier, actually.
Mr. Speaker, of course, philosophically, I have not changed
my mind. I am still a social
democrat. I still see the world a little
bit differently than members opposite, members on my extreme left. That is not to say we do not share some views
in common, have some views in common.
That does not mean we do not agree on some things, but, fundamentally, I
have always believed that the government has a greater role to play in making
this a better world than maybe perhaps members opposite.
I will not get into a philosophical debate on that, Mr.
Speaker. Suffice it to say, I am here
and have been here for these past twelve and three‑quarter years,
whatever it is, as a social democrat, and I have not lost my enthusiasm,
despite the fact that some observers have lost their enthusiasm for social
democracy.
I think the good news is, Mr. Speaker, there are still many
countries and many people in this country and around the world who still view
the role of government in a positive light, and if we lose‑‑and
this is no intentional criticism on anybody who may be a political
opponent. If we encourage the view that
somehow government, that particular stripe of government, that particular world
view, if you will, is wrong and wrong‑headed and will not serve the
people, we ultimately do a disservice to ourselves, because government is of
the people.
I am no different, an elected New Democrat, than any of
you. I am simply elected by my
constituents to do the best that I can do.
They share in this case, I hope a majority of them at least, share my
view of the world. Maybe that is easier
for northerners because we are, in some respects, outsiders. We do not share the spoils of our collective
wealth to the same degree, and I guess that is what makes me perhaps a social
democrat, that I think that should be our objective, that we should ultimately
want for everyone else what we want for ourselves, and I am paraphrasing
another much more eloquent socialist than myself.
Mr. Speaker, finally, last but not least, as they say, I
have enjoyed my association with other members in this Chamber. There are other members whom I respect a
great deal‑‑a great deal.
There are other members whom I have enjoyed fighting with, frankly. There are, I think, many members in this
Chamber who share a passion for partisan politics but who are able to lose it
at the door. We all recognize what we do
in here is certainly serious business, but it is also part theatre, it is also
posturing and positioning. That is
something that people, unless they are involved, do not always see.
Mr. Speaker, I genuinely believe in my experience over‑‑and
I have seen a few people come and go. My
experience has been that virtually‑‑and I should not say virtually,
I would say everyone who has been elected to this Chamber came with the best of
intentions. Of course, we all know what
best intentions are, but be that as it may, that is certainly my
experience. I think that most people not
only come to serve their constituencies but come to serve the Province of
Manitoba. That is what makes this job
worthwhile.
Mr. Speaker, I want to thank my constituents, who, for some
unknown reason, kept electing me. I
never figured that out, other than I loved the job. I did enjoy‑‑I will not say I
enjoyed all of the job. There are always
parts of it that you could do without, but I certainly enjoyed serving the
constituents.
I am humbled and I feel grateful that even today, even
though my constituents know that I am leaving, I probably got a dozen phone
calls, people who wanted me to help them get an appeal at the University of
Manitoba, people who wanted to know about this program and people wanting to
know about the Home Renovation Program, and I find that gratifying.
When I would go to have office hours in my 20‑odd
communities‑‑and I held office hours throughout my constituency
regularly‑‑I would have as many as 35 people show up for office
hours. I was gratified by that. I came with a bag load of work the next week
and letters to write and all the rest of it, but it was gratifying. I enjoyed that.
The rest of it I am going to do without just fine.
* (2040)
Finally, Mr. Speaker, I want to thank you. I have enjoyed the last few years under your
constant vigilance. I have enjoyed, I
think, your rural kind of approach to the job.
It is sometimes‑‑[interjection] No, I perhaps should explain
myself. I have appreciated your informal
approach to the job on many occasions. I
know that you are as serious as any Speaker has ever been about the rules and
the ultimate responsibility that you have, but you have had a way about you
that reminds me of a rural umpire. You
call them as you see them, and you let the chips fall where they may. At the same time, you have respected everybody's
rights. I think that is a real
challenge.
Mr. Speaker, I move on to other things. I really liked Bill 4‑‑no, I was
just kidding about that. [interjection] I am reminded that we are against it.
The bottom line is that all of us, I think, should every
once in a while at least remind ourselves why we are here and try and shake off
some of the criticism and some of the ugliness sometimes that we see in this
Chamber. In my 13 years, if there is
anyone here that remembers any insult that I gave them, I guess I will
apologize now. There are a few over
there that have their hands up, but we will have to do that privately.
Mr. Speaker, I want to conclude by saying that this has
been a hugely rewarding experience, but I am never doing it again. [applause]
Mr. Speaker: Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the
motion?
Some Honourable Members: No.
Mr. Speaker: The question before the House was third
reading of Bill 4, The Energy and Consequential Amendments Act; Loi sur
l'énergie et apportant des modifications corrélatives.
All those in favour of the motion, please say yea.
Some Honourable Members: Yea.
Mr. Speaker: All those opposed, please say nay.
Some Honourable Members: Nay.
Mr. Speaker: In my opinion, the Yeas have it.
An Honourable Member: On division.
Mr. Speaker: On division.
Bills 300, 301 and 302, Refund of Fees Paid
Mr. Ernst: Mr. Speaker, I do not intend to leave. At least not voluntarily anyway, but I do
move (by leave), seconded by the Minister of Finance (Mr. Stefanson), that the
fees paid with respect to the following bills be refunded less the cost of
printing.
Bill 300, An Act to amend an Act to continue Brandon
University Foundation (Loi modifiant la Loi prorogeant la Fondation de
l'Université de Brandon); Bill 301, The Misericordia General Hospital
Incorporation Amendment Act (Loi modifiant la Loi constituant en corporation le
"Misericordia General Hospital"); and Bill 302, The Manitoba
Historical Society Incorporation Act (Loi constituant la Société historique du
Manitoba).
Motion agreed to.
* * *
Mr. Ernst: Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the Minister
of Urban Affairs (Mrs. McIntosh), that when the House adjourns today, it shall
stand adjourned until the time fixed by Mr. Speaker, upon the request of the
government.
Motion presented.
Mr. Gary Doer (Leader of
the Opposition): Mr. Speaker, I want to put a few words on the
record, this motion to temporarily adjourn the House until a time when you will
call this House back again.
I first of all want to start by complimenting the member
for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie), his tremendous public career in this Legislature,
his tremendous speech that just concluded a moment ago. I have always found the member for Flin Flon
to have all the elements of a great member of this Legislature.
I remember meeting the member for Flin Flon before I was
elected to this Chamber, and he was always pretty quick and to the point if he
did not agree with you. He did not beat
around the bush when he was in cabinet.
When one was dealing with the member for Flin Flon, he got right to the
point. He said what he meant, and he
meant what he said.
I also found him to be a great strength when I had the
privilege of being sworn into cabinet in 1986 and to join the member for Flin
Flon who had been there previously.
Again he said what was on his mind, I believe, sometimes with great
success, and sometimes it had a little bit of an interesting controversy to it
in the public arena, but people always knew where he stood.
It is interesting, I do not know whether people in the
Chamber know some of the behavioural habits of the member for Flin Flon, but he
was our designated pacer in the cabinet before and in the caucus today. He is always moving around. Sometimes that gives him the opportunity to
speak two or three times on the same issue, when the Chair loses track of where
he was sitting, and it has given him a great advantage over the years to make
his point once, twice and eventually to hold the day.
His speech, as I say, was eloquent about the roles of all
of us in this Chamber and nobody can say it better than a person like the
member for Flin Flon who has experienced, as he stated, almost an equal career
on the government side, first as a member of the government benches, then as a
member of the cabinet, and then as a member of the third party or second
opposition party, as you will, the famous group of 12‑‑[interjection]
well, some of us would call us a lot of things at that point‑‑and
again being in opposition. Therefore, he
has had all perspectives in this Chamber, and he has had a number of different
portfolios.
Certainly, all of us in the caucus are going to miss
him. There is no sense in being
dishonest about that. He is a big loss
to us, and he is a big loss to our caucus and to this Chamber. He is also a loss‑‑I beg your
pardon.
An Honourable Member: He might change his mind.
Mr. Doer: I hope so.
I will do everything I can to change his mind. I tried to change his mind. We had a long conversation before the 1990
election, as others know, and we have had conversations in this session over
the last five years. I would love to see
him change his mind.
An Honourable Member: What portfolio did you promise Jerry?
Mr. Doer: Well, I could not promise anything, and leave
it at that.
The member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) had the view it is
after a period of time in public service that it is time to move on, and I
respect that. I really do respect
that. I do not like the fact that he is
doing it, but I really respect his decision and the criteria that he used to
make that decision. I am really happy
for the member for Flin Flon in the job he has been awarded by the selection
committee. He will be a great
superintendent of the Frontier School Division.
* (2050)
He loves education.
He loves the North. He loves
students. He loves dealing in challenges
in terms of ACCESS education. He has a
tremendous amount of energy, and I congratulate the member for Flin Flon. It is rather ironic that as a northern MLA,
he is going back north, and I know that he has never left the North.
I also know, Mr. Speaker, that he was humbly talking about
representing a diverse and distant community and constituency. I know the amount of times that the member for
Flin Flon left this Chamber on Friday at 12:30 and got in a car and drove to
his constituency, to the various communities in his constituency, and drove
back Sunday night and was in here again on Monday morning, the hundreds of
times that he has done that.
I know others do that, particularly those who reside in
constituencies and represent constituencies outside of the city of
Winnipeg. I know many people put in long
hours, but it is absolutely demanding to a family and to the individual to
represent that many communities in such remote areas. I have the utmost respect for all members on
all sides that have that extra burden of not living in a constituency where
this Legislature is located and having the extra responsibility of, not just
being able to have one quadrant in the city of Winnipeg to represent, but
rather have a distant group of communities, a diverse group of communities that
require a great deal of time, effort and energy, not only on behalf of the
individual member, but also on behalf of the family of the individual member.
This is the International Year of the Family, and I can
remember the member for Flin Flon talking about the fact, when he was first
sworn into cabinet, having to live in Winnipeg.
I think he was a roommate with the member for Dauphin‑‑[interjection]
Well, we will not get into those stories.
He was phoning his family, phoning his great wife, Betty, and his kids,
and his young children missing him week after week after week and asking him
when is he coming home, and when can he get back from the Legislature?
Of course, we used to go all summer in here for many years
and every evening, and oftentimes it would be very late at night. That is a lot of sacrifice, and others are
making that same sacrifice today. So we
should never ever forget that tremendous sacrifice that families make for all
of us to have the great privilege and honour to be in this Chamber.
I also briefly want to talk about a couple of other members
who have indicated their departure, whether this session is the last one before
the election or not‑‑we do not know‑‑but it is always
interesting. Well, the member for Riel
(Mr. Ducharme) is one member who has indicated publicly he is leaving, and I,
again, have always enjoyed working with the member for Riel. He and I basically had a transition a number
of years ago, when he took the Urban Affairs portfolio.
We had some projects that we had started, The Forks project
I was involved in with the planning stages and the negotiations of the money,
and he often would come to me, and we would talk briefly about the The Forks,
and we never saw it as a partisan issue.
We always thought of it as a tremendous asset for the province of
Manitoba and the city of Winnipeg.
I know he and I bump into each other in the fire‑hall
up at the lake the odd time and have nice breakfasts together, but he has had,
again, a long career in public life, whether it is through City Hall or whether
it is years in this Legislature, and I wish him and his family well after this
session, as well, whether there is an election or not.
I also want to pay tribute to the member for River Heights
(Mrs. Carstairs). We do not know what
the future holds for the member for River Heights. We know that many of the jobs she is rumoured
to be getting, none of us are rumoured to be getting the same jobs. We know that.
They sound very exciting, very challenging, very interesting. Some of them we might even criticize when
they come through, for philosophical reasons, I must say.
The member for River Heights‑‑I remember being
elected in '86 with the member, a single Liberal voice in the Legislature. We probably were too fair to the member for
River Heights. What was it, the member was
not an official party, but I think you had the third question every day and did
raise some critical points to the government of the day, if I recall correctly,
and did a very good job in that role, a very effective job, and lo and behold,
we were at 12 and she was at 20, eventually 21 with the former member for
Springfield. [interjection]
Now, Steve, this is supposed to be a high‑road time.
[interjection] It is on appeal. It is
before the judges and perhaps the case will be heard shortly.
But I want to say, the day the member for River Heights
resigned as Leader of the party, I think we all breathed a sigh of relief over
on this side. I think at the time we
said publicly that she was formidable and feisty, and feisty and formidable,
back and forth. It is a tremendous job
to take one's party from obscurity to relevance. We think it has got too much relevance right
now, I might say, but it is a tremendous job to do that, and we really respect
the member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs).
She has dedicated her public life now to the issue of child
abuse, and we wish her well. We will
work with her; obviously, all members will work with her in that challenge.
Certainly, the role I remember the most was maybe the
finest moment or the not finest moment that we went through. There were some ups and downs with the member
for Tuxedo, the Premier (Mr. Filmon), and the member for Brandon West (Mr.
McCrae) in the old Meech Lake issue. You
know, it is funny how June 23 just passed without a whisper, four years later,
a couple of weeks ago. Remember how
magical June 23 was at one point in our lives or in the life of this Chamber?
It was a tremendous experience, because not only did we
oppose many provisions of Meech Lake, but I think we constructively called for
improvements. We had a really good
report. I still believe in that report
as our constitutional vision of Manitoba, that original Meech Lake task force
that called for a strong and united Canada with strong national programs, with
a floor under which you cannot sink in terms of a national belief system. I thought we added some tremendously creative
ideas, collectively, the Canada clause and a number of other provisions that
today I think still bear the test of time and, unfortunately, were never
accepted by the Prime Minister of the day.
We, of course, came back with the flawed proposal and eventually a
failed proposal with the opposition from First Nations people and from the
former member for Churchill in this Chamber not so long ago.
Mr. Speaker, I want to wish the member for River Heights
(Mrs. Carstairs) well. I will, as I say,
warn her that if it is a position that we do not support, we believe in
abolishing, we will be critical. I want
to assure the member it is nothing personal.
We wish her well after this legislative session.
Mr. Speaker, this has been an interesting session. It is the fifth session since the majority
government. I hear today the government
saying there may be another one. We do
not know. That will be determined. The night is not over‑‑[interjection]
I beg your pardon?
An Honourable Member: Six and five.
Mr. Doer: I am surprised the member for Morris (Mr.
Manness) would be adopting an old Trudeau Liberal proposal, Mr. Speaker;
however, times change, I suppose.
It is interesting you know.
For some people this is the last session. I have outlined three people that have
indicated this may be their last session, but for five people this has been
their first session. It must be
interesting for them to hear about election talk after just coming out of an election. I want to congratulate all five new members
of this Legislature, the three members in our caucus and two members in the
Liberal caucus. I know this can be a
little bit of an interesting spot to be in.
I think all five members have done very, very well in their first
session, and I want to congratulate them.
* (2100)
Mr. Speaker, I want to congratulate you again. I cannot go better than the member for Flin
Flon (Mr. Storie) in terms of paying you all these compliments. I do not want too many compliments to be
thrown your way, so I will just continue to say a job well done, and the job
continues this evening as we proceed through this Legislature. You have done, Sir, I believe, a very, very
admirable job under tough circumstances, lots of rulings that have been
difficult and challenging to you. I
think that the rulings have been very, very fair and very consistent with the
parliamentary traditions, the parliamentary traditions that support both the
majority and also respect the issues of the minority individual members when
those are at risk.
I want to thank the Clerk, the Legislative Counsel, the
people at the desk, and I want to thank all the Pages in this session. I know that this is an interesting
experience. Really, when we get out of
here we are human beings; I want you to know that. It is, as the member for Flin Flon (Mr.
Storie) said, a bit of a thrust and parry in the session, but I hope that this
has helped your broad education of parliamentary life.
It really is one part of the parliamentary life and of
course the work in the committees, in the legislation, the caucus rooms, out in
the constituencies. There is so much
more to this job than you may see in this House, but I hope that this part has
been helpful to you. Many members who
have been Pages before have gone on to jobs in the Legislature, to research
staff, even elected members in the Chamber of the party of their choosing, and
I want to thank you for your work.
I also want to thank our caucus staff and I want to thank
our caucus. As the member for Flin Flon
has said, we all come from caucuses. We
all enjoy our caucus discussions, debate, the kind of area that we have. I am really proud to be in a caucus‑‑if
I can say so in self‑serving way‑‑that has members from northern
Manitoba, from rural Manitoba, from the city of Winnipeg, from all three
geographic regions. We are very lucky to
have that representation from the distinct geographic regions of Manitoba. We, obviously, would want more and we will
hope to have more and we will work to have more after the next election, but we
are very, very proud of the geographic team that we have in our caucus. It brings a real strength of debate, I
believe, in our own caucus and hopefully to the people of Manitoba with the energy
and ideas.
We also are very proud of the diversity of people we have
in our caucus. We have men and women
from all walks of life whether it is small‑business people, agricultural
producers, whether it is teachers, nurses, educators, there are a whole variety
of people in our caucus. I probably left
some out by stating some, but we believe that‑‑[interjection] I
thank the Premier (Mr. Filmon) for his comments‑‑and we really find
ourselves very fortunate to have our diversity of backgrounds and diversity of
experiences. We really think it is
helpful to have working men and women who have had to experience the challenges
that working men and women are experiencing right across this province
represented in our caucus.
Mr. Speaker, the future is going to be very
challenging. Shortly in this country
again we may be thrown into the whole issue of the future of our great
land. Again, it is rather ironic that
Canada, which is the best country in the world‑‑we have always
known that, we have always believed that, we live in the greatest country in
the world‑‑will again have a challenge ahead of it in terms of the
whole so‑called unity debate.
I really believe that we should stick to our strengths,
stick to the strengths of Canada, stick to the things that made this country
great, stick to the national and federal programs that have made this a great
place to live, stick to the cultures and the kind of humanity that we have in
our country as a set of values in terms of our great country in this debate. I believe very strongly that in this debate
we should stick to our strengths, Mr. Speaker.
We should not get caught up in changing this constitutional phrase‑‑we
tried that before‑‑or that constitutional phrase. We should stick, as I say, to the strength of
Canada and strength of people in this great country.
I agree strongly with Premiers Romanow and Harcourt, when
they say that the choices before certain provinces in this country should be
very clear. I have said that before in
the House, when I have asked the Premier (Mr. Filmon) questions, but I know
that we all in this Chamber believe strongly in our country. We will all work with the federal government
and the Prime Minister and the Premier and all members of the Legislature to
keep this country strong and to keep our people strong as our way of dealing
with the future challenges.
I am absolutely convinced that when people have choices
between a strong and united Canada from sea to sea to sea and splitting up this
great country, ultimately, people all across this country will choose Canada
and not choose to split it up, Mr. Speaker.
I also believe that we live in the greatest province in the
country. It is a beautiful province, a
diverse province, a province of great variety, of great people, and, of course,
with great opportunities. We are very
fortunate. We have a standard of living. Because of the conditions of living, we have
a quality of life. We have communities
that I think are envied all over the country and all over the world.
We are sometimes our own worst enemy. I mean, I know how many people talk about
mosquitoes instead of talking about summers.
I know how many Manitobans talk about the winters instead of talking
about the four seasons. I sometimes
think that it is part of the Manitoba thing to talk about some of the negative
things. I always remember turning on CNN
and Canada AM and seeing the entomologist from the City of Winnipeg talking
about how many bites per second you get in the middle of a temporary mosquito
kind of operation‑‑[interjection] I know that. Maybe the member was involved in‑‑no,
I will not say that‑‑when he was formerly at City Hall.
I have often thought that we have to praise the beauty of
this province and the strengths of our people rather than just focus in on the
few weeks that it may get too cold or we may have too many mosquitoes. I actually believe that we are the best kept
secret in Canada, Mr. Speaker, and it is about time we had more energy praising
our province and our people rather than having a negative situation. I think all members in this Chamber are
committed to that goal, but when we say that‑‑[interjection] Next
session.
Mr. Speaker, when I say that, though, we have real
challenges. Two weeks ago, I attended
with the member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie), the member for The Pas (Mr.
Lathlin) and the member for Rupertsland (Mr. Robinson)‑‑we visited
the Mathias Colomb Band and community. I
had been apprised, I had read the letters, I had read the documents, I had seen
the back‑and‑forth correspondence.
The member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) had apprised me of the situation. Where else in this province would you have a
situation where people were distilling water for six months before an emergency
could be declared? Where else would you
see over a thousand people affected with skin disease out of a community of
1,700 and still have it go on for six months?
I am not a doctor or nurse. I saw
kids with faces that I knew had gone through or were being afflicted with
certain disease conditions or sicknesses in their community because there were
just too many of them.
We have some real challenges here. We have Third World conditions in the best
province in Canada and in the best country, Canada. It would not happen in our back yards. In many of our back yards this would not
happen; it would not take six months. It
would not take six minutes if we had a situation where water that was being
consumed by the members of the community was actually more polluted after it
came out of the treatment system than when it went in before. It would not happen. When we rejoice in our strength and we
rejoice in our riches and rejoice in the great standard of living that many of
us enjoy, we just cannot forget some of the Third World conditions that we have
in our own communities.
(Mrs. Louise Dacquay,
Deputy Speaker, in the Chair)
I remember the Premier (Mr. Filmon) talking two years ago
about the opportunity he had‑‑and we were giving him a little bit
of a rough time about his trip to I believe it was Rio. He talked very eloquently about the
international contributions of Manitoba.
We should not forget, and we should rededicate ourselves to pledge
ourselves in this Chamber tonight‑‑our partisan differences will go
back and forth and the comments will go back and forth. Madam Deputy Speaker, we should rededicate
ourselves to‑‑all 57 of us‑‑finally trying to alleviate
the Third World conditions in our own province and that every citizen of
Manitoba is entitled to safe and clean drinking water and the opportunities we
all would share.
I know the government acted, and I thank them for that. I think we have to continue to be vigilant,
because there are more communities and there are more challenges.
* (2110)
Madam Deputy Speaker, that is why our debate was fairly
strong throughout this session on ACCESS.
The member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) talked about it as well. I am happy that the government has kept some
of the funding for ACCESS after the federal Mulroney government cut it
back. We do not believe it has been fair
that the ACCESS program has been chosen to be reduced by the government. We have said it when people are here; we said
it when people were not here. We will
say it tonight again. We would like this
government to re‑examine the priorities of spending in this area.
As the member for Flin Flon has mentioned, 20 years ago
there were very few First Nations' people teaching in First Nations'
communities. There were very few nurses
treating First Nations' people in First Nations' communities. There were no doctors. There were no engineers. There were no social workers. It was people from the south end of Winnipeg,
from Winnipeg going up north and then leaving.
Madam Deputy Speaker, we have to really look at this
because this has been a success. It has
not been perfect. Nobody on this side is
going to say it is perfect. Five hundred
teachers, as the member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) has indicated, in 20 years
have been trained out of this program‑‑500. Look at how much that multiplies the role
models back in their own communities.
Nurses‑‑it is another very positive role
model. We do not want a situation in
Manitoba where we have reservations with people coming in as professionals from
other communities forever. We want First
Nations communities with First Nations services delivered by First Nations
people in a first‑class way in this province.
That is why the member for Wolseley was so critical of the
priorities of government, and when you go back and after the session is over, I
would ask you to take another look at that.
All governments make mistakes. We
have made mistakes, some of them political, some of them that have been
questionable in terms of value judgments that we have made in government. Everybody makes mistakes, but it does not for
us make any sense at all in terms of the fairness of this province to have a
$12‑million enhancement on the corporate tax side and training side and
to have a reduction of $2 million on the ACCESS side.
If it is a question of tough choices‑‑and the
government says there are tough choices to make, and I know there are. There is no question about that. I would just ask you when you go back in your
Estimates process, when you go back in cabinet or you go back in caucus, think
about the 500 teachers who have been trained in ACCESS. Think about how successful that program has
been and find a way to reinvest in our people in Manitoba and find a way to
reinvest in the ACCESS Program in Manitoba.
Madam Deputy Speaker, the member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie)
talked about the economic situation. We
have been critical of the government from time to time, and we have praised the
government from time to time when they have had positive initiatives. We have praised the government on Grow
Bonds. We think it has been a good
idea. We have praised the government on
other initiatives that we think have been positive for our economy. We think there were some improvements. Some of the innovation proposals the
government has made could be utilized and enhanced for the sake of all
Manitobans.
We have also suggested some other ideas. We have suggested that there has been an
increase of some $200 million in social assistance in the province of
Manitoba. We have gone from $300 million
to $500 million per budget year in the last six years, and we do not believe
the solution is a phone line. We believe
the solution is jobs. We believe that
some of that money should be redeployed to economic job opportunities in the
province of Manitoba.
It obviously cannot do anything for the deficit because the
deficit has gone up in terms of $200 million a year in that spending area
alone, and we believe that by redeploying money from social assistance to work
and hiring people who are able to work and having people being invested in the
community, that we will all gain. The
private sector will have more consumers.
The capital sector will have more builders and purchasers of homes.
I wish the government well in their reforms with the
federal government in terms of really getting money reinvested in our
communities, in our infrastructure, in our programs and in work, Madam Deputy
Speaker. We all believe in work. Let us get working on getting jobs in the
province. We would ask the government to
do so.
A couple of years ago we suggested that we have an all‑party
committee on the economy. I happen to
believe that it does not make any sense at all for the one government of the
day to go off on a trade mission here and a trade mission there and go to a
company over here. Would it not be great
if Manitoba was the only province in Canada that sent all three parties
together to attract business here? Would
it not be great if we all sang from the same hymn book instead of being so
interested in getting credit and so interested in criticizing when something
falls apart?
I think the public is sick and tired of us taking credit
and us blaming each other. We have
proposed an economic committee of this Legislature, and I would call on the
government to look at a way of all working together. You know, we have talked privately before
about this project and that project and this idea and that idea. Maybe we should have a law. You know, we are all talking about laws that
we should pass. Maybe we should have a
law that we co‑operate on getting jobs and economic opportunities in the
province.
We have our philosophical differences, yes. But we co‑operate for four years and
then we have a 35‑day campaign where we disagree. Certainly there has to be, in my opinion, a
greater opportunity for us to work together, and we leave the idea of an all‑party
committee on the economy. If we can co‑operate
on some matters, why can we not co‑operate on the most important matter
in government, and that is economic opportunity and jobs for our people.
Finally, Madam Deputy Speaker, I want to talk just for a
moment about health care. We have 95
committees on health care. We have said
before that these committees, in our opinion, do not reflect the patients, the
communities, they do not reflect the full group of professions in the health
care field and that they are disproportionately administrative and
disproportionately the gatekeepers being the doctors.
We think that the government has to have a strategy on
health care. The minister talks about
this province and that province and the next province, but other provinces have
had a public debate, they have had proposals forward, they have had a strategy,
and they are moving ahead with changes in the health care system. Six and a half years later, 95 committees
later, we still do not know what the government is going to do in terms of some
of the proposals that we have tabled in this Chamber‑‑a thousand
layoffs in the two teaching hospitals.
We still do not know what the government is going to do
with some of its reports from some of its committees. Is it going to take the one report where it
has all the psychiatric beds at the Health Sciences Centre after you built the
$45‑million facility? Or are you
going to take the Bell‑Wade Report that came out after and move all the
psychiatric beds back to St. Boniface Hospital?
There is really a lot of confusion in the health care
field. There is a tremendous amount of
confusion in the health care field of Manitoba.
We believe that Manitobans respect and cherish their health care system
more than any other program of government.
If you fail to heed the words of members opposite, you fail to do so at
your own risk and your own peril.
Most Manitobans, for example, believe that we should have
Canadians hired by Americans to bring in a Canadian health care system, not
have Americans hired by Canadians to bring in an American health care
system. That is why it has been such a
controversy, and we have a lot of work ahead of us in the health care system,
both provincially and federally.
Madam Deputy Speaker, nobody pretends it will be easy. The last federal budget along with the other
cutbacks that were exactly the same as the Mulroney budget included a rollback
of the health care funding to the provinces.
The same Mulroney‑Wilson reduction in health care took place in
the Martin budget as it did in the former Mulroney budget. The same reductions in EPF took place in post‑secondary
education. We have to stop the
reductions by the federal government onto the provinces. It was a 50‑50 deal.
* (2120)
Health care was a 50‑50 proposition, and it started
to erode in 1980 and it accelerated in 1985 and it accelerated again in '89 and
now it is continuing on, and it is a snowball going down the mountain. We have to push that snowball back up. We all believe in health care, and it is time
to stop the cuts from the federal government to the provinces, and the time to
stop it is now, no more cuts in no more federal budgets in terms of the old
formula.
We also need help from the federal government in other
areas. I remember the speeches on drug
patent laws, remember the speeches on drug patent laws and generic drugs. Madam Deputy Speaker, I remember the
pamphlets in the last federal election.
I believe everybody believes this.
I do not believe this is just us.
I believe that everybody wants to see a drug patent law and a generic
drug policy in Canada that keeps prices low and gets value‑added jobs in
Manitoba. We say rescind the old
Mulroney bill on drug patent laws and bring back a level playing field.
Madam Deputy Speaker, as I have said, we have many
challenges ahead of us. We have many
challenges ahead of us. We believe, as I
said before, that we have a lot of work ahead of us and we have a lot of
challenges to meet, but we on this side believe that Manitobans want this
Legislature to have energy to create jobs.
They want fairness in terms of the hard‑earned dollars that people
pay in their taxes, fairness both in their tax system federally and
provincially and fairness in terms of the priorities of government. That is why I have singled out only a few
programs tonight, one of them being ACCESS.
They want common sense in terms of reforming their health care system
and improving our health care system, not having 95 committees spinning off in
every different direction.
Manitobans want to co‑operate; they want to work
together. They want to work together to
not only improve their own quality of life, but I believe that Manitobans have
always believed in an ability to share and in an ability and a desire to
improve the humankind for all Manitobans, and that is why we are so proud to
sit on this side of the Chamber and work with all other members, despite our
political differences, to improve the human conditions in Manitoba and to
always work to improve our great country Canada.
Thank you very, very much, Madam Deputy Speaker.
[applause]
(Mr. Speaker in the
Chair)
Mr. Paul Edwards (Leader
of the Second Opposition): Mr. Speaker, well,
the member indicates scattered applause.
Well, we are at a disadvantage, I think, when it comes to applause in
this Chamber simply because of our numbers, but one hopes that that will
change. One hopes.
Mr. Speaker, it is unfortunate that we seem to carry the
weight of the entire federal government here but do not have the numbers to
substantiate that. The daily diet in
this session has proven very clearly that we apparently are the key and single
enemy in this House of the two parties to my other side who have formed a
pretty clear marriage of convenience in this session.
In any event, Mr. Speaker, half to two‑thirds of the
questions are lob balls back and forth.
It has been interesting to see them across the session.
An Honourable Member: Well, we remember when you asked federal
questions?
Mr. Edwards: Mr. Speaker, well, yes, you will always be
able to ask federal questions, to my friends on the right. You will be able to ask them for a long time,
too.
Mr. Speaker, I want to start by indicating that, as with
the other two previous speakers, the Premier and the Leader of the Opposition,
I want to make a few recognitions. [interjection] Well, the Premier will speak
and I am sure will join me in these comments.
I want to start by thanking you, Mr. Speaker, for your
guidance over this past session. As the
other speakers have indicated, I think you have done an outstanding job
again. You have guided us in the last
six years that I have been a member of the Legislature, which coincided with
your being appointed as Speaker in this Chamber. You are the only Speaker that I have had the
pleasure of serving in this Chamber under, and we have taken your guidance over
these last months, again, always understanding the very difficult job that you
have and the very fine line that you walk almost every day in this Chamber and
you have done an outstanding job.
Mr. Speaker, I also want to thank in particular the Pages
who have served us in this session. They
as well have done an outstanding job, and I think while it has been a
relatively short session they have come very early on to have the experience of
very seasoned Pages and have done an excellent job in serving all members and
indeed the Chamber staff.
As well I want to recognize the Chamber staff again, the
members of the staff who have again served us so well, and I think are often
taken for granted in this Chamber. But
as the hours and days have gone by, they as well have served us all very well,
again, certainly to the best of their abilities and, I think, have done an
outstanding job.
In addition, I want to indicate my best wishes to the
member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) as he moves onto a new career. He has spoken very eloquently tonight about
the challenges that he faced in his job.
In his twelve and three‑quarter years, I had the pleasure and
honour of being in this House for six of those.
The member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs) obviously has known him
for a longer period of time. We have
come to see him as a very effective member of this Chamber. The Leader of the Opposition mentioned the
words "feisty" and "formidable" and I think I would
attribute those to the member for Flin Flon as well.
He certainly did his constituents proud in this Chamber with
the regularity and the energy with which he defended their interests in this
Chamber. Obviously, there were many
disagreements over the years, but we certainly always respected the role he
played. I wish him well in his new
career, and I wish his family well, as well, because I know it has been
difficult on all families that we all have, but he has recognized them
tonight. I think it is important that we
all express to him our hope that in this new life that they are moving into,
there will perhaps be some more time for the types of things they have not had
time to do in the past years.
In addition, I want to recognize the member for Riel, Mr.
Ducharme, whom I have also known of longer than I have actually known from
serving in this Chamber for these last six years. He has come over the years to, I think it is
fair to say, become a friend in this service.
He is truly one of those people who gets involved from time to time in
the partisan thrusts in this Chamber and has certainly played his role, again,
with a lot of enthusiasm from time to time but has been able to park it at the
door and has been a gentleman and a friend to many, if not all of us, outside
the Chamber.
I actually know that he comes‑‑of course, he
has a long political background in his family.
I know his brother Al, who has also been involved politically and know
that that is a long family tradition of public service in this community and in
this province. He is well, and his wife
and family are moving on to a new chapter of their lives. We wish them well indeed.
Mr. Speaker, I also want to make special note of the new
MLAs. The Leader of the Opposition has
recognized them, and I want to add my congratulations to those five who have
come into this Chamber and have gone through a training of sorts in this
session, which has been a fairly unique session‑‑I am going to get
into that a little later‑‑but I think have all performed very
well. It is, I think, a forum that draws
people from all aspects of life and backgrounds, and when they get to this
Chamber, they bring that experience and that wealth of knowledge.
The truth is that it is a very specialized place, and it
does take time to gain the experience. I
think it is difficult moving into this job, and I think all five of them have
proven to us, regardless of the positions they have taken, that they have truly
committed themselves to public service in their own ways and represented their
constituents in this House, and all of them, I think, deserve congratulations
from us, Mr. Speaker, on their performance in this session.
I also want to recognize briefly my former leader, the
member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs), who has gone through this session as
a former leader. The others have
mentioned the different roles that people play in this Chamber and in a career,
and the member for River Heights has had many.
This last session has been a unique one for her: as a member but not as the leader of our
party. I want to recognize formally and
on the record her enormous contribution not just to our party in the past and
to, I think, this Chamber through her years of service, but also in this last
session to me personally and to our caucus as she has assisted us in every way
possible and been nothing but a support in this time as she comes to the end of
her legislative career, indicating that she will not be running in the next
election. The member for Concordia (Mr.
Doer) says that she may go on to other things.
Well, whatever she goes on to, we will congratulate her, Mr. Speaker,
because we wish her well. [interjection] I do not know what it is either, but
in any event we wish her well.
* (2130)
I also want to recognize of particular note to me in this
last session‑‑and it is the first full session that I have had the
privilege and the honour to serve in this Chamber as a Leader of a party‑‑the
role of my colleague, the member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux), to my right, who
has been a constant source of support as well to our caucus as our House
leader, as our critic for a number of areas.
Mr. Speaker, I would be remiss if I did not recognize his enormous
contribution to us and to me personally, given that, as some other members in
the Chamber know, leadership races can be difficult and they internally can be
stressful. Of course, we had gone
through that just a year ago, and I think that a lot of our ability to work
together certainly is attributable to his efforts and his teamwork within our
caucus and as evidenced by his work in this Chamber.
This session, I think, deserves an analysis, looking back
to the first election of this government in April of 1988 and then their
election as a majority government in September of 1990, because we have come to
the end, Mr. Speaker, of close to six years of government, two in minority and
four in majority. I would synopsize in
my estimation this session as really representing the government's position
that the status quo is good enough, and what has happened in the past and the
things that have been laid in the ground in the past for these six years have,
in their opinion, served us well and we do not need to do a lot more. It has been a short and a relatively light
session, a very light session, too light a session, in my view, and that is why
our caucus put forward a legislative agenda back in March, which we simply
asked the government to consider as proposals, as that which we needed to look
at in this province to deal with the things that all three parties, and I am
sure all three Leaders, will agree that we need and directions that we need to
go. It is just a question of how we get
there.
Mr. Speaker, my conclusion is, and my view is not changed
from the beginning of this session, which is that the status quo is not good
enough. Certainly there may be other
things, there are other things that members opposite will know about, will have
access to and will be thinking about that I do not and that I am not thinking
about, but the truth is that what we have seen is a session which really has
taken the attitude I believe that it is okay the way we are and things are
working out. I do not think they are.
As we look back to those key dates, and I refer in
particular to July 21, 1988, the first Speech from the Throne which was brought
down by this government, and the key part of that speech specifically indicated
in the economic and social priorities that initiatives will be presented to
meet the challenge of education and training Manitobans at all levels. That was the statement in 1988.
Today, at the end of this session, at the end of six years
we have the public education blueprint.
That was a commitment made six years ago. Since that time we have seen not just an
erosion of funding but erosion of morale and erosion of standards in our public
education system which, in my estimation, Mr. Speaker, is unparalleled in this
province, and it is important I think today to reflect back on six years in
which that has occurred and the synopsis today that maybe, maybe we can achieve
and our goal should be the best education system in the world. Obviously it should be. When?
Six years hence, by the year 2000.
It is not good enough.
Essentially, the government has said these last six years, the status
quo, the problems that we face, the highest high school dropout rate in the
country is good enough. It has not been
good enough, and I do not think that the effort in this session has been good
enough, and I think that needs to be said as we come to the end of this four‑year
mandate. There may well be another
session, but we have come to the end of close to six years in government from
this particular government.
Also in that 1988 Speech from the Throne, Mr. Speaker, were
some very interesting comments.
Specifically at that time you may recall that the Department of
Industry, Trade and Technology was consolidated, Technology being dropped as a
title of that department. Now, perhaps
there is not much to be read into that, but it is somehow ironic I think and
symbolic that at that time technology was wound into an overall Department of
Industry, Trade and Tourism.
Today the thrust is apparently technology and information
technology as we move into the 21st Century.
Again, we have come to the end of six years, and we are now in this most
current Speech from the Throne apparently talking seriously for the first time
about the role of technology and the role of innovation and research and
development in our economy.
Mr. Speaker, we see in that report, in that Speech from the
Throne in 1988, the discussion about a water strategy, and that was in that
specific Speech from the Throne back in 1988.
Last week members received the first comprehensive water strategy put
out by this government.
That again is good to have.
It is a little late. It is a
little late as we end up six years of government, and again I stress, four in a
majority situation.
Mr. Speaker, the education statement in this particular
Speech from the Throne evidences the commitment early on to build an education
system that would serve not only our citizens but obviously our economic growth
for the future. That was repeated in
October of 1990 when the Speech from the Throne specifically indicated that
education would be the key to our future success, and it stated: We will invest in our education system to
make it more responsive to the challenges our children will face in the 21st
Century. That is virtually word for word
what has come out again in a blueprint four years later: We will match the talents of Canadians, new
and old alike, to job opportunities, filling critical skill shortages in
Manitoba.
Well, Mr. Speaker, we are so far away from that today, we
are probably further away than we were four years ago when this government said
that that was a commitment of their term, of their four‑year term in
government. We see ACCESS programs
cut. We see training dollars going to
unaccountable organizations and in ways that do not produce new jobs.
The truth is that after six years the status quo is not
good enough, and much of what was said during that period of time has not come
to pass. It has always been, this will
happen next year. It is going to be
great next year. The economy is going to
turn up, jobs are going to be created, and we are going to be able to do
things.
Next year is here and long gone, Mr. Speaker. It has been six years, and the truth is that
today in this province we still are the child poverty capital of Canada. We still are the high school dropout rate of
Canada. We still have a rate of growth
over that four‑year period which is less than the national average. Taking the 1990‑1993 four years, we
have had growth of 1.8 percent. The
national average has been 5.6 percent at Gross Domestic Product market prices.
The fact is that our population, while globally up 10,000,
Mr. Speaker, when you factor out the birth date, the actual out‑migration
from this province from 1990 to this year, January 1, has been 21,000 people.
Mr. Speaker, it is not good enough. People are leaving this province, and the
people more often than not that are leaving are the people under the age of
35. When you lose somebody who is in
that age bracket, you are losing someone who is going to contribute to the
economy and more likely than not for 20‑25 years. It is not good enough‑‑[interjection]
The member says, it has always been that way.
Maybe. It is not good
enough. We are not here to say, it has
always been that way, so we will accept it.
The Leader of the Opposition (Mr. Doer) mentions the
deplorable conditions in some of our northern communities. Clearly those are problems which must be
addressed. We need to accept that our
role is not to explain. It is not
primarily to tell the people of this province that it is someone else's fault,
because there is only one taxpayer, as the Premier has said many times, there
is only one citizen which all levels of government serve.
* (2140)
Mr. Speaker, with respect to the session and what I think
that Manitobans expect of their legislators as we head into this period of time
when the country appears to be teetering, hopefully, and I think all members
obviously hope that there is some recovery economically coming in this country,
is that we keep up, is that we in Manitoba hold our own. We have not, for many, many years in this
country we have not, and we need to keep up because Manitobans deserve the best. This country has been recognized by the
United Nations as the finest place on the face of the earth to live. Manitoba has every reason to be within that
country, the finest place to live. We
have the means, we have the ability.
What I think we need is the political will and we need some creative,
innovative thinking.
Going through a session which is the shortest in my six
years‑‑maybe others have been through shorter sessions, but
certainly the shortest in my years here and the lightest in terms of an agenda
and a plan‑‑is not good enough and I am disappointed. I do not want to mislead members and suggest
anything else. I am disappointed. I think there were things that could and
should have been done. We certainly do
not purport to have all the answers, but it has not been enough to deal with
some of the‑‑admittedly important from time to time‑‑but
not deal with the core problems which we are facing.
All parties, all members will say we wish we had lots of
money for health care. We wish we had
lots of money for education and social services. We are all here focusing first and foremost
on how to pay for those things, not just for the next election but to the next
century. We have had 19 years in a row
of deficits, and that is not unique. I
do not suggest it is. Other jurisdictions
around the western world have had that.
But the truth is that despite all the talk, this province under this
government does continue to have debt, spiralling debt, unacceptable debt. We need economic growth to pay for those
things in the future. It is not just
about saying to another level of government, do not make cutbacks, do not do
this, do not do that. We all do not want
that. This government makes those
cutbacks to the lower levels of government.
You cannot just point the finger one way. It goes both ways.
The truth is, Mr. Speaker, all governments have those
deficits. All governments have those
financial restraints. All governments
must co‑operate to find the solutions.
The solution, and the only solution, is growth. It is growth and career opportunities that
will keep our children here and provide the funds which we need for those jobs
in the future‑‑that and that alone.
We are still seeing not just the drain of our greatest resource, our
young people, but we are seeing the drain of upwards of $600 million a year in
new investment per year from our own citizens out of this province. That is not good enough.
Mr. Speaker, I had outlined, and in these debates over
these last months, we have talked about many of the initiatives which the
government has taken. We have talked
about those which we have put forward, those that the opposition party has put
forward. We are ending letting
Manitobans down about what their future is and giving them a future to believe
in, because I think that today it is more important than ever before in this
province to give people some hope that government can provide leadership to
give them jobs, dignity and a future.
Clearly, as the Leader of the Opposition has said, there is no party,
there certainly is no member, that has all of those answers, but what I think
is important to recognize is that we are all after the same thing.
It is does not make too many points to stand up and say
that it would be great if we could just throw money at health care. We cannot.
I agree with the Minister of Health (Mr. McCrae) on that. We cannot.
Endlessly, you cannot throw money at anything. Money and spending alone is not an
answer. What we need to do is find ways
to have economic growth so that there are revenues indeed to spend.
Mr. Speaker, in addition, I want to say that in addition to
the economic problems that we face, the challenge today is not just
understanding that change needs to occur but, I think, managing change. I think that is the key to successful government,
managing change, finding ways to actually implement it, because one thing that
the former Minister of Health certainly knows is, you cannot sign off documents
or rules or laws in this Chamber and just expect it to happen. It does not happen that way. You have to build consensus to move forward,
and you do not always get what you want.
You have to compromise.
What we have seen in the last six years, and certainly the
last six months, are parties‑‑but in particular, I think this
government has practised the politics of division and has gone out to create an
adversarial relationship, the result of which has been most clearly seen in the
health care reform, which was derailed so clearly early on in the health care
reform agenda. What I think the
government will find out is that it will also impact their education reform, it
will also impact the other major initiatives that they talk about, as it has
for the last six years. It has not
worked because you cannot go out and create enemies, and there is a line which
bears repeating, which is, you should not make an enemy until you have to.
This government has gone out of its way to make enemies any
time it possibly could with those that it does not perceive are its political
allies. The result of that is that I
think today we are, in a sense, back at 1988.
The government's Speech from the Throne in 1988 could be read again
today, and the same problems which so faced that government and that electorate
at that time are still here. Most of
them are worse.
I do not know if this will be the last session before the
election. Only the government knows
that. But I do want to say that whether
that is true or not, I do hope that the next session‑‑and maybe it
will be with this Premier and this government‑‑takes a real look at
what is happening in this province and in this country and does not accept the
status quo, and does not make as its sole political agenda that of division and
that of blaming some other level of government.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Hon. Gary Filmon
(Premier): Mr. Speaker, it is a pleasure for me to rise
at the end of the session and put a few words on the record. Indeed having been given a very, very fine
example by three previous speakers, I think I will attempt to keep it as short
as I possibly can.
The member for Wellington (Ms. Barrett) is imploring me to
take the high road, and I certainly intend to do that if not given reason to be
off the high road.
* (2150)
I want to begin by extending thanks to you, Mr. Speaker,
for the terrific job that you have done in this session and, indeed, throughout
your more than six years as Speaker of this Assembly. This has perhaps been your most difficult and
challenging session. The numbers in the
House, the manner in which various procedural issues have come to the fore have
really tested your patience, your wisdom and your sense of fair play, and as
always you have come through with flying colours. I know on behalf of all of my colleagues I
wish to thank you for that. I wish to
thank you for the contributions that you make as the impartial arbiter of this
House, and we all appreciate very much the difficult circumstances under which
you have operated and the excellent job that you have done, Sir.
I want to add my thanks to the Pages, two of whom are
represented here, the others perhaps who may be joining us later to celebrate
the end of the session, for their contributions. I hope that it has been an enjoyable and a
productive and a positive experience for them, and I hope that they will look
upon the memories here fondly and as a good experience for them.
I too want to thank the Table officers, the Clerk of the
Assembly, the Sergeant‑at‑Arms, the Deputy Sergeant‑at‑Arms,
the staff in the Legislature Chamber and, indeed, the staff in the building‑‑Hansard,
the Clerk's Office, the Journals Branch‑‑all of those people who
put in so much work to make it possible for us to do our job and to take care
of our responsibilities here. They also
assist us, I think, in the smooth functioning of the House.
As well, the Legislative Counsel, who had I think as busy a
year as they have ever had, even though the government purposely attempted to
keep the legislative load light, there seemed to be much work for them that was
put forward by many members, and that is their responsibility. I know that from our desires to get a few
things done at the end of the session that they were certainly as busy as they
have ever been. I thank them for their
dedicated efforts on behalf of all of us in the Chamber.
I want to thank all of the staff of the caucuses and the
ministers' offices for the tremendous work that they put in throughout the
course of each and every session in each and every year. We have indeed I think a very high calibre,
loyal and dedicated staff, all of us, and we ought to be grateful for their
efforts. They live under a great deal of
pressure. They live under stress that I
think is not common to many types of endeavours and occupations. They come through with tremendous efforts and
great dedication and great loyalty. I
thank them on behalf of all of my colleagues.
I want to thank the opposition members. Reference has been made to the length of the
session and the fact that it was indeed, in terms of a full session, the
shortest that I have been through in my 15 years in this Legislature. That is only due to the co‑operative
attitude and approach that was taken by all members opposite.
Now, some members opposite have the view that if a session
is short, if there is not too much legislation, then it is not a good
session. I do not believe that and I
will talk perhaps a little more about that later. But I believe that we were able to complete
the Estimates, the 240 hours mandatory review of Estimates, in a shorter time
than normal because we were willing to sit longer hours, many evenings, many
morning session, extra time, and I think that there was a tremendous sense of
co‑operation.
I want to thank not only the government House leader but
each of the opposition House leaders, because this could not have happened
without their efforts, without the co‑operative spirit that was shown by
all of their caucus members. I thank
them for that because I think it demonstrated that the House need not be
something in which it does not have to be eternal to be immortal. It can be done in a reasonable period of time
and I thank all members, including particularly the members opposite, for that
attitude, that approach and what I think was demonstrative of a successful session
without having to be a very long session.
I particularly want to just thank my own caucus, the
colleagues in our government caucus, for their loyalty, dedication and support
certainly throughout this year, which was a year of more stress, perhaps because
of the narrow numbers, the razor‑thin majority in the House that has been
referred to on numerous occasions.
I thank them all for a dedication to the work that we had
to do, the things that we wanted to accomplish, the agenda that we set for ourselves
collectively. I thank them all for the
dedicated, loyal approach that they took and the togetherness that they showed
throughout the course of this past year.
From time to time I have had people say to me, oh, it is
easy for you, Filmon, you have got a government and you have a majority, and
all you do is just walk into the House and everybody votes with you; not like
us on City Council, you know, it is hard to get consensus, and all that. They do not realize, and it is only in this
House that we realize that caucuses are not unanimous on any issue, that there
are varying views. [interjection] Well, okay.
The member for Osborne (Ms. McCormick) suggests that there is unanimity
in the Liberal caucus on everything. I
will take her word for it. I have not
sat in that caucus.
The time that is spent discussing issues and going through
them many, many times in committees and various groupings to try and achieve
consensus is the most difficult time, and it is the time that is most important
in forging a government policy direction, because you really do have to know
that you do represent the consensus view and the view of all your members of
caucus, a view that they can support.
Many, many countless hours are put into that effort, and it is not just
a matter of somebody or some minister standing up and saying, this is what I
want to do. Members opposite who have
served in cabinets know that, it is not that easy. Particularly at a time like this when we
wanted to ensure that there was this consensus, it was important for us to
spend the time in forging the consensus on all of the issues.
(Mrs. Louise Dacquay,
Deputy Speaker, in the Chair)
I want to add my personal congratulations and best wishes
to the member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie).
I say that in all sincerity. He
and I have not often agreed in this House, I can be honest about that. I think we have been very, very forceful
enemies most of the time. I think that
there has been the odd occasion in which we have agreed. That was indeed very pleasant because I know
that he is a fierce competitor, and it is always good to have him onside.
I remember a baseball game against the media one time in
which he played a mean shortstop or third base.
I was catching his throws at first base, and he just about put a hole
through my glove. He is a fierce
competitor in whatever he does. In this
House he has been a very fierce competitor.
I am going to miss him for a variety of reasons, not the
least of which is that I am going to run out of stories that I can tell on the
hustings or at least within our group about times in which I am mistaken for
him.
I remember going into the Flin Flon airport, and the first
person who approached me said, oh, are you home for the weekend? I had to stop for a second until I realized
that they mistook me for the member for Flin Flon. Another time, I was at the Nickel Days in
Thompson, and this person was talking to me about having seen me at the
meeting, rattling on about something, and it was not making any sense
whatsoever, and then he referred to J.
Then all of a sudden it hit me, it was the wrong meeting, the wrong party,
and it was the member for Flin Flon he was talking about.
The funniest story was when I was campaigning door to door
in the Fort Garry by‑elections back in about 1984, and as I got to the
door, this person said to me, she said, you do not have to tell me, I know who
you are. You are that smart aleck who
never answers a question right in Question Period. And I said, wait a second, there is something
wrong here. I said, I do not answer the
questions, I am the one who asks the questions.
I am on the opposition side. She
said, no, no, you are the smart aleck.
Finally, I realized it was the member for Flin Flon she was referring
to.
In any case, the member for Flin Flon is doing something
that I think we all ought to do, and that is taking control of his own future
and making the decision as to when he wants to leave and on what terms he wants
to leave this Legislature.
* (2200)
I have talked before about how I admired our former
colleague Bob Banman and how I tried to talk him out of leaving and not running
again in 1986. He said that there comes
a time when we take control of our own destiny.
When you are in public life, all too often you get swept with the tide,
the enthusiasm, the different feeling of power and responsibility and authority
that you have in public life, and you never stop to think about what you really
want to do with your future. He said, I
am making the decision before the public makes the decision that I should not
be here any longer.
I am not suggesting that the member for Flin Flon ever
would have lost his seat, but I am suggesting that he is right in making that
decision in consideration of his family and his own future.
On the other hand, he has made some options open to change
my mind, because we now are back to the comfortable majority with which we were
elected, and heck, we could govern a long time.
In any case, I too want to join in thanking and
congratulating the new members, the five new members who joined this Chamber
for the first time this session for their contributions. I compliment them on their participation and
the contributions that they have made on behalf of their constituents. I thank them for what they have done, and I
wish them all well.
The session was one in which I think we were looking for
efficiency. The member for St. James
(Mr. Edwards) made commentary about the fact that he felt government ought to
be doing more. It reminds me of a saying
that the dean of this Legislature, the member for Lakeside (Mr. Enns), often
has. He said that the people are most at
risk when the government is sitting, because governments tend to want to
intervene in their lives and pass laws and regulations that always take power
away from the people and put it into the hands of the government and its
bureaucrats. Madam Deputy Speaker, there
is something to be said for that. Having
government intrusion in people's lives, having government intervention in all
things and imposing government's will and judgment on all situations is not
necessarily the best thing for the people of this or any other province.
Last year we had what was termed by the editorialists and
observers perhaps the most ambitious workload in modern memory in this
Legislature, things like no‑fault insurance, things like French language
governance, a new Parks Act and many, many things that had been the result of
long‑term development of policy.
That does not mean that you have to do that every session.
The most important instrument of public policy that any
government has is the budget. It is the
thing from which all decisions flow, from which all government priorities
stem. It is ultimately the one thing
that I think carries the most weight. I
am very proud of the fact that for the seventh straight budget we did not raise
any of the major taxes in this province.
I am very proud of the fact that this government is on
track for a balanced budget by the year 1996‑97. I firmly believe we will be the first
province in Canada in a long, long time to have a balanced budget, all things
in, capital, operating, everything in. I
believe that we will have that balanced budget before anybody else. I believe that when you compare us with other
provinces we are doing very well. In
fact, because the member for St. James (Mr. Edwards) was critical, I think that
he ought to have a little chat with his colleagues in Nova Scotia and
Newfoundland about implying to people that you can do everything. He puts as his major platform creating hope
in people. Hope is not an economic
strategy. People have to make choices;
people have to set priorities; and people have to live with a plan.
Madam Deputy Speaker, a person whom I like very much, Jack
Savage, is somebody that he ought to talk to.
An Honourable Member: John Savage.
Mr. Filmon: His friends call him Jack.
Premier Savage is a very astute individual, and he is an
individual who came to office, I think, with the thought that he could make
major change and turn around the economy of Nova Scotia instantly. Nova Scotia is going through very, very
difficult times, but he, like us, is having to make the tough choices
today. He cannot meet many of the
commitments that he made to the public, and many of the expectations that he
created are just gone in dust. I do not
blame him for that. The fact is that
these are difficult times, and whether you are a New Democrat or whether you
are a Liberal or whether you are a Conservative, you have to deal with
reality. It is only when you are in
opposition that you can be irresponsible and say to people, we will handle all
of that and we will do everything and we will change everything. You cannot do that, Madam Deputy Speaker.
Earlier on he was criticizing us for leaving until the end
of a six‑year term to accomplish things in education, to accomplish
things in health, to accomplish things in other areas. You know, there is an old saying that says,
the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago; the second best time is
today. So the fact of the matter is
that, regardless of when these initiatives are undertaken, it is important to
undertake them and not to criticize because they take place six years‑‑[interjection]
Well, some people have never done it. Some people have been in office eight
years. Liberal governments have been in
office eight years and never done it. It
is important to do the things that are within your power to do and things that
are important for the people to do, not to say, well, you should have done it
years ago. Should have done, could have
done‑‑those are the words of people who are always in
opposition. I say that to members with
all due respect and with all kindness, Madam Deputy Speaker.
The fact is that our economy is picking up. We have 13,000 more people employed today
than were employed a year ago in this province.
Last year we had the third best job creation rate in the country in '93.
[interjection]
Well, the member opposite‑‑at least the members
of the New Democratic Party acknowledged that we have been in office at a time
when we have gone through a recession and a global restructuring, a restructuring
that has seen massive shifts in resources of companies. All the multinational companies are shifting
resources. Some of those decisions have
not been kind for Canada. Period. I mean, there are 300,000 jobs lost in
Ontario, and I can go through the numbers in every single province. The fact is that we are working at it, that
we do have growth in technology areas.
The member opposite makes the statement which I have heard
many of his colleagues make about, is it not terrible that people with education
and training in specialty areas have to move away from this province. Well, you know what? We have lost in the high technology areas as
a result of decisions made by his federal Liberal government, 350 jobs that we
were supposed to get with the AH‑101 contract here. There will be another over 200 jobs lost as a
result of the cuts made to the CF‑5 program‑‑another over 200
jobs, high‑tech engineering jobs for university graduates gone as a
result of the decisions made by his federal Liberal colleagues. Those are the kinds of things that we have to
fight against every day.
Madam Deputy Speaker, telecommunications, the call centres‑‑a
bright spot for our economy, an opportunity.
Manufacturing‑‑last year our investment in manufacturing was
up 35 percent. It was by far the highest
in the country. Our manufacturing jobs
have been coming up over the last number of months getting back toward levels
that they were at at the peak of the employment levels in about 1990. We are starting to get back to that level in
manufacturing. Good signs.
Exports are way up.
Exports are growing leaps and bounds.
To a market like the United States which is our largest market, they are
up 40 percent in the last three years alone.
Markets‑‑all the new areas like Korea, Brazil, Spain and
Mexico‑‑growing very, very rapidly.
That is a positive sign.
* (2210)
Mining‑‑we had the largest investment in
mineral exploration and oil exploration of any year in our history last
year. Mining is starting to become one
of the bright spots on the horizon.
The interesting thing is that we are going through
challenges that have not been seen probably this century in this province or
this country. Despite all of those major
challenges‑‑and all you need to do is go to a place like the World
Economic Forum and listen to the tales of woe of some of the major
industrialized countries of the world where they are looking at no growth in
the foreseeable future in places like Germany or even Japan, where Sweden has
lost one‑sixth of its entire workforce in three years.
Looking at all of those things, Mr. Speaker, what are they
saying? They are saying that these are
challenges that we have to come to grips with, with programs and policies and changes
that have not been seen before. They are
saying in those countries that the social safety net has absolutely crippled
their competitiveness and they have to totally dismantle the social safety net,
not add to it as is being advocated every day in this House by members of the
Liberal Party and the New Democratic Party.
Every day they are saying, add more, add more, add more to the social
safety net.
The fact of the matter is no country in this world can do
that. We cannot add to the taxes. We are among the highest‑taxed nations
in the world. We cannot add to the debt
of the G‑7 nations on a per capita basis.
We are only next to Italy in terms of our per capita debt.
The members opposite will have their opportunity to offer
their solutions, but the fact of the matter is that the solutions that they
have been giving us for the past six years in this House are not solutions that
would help Manitobans. They would
cripple Manitobans.
We look at the area of health care and look at that as an
issue, or education‑‑two areas of tremendous heat in this
House. Those two areas are areas in
which I would argue major, major things are happening.
I have had the great pleasure of listening to and visiting
with many of our health care professionals in recent times. We have people who want to do a tremendous
job for this province. We have people
who are doing a tremendous job for this province. We have professionals who are committed
deeply to health care reform and are contributing to it each and every day,
whether that be Manitoba Association of Registered Nurses or MMA and the
College of Physicians and Surgeons.
I recently had a discussion with a board member of the St.
Boniface General Hospital. They will
have a balanced budget by the end of this fiscal year. It is an incredible change over what they
have gone through in years past. It goes
all the way back to New Democratic years that they were fighting, fighting, and
over the budget year after year. They
now have taken control of their destiny and their problems, and they are saying
that we will have our budget balanced by the end of this fiscal year‑‑a
tremendous achievement.
We have been making the shifts. Our increases in support for Support Services
to Seniors have been in the hundreds of percent since we have taken
office. We have had almost a doubling of
the entire funding to our Home Care programs.
Personal care beds have gone up by the hundreds in this province. There used to be tremendous waiting lists at
great costs as these people were being put in acute care beds. Now we are getting to the point where we are
meeting our needs by putting so many more resources into more appropriate care
for people in home care.
Nurse‑managed care, a project and opportunity that
will give nurses the opportunity they have been looking for to apply the skills
and the training that they have to better use in the health care system‑‑and
better cost effectiveness and efficiency for the people of this province. Self‑managed care, nurse‑managed
care‑‑areas that will greatly contribute to the effectiveness of
the delivery of health care in this province, and in the long run will be more
cost efficient than the things that we have been doing before.
Education reform‑‑now, education reform, of
course, is something that many are fighting.
Many are fighting, suggesting that education reform is something that is
bad. Education has to continue to renew,
regenerate itself and to reform the way in which it is delivered. We have to do it. It is absolutely fundamental to ensuring that
we have the qualified workforce that we need in the future, that we are able to
meet the challenges of competition around the world. We must have quality people. The investment that we make in our human
resources is absolutely the most important one, and we have to do it in the
most efficient and effective way possible.
We cannot just do it the way we have always done in the past.
(Mr. Speaker in the
Chair)
Mr. Speaker, I just want to, in closing, say that I have
enjoyed the opportunity to listen to members opposite, to have an opportunity
to debate with them. I thank them for
their contributions.
I want to just add one thing. When the member for Concordia (Mr. Doer) was
talking about singing from the same song book, it sounded rather incongruous to
me. One thing I knew for sure was it
would not be Home on the Range, because this is not a place where seldom is
heard a discouraging word. [interjection] Mr. Speaker, with all of this encouragement,
I am tempted to go to the notes that have been developed for me outlining all
of the accomplishments of our government during the past number of years.
Mr. Speaker, I do want to say in all sincerity that
although we may well be back in session and have the opportunity to go through
further debates, I want to pay tribute to the member for Riel (Mr. Ducharme)
for all of his contributions, for the service he has given to his constituents,
to an adult lifetime of service to the people of St. Vital. The people of St. Vital have been very
privileged to have, I believe, the representation of the member for Riel. He served them as a member of the school
board, ultimately as its chair. He
served on City Council, ultimately as chair of the executive committee, and he
has served in the cabinet of this province with great distinction.
The member for Flin Flon (Mr. Storie) referred to the
privilege that those of us who have served in cabinet have had. Not long ago, I went through to try and
determine how many people had served in the cabinet of the Province of Manitoba
in the history of this province‑‑and we are 125 years next year‑‑and
it is fewer than 500 people. So it is
really a privilege that I think should be taken very seriously and one that
people ought to take as a life's accomplishment, Mr. Speaker.
I compliment the member for Riel (Mr. Ducharme).
I compliment the member for River Heights (Mrs. Carstairs)
for her contributions and her service to this Legislature. I wish her well in her future endeavours,
whatever those may be. Like the member
for Concordia (Mr. Doer), I may want to read back some of her comments about
patronage appointments when the appropriate time comes, but I compliment her,
and I wish her well.
* (2220)
I, in closing, wish all of the members opposite an
enjoyable time recharging their batteries, spending time with their families
and loved ones, and hope that they enjoy the summer, the fall and look forward
to seeing them back here soon, Mr. Speaker.
Thank you very much.
Mr. Speaker: Prior to putting the question, I will take
this opportunity to thank each and every one of the 56 members presently before
me on behalf of the individuals that we do see but we do not hear, namely the
table officers, Legislative Counsel, Sergeant‑at‑Arms, Chamber
branch, the Pages, indeed, Hansard. It
has been our privilege to serve each and every one of you.
An old saying that I once heard: It is always happy to meet, happy to part, but
it is always happy to meet again.
Everybody, have a safe holiday.
*
* *
Mr. Speaker: Now I believe I am informed that the Sergeant‑at‑Arms
is about to enter the Chamber.
Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion?
[agreed]
All rise.
ROYAL ASSENT
Sergeant‑at‑Arms
(Mr. Dennis Gray): His Honour the Lieutenant‑Governor.
His Honour W. Yvon
Dumont, Lieutenant‑Governor of the Province of Manitoba, having entered
the House and being seated on the Throne, Mr. Speaker addressed His Honour in
the following words.
Mr. Speaker: May it please Your Honour:
The Legislative Assembly, at its present session, passed
bills, which in the name of the Assembly, I present to Your Honour and to which
bills I respectfully request Your Honour's Assent:
Bill 2, The Prescription Drugs Cost
Assistance Amendment and Pharmaceutical Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur
l'aide à l'achat de médicaments sur ordonnance et la Loi sur les pharmacies
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
Bill 4, The Energy and Consequential
Amendments Act; Loi sur l'énergie et apportant des modifications corrélatives
Bill 5, The Highway Traffic
Amendment and Consequential Amendments Act; Loi modifiant le Code de la route
et apportant des modifications corrélatives
Bill 7, The Crown Lands
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les terres domaniales
Bill 8, The Fisheries
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la pêche
Bill 9, The Convention
Centre Corporation Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la Corporation du
Centre des congrès
Bill 10, The Wildlife
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la conservation de la faune
Bill 11, The Legislative
Assembly Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur l'Assemblée législative
Bill 12, The Provincial
Auditor's Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur le vérificateur provincial
Bill 13, The Condominium
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les condominiums
Bill 14, The Real Estate
Brokers Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les courtiers en immeubles
Bill 15, The Law Society
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la Société du Barreau
Bill 16, The Provincial
Court Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la Cour provinciale
Bill 17, The City of
Winnipeg Amendment and Consequential Amendments Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur
la Ville de Winnipeg et apportant des modificantions corrélatives
Bill 18, The Insurance
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les assurances
Bill 19, The Mental Health
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la santé mentale
Bill 20, The Municipal
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les municipalités
Bill 21, The Manitoba
Medical Association Dues Act; Loi sur la cotisation de l'Association médicale
du Manitoba
Bill 22, The Statute Law
Amendment Act, 1994; Loi de 1994 modifiant diverses dispositions législatives
Bill 23, The Manitoba
Historical Society Property Act; Loi sur les biens de la Société historique du
Manitoba
Bill 24, The Waste Reduction
and Prevention Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réduction du volume
et de la production des déchets
Bill 25, The Statute Law
Amendment (Taxation) Act, 1994; Loi de 1994 modifiant diverses dispositions
législatives en matière de fiscalité
Bill 26, An Act to amend An
Act to Protect the Health of Non‑Smokers (2); Loi no 2 modifiant la Loi
sur la protection de la santé des non‑fumeurs
Bill 27, The Highway Traffic
Amendment Act; Loi modifiant le Code de la route
Bill 28, The Off‑Road
Vehicles Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les véhicules à caractère non
routier
Bill 31, The Manitoba
Employee Ownership Fund Corporation Amendment and Income Tax Amendment Act; Loi
modifiant la Loi constituant en corporation le Fonds de participation des
travailleurs du Manitoba et la Loi de l'impôt sur le revenu
Bill 206, The Coat of Arms,
Emblems and the Manitoba Tartan Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur les
armoiries, les emblèmes et le tartan du Manitoba
Bill 300, An Act to amend an
Act to continue Brandon University Foundation; Loi modifiant la Loi prorogeant
la Fondation de l'Université de Brandon
Bill 301, The Misericordia
General Hospital Incorporation Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi constituant
en corporation le "Misericordia General Hospital"
Bill 302, The Manitoba
Historical Society Incorporation Act; Loi constituant la Société historique du
Manitoba.
Mr. Clerk (William
Remnant): In Her Majesty's name, His Honour the
Lieutenant‑Governor doth assent to these bills.
Mr. Speaker: May it please Your Honour:
We, Her Majesty's most dutiful and faithful subjects, the
Legislative Assembly of Manitoba in session assembled, approach Your Honour
with sentiments of unfeigned devotion and loyalty to Her Majesty's person and
government, and beg for Your Honour the acceptance of these bills:
Bill 29, The Loan Act, 1994; Loi
d'emprunt de 1994
Bill 30, The Appropriation
Act, 1994; Loi de 1994 portant affectation de crédits.
Mr. Clerk: His Honour the Lieutenant‑Governor doth
thank Her Majesty's dutiful and loyal subjects, accepts their benevolence and
assents to these bills in Her Majesty's name.
His Honour was then
pleased to retire
God Save the Queen was
sung
O Canada! was sung
* (2230)
Hon. Jim Ernst
(Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, I move,
seconded by the member for Thompson (Mr. Ashton), that the House do now
adjourn.
Motion agreed to, and the House adjourned and stands adjourned
until a time fixed by Mr. Speaker upon the request of the government.
Mr. Speaker: Everybody, have a great summer.