LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON JUSTICE     

Wednesday, May 8, 2024


TIME – 6 p.m.

LOCATION – Winnipeg, Manitoba

CHAIRPERSON – MLA Billie Cross (Seine River)

VICE-CHAIRPERSON – Mr. Logan Oxenham (Kirkfield Park)

ATTENDANCE – 6QUORUM – 4

Members of the committee present:

Mr. Balcaen, MLAs Chen, Cross, Messrs. Khan, Oxenham, Mrs. Schott

APPEARING:

Hon. Adrien Sala, Minister of Finance

Hon. Nahanni Fontaine, Minister of Families and of Women and Gender Equity

Lauren Stone, MLA for Midland

Kathleen Cook, MLA for Roblin

Hon. Matt Wiebe, Minister of Justice and Attorney General

Doyle Piwniuk, MLA for Turtle Mountain

PUBLIC PRESENTERS:

Bill 6 – The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act

Kate Kehler, Social Planning Council of Winnipeg

Josh Brandon, Make Poverty History Manitoba

Jim Silver, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives–Manitoba

Bill 8 – The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

David Grant, private citizen

Bill 15 – The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act

David Grant, private citizen

Bill 19 – The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act

David Grant, private citizen

MATTERS UNDER CONSIDERATION:

Bill 6 – The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act

Bill 8 – The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

Bill 11 – The Statutes and Regula­tions Amend­ment and Inter­pre­ta­tion Amend­ment Act

Bill 14 – The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024

Bill 15 – The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act

Bill 19 – The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act

Bill 20 – The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act

Bill 24 – The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Amend­ment Act (Dis­tri­bu­tion of Fake Intimate Images)

* * *

Clerk Assistant (Ms. Katerina Tefft): Will the Standing Committee on Justice please come to order.

      Your first item of business is the election of a Chairperson.

      Are there any nominations?

Hon. Adrien Sala (Minister of Finance): I'd like to nominate MLA Cross as Chair.

Clerk Assistant: MLA Cross has been nominated.

      Are there any other nominations?

      Hearing no other nominations, MLA Cross, will you please take the Chair.

The Chairperson: Our next item of business is the election of a Vice-Chairperson.

      Are there any nominations?

MLA Sala: I'd like to nominate MLA Oxenham as Vice-Chair.

The Chairperson: MLA Oxenham has been nominated.

      Are there any other nominations?

      Hearing no other nominations, MLA Oxenham is elected Vice-Chairperson.

      This meeting has been called to consider the following bills: Bill 6, The Manitoba Assistance Amend­ment Act; Bill 8, The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act; Bill 11, The Statutes and Regula­tions Amend­ment and Inter­pre­ta­tion Amend­ment Act; Bill 14, The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024; Bill 15, The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act; Bill 19, The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act; Bill 20, The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act; Bill 24, The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Amend­ment Act (Dis­tri­bu­tion of Fake Intimate Images).

      I would like to afform–inform all in attendance of the provisions in our rules regarding the hour of adjourn­ment. A standing com­mit­tee meeting to consider a bill must not sit past midnight to hear public pre­sen­ta­tions or to consider clause by clause of a bill except by unanimous consent of the com­mit­tee.

      Prior to proceeding with public presentations, I would like to advise members of the public regarding the process for speaking in a committee. In accordance with our rules, a time limit of 10 minutes has been allotted for pre­sen­ta­tions, with another five minutes allowed for questions from committee members. Questions shall not exceed 30 seconds in length, with no time limit for answers. Questions may be addressed to presenters in the following rotation: first, the minister sponsoring the bill; second, a member of the official op­posi­tion; and third, an in­de­pen­dent member.

      If a presenter is not in attendance when their name is called they will be dropped to the bottom of the list. If the presenter is not in attendance when their name is called a second time, they will be removed from the presenters' list.

      The proceedings of our meetings are recorded in order to provide a verbatim transcript. Each time some­one wishes to speak, whether it be an MLA or a presenter, I first have to say the person's name. This is a signal for the Hansard recorder to turn the mics on and off.

Bill 6–The Manitoba Assistance Amendment Act

The Chairperson: All right, our first presenter is Kate Kehler from the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg and she is joining us virtually.

Kate Kehler (Social Planning Council of Winnipeg): Am I waiting for my name, or do I start?

The Chairperson: Yes, just one second.

K. Kehler: Perfect, thank you.

The Chairperson: Sorry about that. Kate, please proceed with your pre­sen­ta­tion.

K. Kehler: Oh, of course. Thank you very much.

      Good evening, everyone.

      Thank you for–very much for the op­por­tun­ity to speak with you tonight on the necessity of imple­men­ting Bill 6, The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act.

      As some of you may know, I represent an organi­zation with 105 years of ex­per­ience working to create a better city and province for all. Our current vision statement is for sus­tain­able com­mu­nity that is just, equitable and caring.

      I will be high­lighting two specific areas of our work: child and family poverty in Manitoba, as well as the data from the Winnipeg street censuses in order to support our argument for the adoption and full imple­men­ta­tion of Bill 6 as quickly as possible. I will also bring my previous ex­per­ience with the John Howard Society of Manitoba to the discussion as well.

      It has long been a call from com­mu­nity-based organi­zations that support people on EIA and social justice advocates concerned that the current em­pha­sis of EIA on finding em­ploy­ment, any em­ploy­ment, can trap individuals into low-paying jobs.

      While Manitoba has made some progress on increasing minimum wage, it is still not a living wage. Someone, especially a full-time working parent, should not have to rely on food banks, for example, and yet Harvest Manitoba's most recent Voices report notes women who remain the pre­domi­nant leaders of single-parent families are more likely to access food banks and work more part-time lower paying jobs when com­pared to men. They are more likely to face food insecurity due to factors such as a lack of ac­ces­si­ble child care and flexible work op­por­tun­ities that can ac­com­modate caregiving respon­si­bilities.

      Higher edu­ca­tion is the answer to this problem. Be it in trades or academic degrees, edu­ca­tion opens op­por­tun­ities for higher incomes and can move people from beyond cycling in and out of the EIA system because they cannot make ends meet on a minimum-wage job they were forced to take or risk being deemed ineligible by their worker.

      It must also be noted that EIA rates still only put individuals at about 40 per cent of the poverty line, so by extending EIA to people pursuing an edu­ca­tion is hardly offering them the easy way out.

      As I mentioned, SPCW is turning 105. When we were approaching our 100th anniversary, we were looking back over our history and we found some records of discussions of gov­ern­ment legis­lation dating back to the early 1920s.

      That legis­lation was talking about what to do about the problem of unmarried and, gasp, pregnant women. It was generally agreed that some­thing had to be done but what they very clearly spelled out is it could really–it shouldn't be too much because they didn't want to, quote, unquote, encourage that behaviour.

      And, unfor­tunately, that's been–that's continued to be our thinking. It's our society's thinking and there­fore it's reflected in our gov­ern­ment policies, that we continue to think that we can punish people out of poverty. It didn't work back then and it hasn't worked in the last 100 years.

      Do people succeed and move on from EIA on their own? Of course, but that is usually in spite of the system and not because of it. And when we start talk­ing about the intergenerational poverty, it's just that much more difficult.

      I mentioned Harvest earlier. They are a long-time partner on the Campaign 2000 annual Report Cards on Child and Family Poverty in Manitoba. The most recent data, 2021, based on the CFLIM-After-Tax poverty measurement demonstrates that Manitoba, while having, quote, unquote, beat out our long history of being the province with the highest rates of child and family poverty by Saskatoon in 2021, but only by a mere 0.2 per cent.

* (18:10)

      We are still the province, though, with the highest rates of child poverty for children under the age of six: 27 per cent of Manitoba's children under the age of six lived in poverty. That is a full 11 per cent higher than the overall rate for Canada.

      Why am I talking about children when we are talking about adult edu­ca­tion? To be adding it to EIA? Because our most recent Campaign 2000 reports high­light the health, physical and mental harms done by even short stints in poverty as a child. Pre-term and low-birth-weight babies are too. Thank you. Doubling the Healthy Baby Prenatal Benefit will help with that; however dental extractions are also high, pointing to food insecurity as children move beyond infancy.

      Our reports also speak to the cognitive damage done to brain dev­elop­ment through 'toxis'–toxic stress caused by poverty. The most telling statistic in our report is that teenagers in the lowest income quintile are more than four times more likely to die by suicide than the other four quintiles combined, my point being that we are damaging our children by allowing the depth and breadth of poverty we have.

      And so we owe it to those children who have grown into adulthood in poverty to do every­thing we can to help them catch up. And the good news is they can. People can recover, but they need the ap­pro­priate supports and the light at–that light at the end of the tunnel to keep them moving forward.

      As an ad­di­tional note, all three Winnipeg street censuses that we have been involved in–2015, 2018 and 2022–all demon­strate that the vast majority of Winnipeg's unsheltered popu­la­tion are Indigenous. Campaign 2000 reports and countless others demon­strate that Indigenous people are overrepresented in poverty. Family breakdown and Child and Family Services involvement are also cited as reasons for people becoming unsheltered, and 18 is still the most common age people first become homeless. So the aging out of care and into being unsheltered is an ongoing concern.

      Voices Manitoba–Voices: Manitoba's Youth in Care Network, also partnered on our most recent reports, and, according to them, Bill 6 could be a game changer. To quote: Too many of our youth graduate the CFS system without graduating high school and need time, support and financial stability in order to complete grade 12 or a GED. Those who do complete high school before aging out would like to see a way to pursue higher edu­ca­tion. Unquote.

      Bill 6 will contribute to Canada's Youth in Care Network's equitable standard's framework by support­ing its first pillar: financial stability. Every young person–again to quote: Every young person should have the financial resources required to meet their needs. Youth in care deserve to have a financial starting point that is above the poverty line and allows them to pursue their career interests and dreams.

      So Bill 6, while it does not get them to the starting point of above the poverty line–we can talk about that later–but it could provide a path to higher-income jobs.

      Bill 6 would also contribute to achieving many of the goals outlined in the previous gov­ern­ment's poverty and edu­ca­tion task force report, especially in the overarching theme of a need for equity in edu­ca­tion, as that should include addressing the long-term effects of poverty on people's edu­ca­tional trajectory.

      I would–just a little bit of information from my time when I was at John Howard Society of Manitoba. Obviously, we offered literacy pro­gram­ming, and we knew at that time the vast majority of the people we worked with had about a literacy level average of grade 8.

      So there is need for folks exiting in­sti­tutions to actually also be on social assist­ance and actually also be provided with the support so they can continue their edu­ca­tion because what we know through our reintegration program and the bail program when we were there, when we take people and we drop them right back into the exact same social con­di­tions that led them to be susceptible to crime in the first place, we're just repeating that. It's a–just a disaster waiting to happen, and we continue down this road.

      So instead of focusing on bail reform–and should legis­lation come forward I'd be happy to speak more on that, but I just wanted to make that point that this is one way we could actually stop people from exiting institutions and unfor­tunately picking up and–where they had left off.

      So, finally, while I've spoken on why Bill 6 is essential for people in poverty, this should not be the only lens we use. I know this is odd coming from me; however, someone was in a decent-paying job but lost that position or found that it was no longer a good fit for a multitude of reasons, why would we want to deny that person the op­por­tun­ity to retrain or achieve a higher edu­ca­tion while they figure out life's next steps? No society has ever fallen apart because its popu­la­tion is too well educated. It is societies who allow ignorance and discrimination to prevail that do. We need to encourage more edu­ca­tion so that every­one has the critical thinking and reasoning skills needed in our complex world.

      Thank you.

The Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Do members of the com­mit­tee have questions for the presenter?

Hon. Nahanni Fontaine (Minister of Families): I just wanted to say a profound miigwech and ap­pre­cia­tion to Kate Kehler and all of the really im­por­tant and critical work that you do. Obviously, as you know, I am a huge fan of the work that you do, and I think that you are just a pillar of the com­mu­nity.

      And I really want to just lift up the analysis that we can't punish people out of poverty. And that is a core principle and tenet of our gov­ern­ment, that we will deal with the root causes of why folks come into conflict with the law and also put those legis­lative measures and those social policy measures that lift people and help work with people to get them out of poverty.

      So I just want to say miigwech for all of the work that you do.

The Chairperson: Thank you.

      Any other questions?

      Sorry, Kate, you have a chance to respond.

K. Kehler: I just want to say thank you very much for those kind words. They're very much ap­pre­ciated.

      I know I come to this organi­zation after a–as I said, a very, very long history of some in­cred­ible work.

Mrs. Lauren Stone (Midland): Thank you, Kate, for taking time out of your evening to speak tonight. I'm sorry if you're having trouble hearing me; I'm just getting over a cold here.

      But in your comments, you had mentioned, you know, the challenges of, you know, how this current system traps individuals and vul­ner­able individuals into low-paying jobs.

      So we're facing a, you know, critical skilled labour shortage here in Manitoba. So from your expertise and ex­per­ience, you know, what do you find the biggest edu­ca­tional skills gaps or skills training gaps that exist right now that you think this bill can help mend?

The Chairperson: Kate.

K. Kehler: Sorry, you've said my name now? Sorry about that.

The Chairperson: Yes, go ahead. Sorry.

K. Kehler: So I am actually not an expert in–on the labour force, so I don't want to offer too much about that. Somebody, another speaker after me, might actually have better infor­ma­tion on that than I do.

      I would just say that, you know, I know it seems like the soft answer, but when you have–when you're dealing with folks, especially folks in poverty who have had so many–so much of their agency taken away, that I wouldn't like to actually have to then decide that this is the job you need to take, or you need to take this sort of edu­ca­tion. We need to give people back agency.

      Let them, again, just learn how to learn, and then they will be able to move forward in a–with some­thing that is their passion. That's some­thing that they can then succeed in.

The Chairperson: Thank you, Kate.

      Are there any other questions?

      Hearing none, then I would like to call the next presenter, Mr. Josh Brandon from Make Poverty History Manitoba, who is also joining us virtually.

      Mr. Brandon, feel free to start when you're ready.

Josh Brandon (Make Poverty History Manitoba): May I begin?

The Chairperson: Ready if you are.

J. Brandon: Good evening, and thank you for the op­por­tun­ity to present this evening.

      I'm here repre­sen­ting Make Poverty History Manitoba. We're a coalition of organi­zations and indi­viduals working towards ending poverty in Manitoba. And we're pleased to support Bill 6, the assist­ant amend­ment act, as a small-but-im­por­tant step towards minimizing the effect of poverty and working to address the difficult cycles of poverties that our current social systems keep far too many people trapped in.

      Make Poverty History Manitoba conducted con­sul­ta­tions with the com­mu­nity last year ahead of the prov­incial election to ask people who have ex­per­ience in a diversity of fields and have front-line ex­per­ience, people with lived ex­per­ience with poverty, policy advocates: What are the key measures the gov­ern­ment should adopt to mitigate poverty and work towards ending poverty?

      We asked people to consider policy changes or solutions that touch people the most who were in the deepest poverty, and also recog­nize the inequitable dis­tri­bu­tion of poverty in the province and the need for policies to address those groups that are hardest hit by poverty, including Indigenous people, new­comers, people with dis­abil­ities, children, women and people from gender-diverse com­mu­nities.

* (18:20)

      And through that process we developed a plat­form of 10 key areas the gov­ern­ment should focus on. And I've had a chance to share this whole larger plat­form in other fora, and I won't touch on all our demands here.

      But one of the key relevant areas in our demands for Manitoba is to invest in programs that support the edu­ca­tional pursuits of residents of all ages. And this is critical because we know that few Manitobans are able to escape poverty if they are not given the tools to be suc­cess­ful in their edu­ca­tional pursuits. To quote Justice Murray Sinclair: Edu­ca­tion got us into this mess. Edu­ca­tion will get us out.

      And so the–poverty and edu­ca­tion can unfor­tunately create a feedback loop that it's difficult to escape. Low-income families face barriers to edu­ca­tional success including poor housing, overwork, fewer benefits, lack of income and often fewer models of academic achieve­ment in their own families or com­mu­nities.

      And so we know that edu­ca­tion for all Manitobans is in­creasingly a lifelong process. And that's why we're promoting an edu­ca­tion system that encom­passes all stages of life, including early learning, K‑to‑12, post-secondary and adult edu­ca­tion.

      Con­cern­ing adult edu­ca­tion, our report listed three demands. Firstly, double the annual budget for adult literacy and learning, which is flat currently and less than 1 per cent of what we currently are spending on K‑to‑12 edu­ca­tion and less than a per capita basis on what we spend on our prison system. To double the annual budget would only cost an ad­di­tional $20 million.

      We also said: Ensure that Manitoba income support program switches from a work-first orientation to an adult edu­ca­tion approach wherever possible, to sup­port recipients to improve literacy and edu­ca­tion levels. And this current bill touches on that demand directly.

      And then the third demand was to move rapidly towards the creation of adult learning hubs which would combine adult learning centres, adult literacy programs and a child-care centre. Many in need of adult basic edu­ca­tion have young children, and the availability of child care would be an im­por­tant part of that.

      According to the Manitoba gov­ern­ment's own reports, there are currently 192 Manitobans between the ages of 18 and 65 who lack literacy levels to enable them to partici­pate fully in society, and addressing this gap is an im­por­tant part of the process of recon­ciliation, recog­nizing overrepre­sen­tation of Indigenous people in poverty and the high demand for adult edu­ca­tion within Indigenous com­mu­nities in Winnipeg and across Manitoba.

      We also know new­comers in Manitoba often require ad­di­tional supports due to language barriers, interrupted schooling and discrimination they face in em­ploy­ment and edu­ca­tion systems.

      The proposed amend­ment to the assistance act will make edu­ca­tion more available for people who need it most, including those on EIA, by making it a require­ment for the de­part­ment to consider adult edu­ca­tion as an em­ploy­ment en­hance­ment measure.

      This meets the principle that adult edu­ca­tion and literacy is a key pathway out of poverty for people living on EIA and also recognizes the need that the transition from EIA into em­ploy­ment needs to be sus­tain­able. Unfor­tunately, the current approach too often requires EIA recipients to focus on finding jobs that are not sus­tain­able for which they have insuf­ficient job readiness or lack the skills for, and this approach is not working. More than 37,000 families repre­sen­ting 62,523 individuals relied on the EIA program last year. Of these, only 2,662–or 4 per cent–reported em­ploy­ment income.

       For some individuals on EIA, it may be a stopgap program to provide some ad­di­tional support while they find em­ploy­ment. However, for far too many, it is a trap that keeps people within a debilitating system of poverty.

      We are hopeful that the changing approach represented by this bill is the right one and will have positive effects to allow more people in EIA to suc­cess­fully leave the program with the skills they need to partici­pate fully in society.

      While this measure is im­por­tant, it's also im­por­tant to recog­nize that the low level of income support in the program is also a barrier to edu­ca­tional attain­ment.

      We know that the levels of assist­ance provided by the programmer–inadequate to meet basic needs. According to data collected by the Maytree Foundation, households relying on EIA have incomes far below the poverty line and generally below the level classified as deep poverty.

      For individuals on EI general assist­ance, total incomes were only 40 per cent of the poverty line last year, and people with dis­abil­ities were little better off at only 55 per cent of the market basket measure. In fact, the levels of PIA and Rent Assist announced this year, total incomes for EIA recipients would drop further in 2024.

      When we consider inflation, calculating real in­comes for people on EIA, we calculated that incomes have dropped 10 per cent since 2018.

      So we'd like to see an EIA basic needs system–EIA transform its basic needs program into a level that at least meets the market basket measure with an aim of transforming towards a basic livable income and a benefit that all Manitobans can have the dignity they deserve.

      As a first step the gov­ern­ment should consider with this bill increasing supports for individuals in em­ploy­ment en­hance­ment programs, including all those in adult edu­ca­tion, in order to maximize their chances of success.

      Thank you so much.

The Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Do members of the com­mit­tee have questions for the presenter?

MLA Fontaine: Miigwech, Josh Brandon.

      I ap­pre­ciate the time that you've taken to share things that we need to consider and things that are in your report.

      I also just want to acknowl­edge you for all the work that you do as an anti-poverty activist and an activist on a myriad of different fronts. I know that we see you at many, many different functions challenging every gov­ern­ment, no matter who's in gov­ern­ment, to do better. So I just want to acknowl­edge you on that.

      Miigwech.

J. Brandon: Thank you, Minister Fontaine, for your kind comments, and I look forward to continuing to be an advocate for these issues.

The Chairperson: Any other questions?

Mrs. Stone: I also just wanted to say thank you very much for taking the time out of your night and clearly for your passion and your ex­per­ience in this area as well. It was a very thorough pre­sen­ta­tion, and I ap­pre­ciated learning more about it.

      So thank you very much.

The Chairperson: Are there any other questions?

       Seeing no other questions–[interjection]–sorry; I apologize. Would you like to respond, Mr. Brandon?

J. Brandon: Again, just thank you very much for your comments and I hope that the infor­ma­tion I provided will be useful in your deliberations today.

The Chairperson: Thank you very much.

      We'll move on to our next presenter. I will now call on Jim Silver from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives of Manitoba.

      Please proceed with your pre­sen­ta­tion, Mr. Silver.

Jim Silver (Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives–Manitoba): Thank you very much.

      So I'm here on behalf of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. I'd like to admit into the pro­ceedings two reports on adult edu­ca­tion that some of you will have seen before.

      This amend­ment is one of the recom­men­dations that we've made in the work that we've been doing on adult edu­ca­tion, and I'm delighted with–that this is a really im­por­tant step forward.

      Up until now, in EIA there's been a work first–what's called a work-first approach–which means that when somebody is an EIA recipient, the worker tries to push her or him as quickly as possible into the paid labour force to drive down the numbers of those who are on EIA, whether they're prepared to go into the workforce or not.

      Often, they are not fully prepared. It doesn't work very well. They get a job that doesn't lift them out of poverty. Sometimes they quit their job out of frustra­tion because they're not getting ahead with it and it's just another failure that sets them back.

      What this amend­ment does is to shift us from a work-first approach to an edu­ca­tion-wherever-possible approach.

* (18:30)

      Not everybody on EIA can succeed in the mature high school program, but many can, and many are knocking on the doors of adult learning centres, wanting to do their mature high school, to get their diploma, and in many, many cases they're being turned back because in the regula­tions it says that EIA recipients can go into edu­ca­tion under exceptional circum­stances only. It's a work-first approach; it's an anti-edu­ca­tion approach.

      This amend­ment changes that, and that's a wonder­ful thing. It's going to mean that lots of people are going to get their grade 12. Many of those who get their grade 12 will go on to further edu­ca­tion. They'll go into the paid labour force. They'll pull them­selves out of poverty.

      We have lots of evidence, and when mom or dad are in adult edu­ca­tion, their kids do better in school. Presumably that's because mom's doing her home­work at the kitchen table after supper and the kids see that, and they figure, hmm, edu­ca­tion's a pretty good deal.

      So this is im­por­tant for individuals who will pull them­selves out of poverty, and for families that are in poverty. It's really, really hard work to complete a high school diploma when you're 33 years old and have three kids, or you're 37, or you're 29 or whatever the case may be, it is extremely difficult.

      So what we're talking about here is creating the op­por­tun­ity for people on EIA to really bust them­selves to get their mature high school diploma. These aren't people who are 'lollygaggling' about; these are people who want to improve their circum­stances and their families' circum­stances by doing the hard work that is necessary.

      I think it's im­por­tant to note that the amend­ment says, when deciding on em­ploy­ment en­hance­ment measures for an applicant or recipient, the director, the director of EIA, must–must–consider whether adult edu­ca­tion is the most ap­pro­priate em­ploy­ment en­hance­ment measure.

      So the word must is really im­por­tant here. It seems to me it's equivalent to the word shall. It's not the word may, it's the word must. So in other words, what we're saying here, it seems to me, with this amend­ment is every case–every case–must be looked at with an eye to whether that EIA recipient can succeed in high school, whether she or he wants to and whether they're capable of doing so.

      It'll also be im­por­tant to change the wording in the regula­tions and in the EIA admin­is­tra­tive manual. The regula­tions are full of work-first, and the admin­is­tra­tive manual is full of work-first. They are anti-edu­ca­tion docu­ments; edu­ca­tion in exceptional circum­stances only.

      So I think that it's going to be im­por­tant to change the regs and to change the admin­is­tra­tive manual to make it con­sistent with this amend­ment to the act.

      It will also be im­por­tant that the director of EIA meet with the front-line workers. It's the front-line workers ultimately who make decisions about whether an EIA recipient can go to school or cannot go to school.

      They need to be instructed by the director that things have changed, there's an amend­ment to the act and they must consider whether this parti­cular recipient can go to a mature high school program or, in some cases, to a literacy program.

      So adult edu­ca­tion, adult basic edu­ca­tion in this province, the adult learning centres that offer the mature high school diploma and the adult literacy pro­grams that prepare people to take high school courses, it's fabulous. It works really, really well, it produces lots of graduates. From a budget point of view, it's been flatlined for decades by both parties. We need to change that.

      We recom­mended a doubling of the budget this year. The budget is $20 million, really small potatoes in a big budget like Manitoba's. I know there's many demands, budgetary demands. But this is a transforma­tive thing, adult edu­ca­tion. It transforms people's lives and families' lives.

      It's an anti-poverty initiative. It pulls people and their families out of poverty. It's part of recon­ciliation, which is im­por­tant in this province, parti­cularly, because Indigenous people are represented in adult edu­ca­tion programs at about two and a half times their share of the popu­la­tion.

      And it's about the labour shortage. It's producing workers; it's producing skilled workers, which we need in this province.

      So this is a very im­por­tant amend­ment. I'm delighted that this amend­ment is before us, and I hope it will get all-party support when it goes back to the House.

      Thank you.

The Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Silver.

      Before proceeding to questions, there are only two copies of Mr. Silver's reports, and they are quite lengthy.

      Is there will of the com­mit­tee for the clerk to scan these and upload them to the MLA portal instead of making copies? [Agreed]

       We will now move to questions. Are there any questions?

MLA Fontaine: Really fast here, because I have 30 seconds, I just want to lift you up for all of the work that–you literally, in Manitoba, are an OG in respect of all of the anti-poverty, anti-racism work, recon­ciliation work. You are just–I honour the work that you do on behalf of everybody here in Manitoba.

      And I really want you to know that I have some of my de­part­mental staff who have taken notes in respect of some of the recom­men­dations on the regs and the admin­is­tra­tion manual, so changing the lan­guage there. And also writing down about the director meeting with the front line. So I really do ap­pre­ciate those recom­men­dations.

      And again, once again, miigwech so much for your work.

J. Silver: Thank you very much.

Mrs. Stone: Yes, I also just want to say thank you for taking the time to come and present to us tonight. And I look forward to reading the report that you've brought to us tonight, so thank you.

The Chairperson: Mr. Silver, any?

J. Silver: Thank you.

The Chairperson: Okay.

      Any other questions?

      All right, thank you, folks.

Bill 8–The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

The Chairperson: We are now going to move to pre­sen­ta­tions for Bill 8.

      And we have David Grant, who is joining us virtually.

      Mr. Grant, are you there? Mr. Grant, can you make sure that your mic and your video is on, please?

David Grant (Private Citizen): Okay, my–I'm unmuted and my video is on. Is that okay?

The Chairperson: We can't see your video, but we can hear you now. Oh, now we can see you–or, we could. Now it went off again.

      There you go. All right. Please proceed.

D. Grant: Sort of new to this. I've been to the Leg. before, but not to this, so excuse my clumsiness.

      Anyway, on Bill 8, this bill has a noble cause, and my back­ground is I strongly support the rights to obtain abortions. But I'm concerned about the bill, the wording.

      A large number of abortions in Manitoba are chemi­cal in nature and depend on imported pharmaceuticals. We know that the enemies of abortion try to restrict the supply of those pharmaceuticals.

      And so I'm concerned that the bill does not ensure that the supply chain goes uninterrupted, so that the bill can have the effect that it's supposed to. So just a sug­ges­tion that maybe it should go in that direction.

      Also, if protesters are kept several metres away, and they're limited in numbers, safety can be assured. By outlawing visual clues of disapproval, Bill 8 ventures far from safety and into denial of what we would call–some would call human rights. We know that the city has occasionally done this, when it forbids use of a road by anybody not on a bike, that sort of thing.

      So, just concerned that we tread lightly on rights.

      Thank you. That's all I had to say on 8.

The Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Are there any questions?

Mrs. Kathleen Cook (Roblin): Thanks for taking time out of your evening to join us here tonight.

The Chairperson: Mr. Grant, any comments?

D. Grant: No, nothing further. I got two more bills here, but thank you.

The Chairperson: Seeing no further questions, we will now move on to Bill 15.

* (18:40)

Bill 15–The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amendment Act

The Chairperson: And Mr. Grant is also presenting on Bill 15, so whenever you're ready, Mr. Grant, please proceed.

David Grant (Private Citizen): On 15, the removal of a person from a busi­ness when they're presenting a problem for those in the busi­ness, physic­ally removing them can be done now without Bill 15. And it's obviously the law, civil law, is intended to protect us from unruly people or those who present an infection danger.

      But removing a person from member­ship in a member­ship-based financial in­sti­tution–I am a member, but I don't have a mortgage, et cetera, with them–I believe this could ruin a person financially. And this fact puts require­ments on the act to draw solid lines between trivial insults and actual threats to life.

      And I think that's some­thing that should be in it, some kind of guidance for when it's expected that a person would be removed from member­ship in their credit union. Because in that case, I would expect it should be some­thing fairly serious, not failure to wipe your hands with the squirt bottle as you come in.

      But that's my comment on 15. Thank you.

The Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Grant.

      Are there any questions from the floor?

Hon. Adrien Sala (Minister of Finance): I just want to thank you for taking time to come share your concern and ap­pre­ciate making time in your evening here.

      Thank you.

D. Grant: I'm sorry, I couldn't hear that. Somebody's making noise here. I'll try to turn up my mic. So can he try again?

The Chairperson: Minister Sala, would you like to repeat that?

MLA Sala: Just wanted to thank you for taking time to be here tonight.

D. Grant: Thank you.

The Chairperson: Are there any other questions?

      Seeing no other questions, we are going to move on to Bill 19.

Bill 19–The Drivers and Vehicles Amendment Act

The Chairperson: And Mr. Grant is also presenting on Bill 19.

      Whenever you're ready, Mr. Grant, please proceed with your pre­sen­ta­tion.

David Grant (Private Citizen): Madam Chairperson, 19 adds heavy-duty trailers to the vehicles that can be declared unsafe and unfit by author­ities. It seems like a good idea, but it does remind us all that MPI has, in the opinion of some, been abusing safety rules to advance its own cor­por­ate causes and predilections.

      Some of the–of which–these rules pushed are completely unrelated to the danger that a vehicle might pose to the public. Examples are numer­ous, and the–a carefully maintained and rare vehicle, except for slight hail damage to it is easily replaced is declared unfit based only on age.

      It is time to bring MPI to account, in my opinion, for the cost of some of its policies when they cannot be linked, logically, to road safety. And that's some­thing I think should be done here, because I could see them doing the same thing for a certain brand of trailer where it presents no safety issue, but it can still be declared unfit forever.

      So, thank you.

The Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Grant.

      Are there any questions for Mr. Grant?

      All right, Minister Wiebe. Please proceed.

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Well, thank you very much, Mr. Grant. I really ap­pre­ciate you taking the time to be here this evening.

      I think it sounds to me like we're on the same page with regards to the importance of safety and the importance to focus on that and the importance of getting MPI back on track, which has been a major goal and endeavour of this gov­ern­ment so far.

      We're going to keep working on it; there's a lot to get right. But keeping rates affordable and getting MPI back on track is absolutely a focus of this gov­ern­ment.

      So thanks for your time.

D. Grant: And thank you very much, Minister.

      And at the open house in December, I did get the card for your assist­ant, and I would like to follow up in a couple of ways because, as you pointed out, we both share a goal of making Manitoba roads safer and fixing MPI.

      So thank you.

The Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Grant.

      Are there any other questions?

Mr. Doyle Piwniuk (Turtle Mountain): Well, thanks, Mr. Grant, for your pre­sen­ta­tion, and thanks for coming here tonight to give us this infor­ma­tion. We ap­pre­ciate it.

      Thank you.

D. Grant: I didn't catch that. Could it be said louder?

The Chairperson: Sorry. Yes.

Mr. Piwniuk: Sorry, I'm actually at the end of the road here.

      Thanks, Mr. Grant, for your pre­sen­ta­tion and coming here tonight to present and give us the infor­ma­tion. I know the value, we all value the safety. I was the minister, at one time, of Trans­por­tation and Infra­structure, and I value this–your concerns about safety on our highways.

D. Grant: Yes, thank you very much for your comments.

The Chairperson: Thank you for your time.

      That concludes the list of presenters I have before me.

* * *

The Chairperson: In what order does the com­mit­tee wish to proceed with clause-by-clause con­sid­era­tions of these bills?

Hon. Nahanni Fontaine (Minister of Families): Excellent. I suggest that we consider the bills in this order: Bill 15, The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act; Bill 6, The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act; Bill 8, The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act; Bill 11, The Statutes and Regula­tions Amend­ment and Inter­pre­ta­tion Amend­ment Act; Bill 14, The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024; Bill 19, The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act; Bill 20, The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act; and Bill 24, The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Amend­ment Act (Dis­tri­bu­tion of Fake Intimate Images).

The Chairperson: Is there agree­ment from the com­mit­tee to read the bills in the following order: bills 15, 6, 8, 11, 14, 19, 20 and 24? [Agreed]

Bill 15–The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amendment Act

(Continued)

The Chairperson: We will begin with Bill 15. So we will now proceed with clause-by-clause of Bill 15.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 15 have an opening statement?

Hon. Adrien Sala (Minister of Finance): Yes.

The Chairperson: All right, Minister Sala, please proceed.

MLA Sala: Grateful to have a chance to speak briefly here about Bill 15, The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act.

      I know folks here all agree that credit unions and caisses populaires play in­cred­ibly im­por­tant roles in our prov­incial economy here. They have over $43.3 billion in assets, and we know that they have a bigger share of deposits than in any other province or territory in Canada. So we know credit unions are just an in­cred­ibly im­por­tant piece of our financial services sector here in Manitoba.

      We do know, however, that credit unions are facing increasing headwinds in Manitoba and across the country with the advent of fintechs, AI, credit unions are facing greater challenges than ever before.

      And we see that and the pressures that they're facing in the fast rate of consolidation of credit unions here in Manitoba. We had at one point over 60 credit unions only a matter of years ago, and now we're down to about 16, or 16 total. So we see that the pressure sort of manifesting in terms of that pace of consolidation, and that continues to happen today.

      We should be deeply proud of what this sector has created here in our province, and our gov­ern­ment celebrates the im­por­tant role of credit unions and the caisses populaires, and the role that they continue to play in serving Manitobans and provi­ding very important financial services.

      Part of ensuring that they can continue to succeed is ensuring that we're listening to them and listening to the needs that they have and that they're bringing forward so we can ensure that they can continue to provide those im­por­tant services and help to play an im­por­tant role here in our prov­incial economy. This bill is one of those responses to us having listened to them, and it was drafted after con­sul­ta­tions with the Credit Union Central of Manitoba.

      It will update several sections in the existing legis­­lation to address a number of issues that have arisen in the operation of credit unions and the caisses populaires, and this is parti­cularly in connection to members' meetings.

      I will just high­light just the key changes that this bill brings forward. First it will permit credit unions to submit proposed bylaw amend­ments to the prov­incial registrar in advance for confirmation that they are con­sistent with legis­lation, and this will help to avoid situations where credit unions submit bylaw amend­ments to its members for approval, only later to learn that that bylaw was not permitted with the registrar.

      It will also no longer permit members to put for­ward proposals, including the nomination of a director, at meetings of members. And the reason for that is because voting can often happen now in advance of those meetings, so this ensures that all members of the credit union have the ap­pro­priate op­por­tun­ity to vote on proposals.

      It will also eliminate the ability of members of a credit union to access the register of members, with certain exceptions. There is no reason to allow such general access, as this creates significant privacy-related concerns.

* (18:50)

      The bill also clarifies that voting at a meeting of members can be by electronic means, which is, of course, in­creasingly the way that voting is taking place at meetings, not only in the credit union sector, but, of course, in all sectors.

      And the bill will also allow manage­ment of the­ credit union to terminate the member­ship of a mem­ber who is engaging in conduct that is abusive, discriminatory or threatens the health and safety of others, coupled with a right–and this is very im­por­tant–of that member to have the termination reviewed by the credit union's board of directors.

      Of course, termination of member­ship would only happen in extreme circum­stances, and in those circum­stances, those members would still have that ability to have, again, that termination reviewed by the board.

      So, in closing, we know that credit unions are, again, a crucial part of our financial services sector. We want to see them thrive. We want to see them con­tinue to succeed. We applaud their con­tri­bu­tion to our prov­incial economy, and we believe this–the amend­ments in this bill will help to ensure that they can continue to do that im­por­tant work.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mr. Obby Khan (Fort Whyte): Well, without repeating a lot of what the minister said–I think he had a lot of this–overlapping notes there, so I won't go into too much detail on that.

      But I do want to say it was a pleasure to work on this bill with various credit unions. Curtis Wennberg, president and CEO of Credit Union Central of Manitoba; I want to thank him and his team for all the work they had done and the discussions we had around this bill.

      This bill is an im­por­tant bill. It is a step in the right direction to support the im­por­tant work that credit unions do, and caisses populaires, within the province of Manitoba.

      And from Ontario born and raised myself, I hadn't had much exposure to credit unions, and this bill–moving here, you get to hear a little bit about them, but reading this bill in detail and having meetings, you actually see the great work they do. It's vital for Manitoba's economy. So this bill is a step in the right direction.

      So I'm happy to see this come forward; however, there is a further discussion to be had, and it was–came up at second reading and the minister acknowl­edged this, and I look forward to working with the minister on this, as well as coming up with further pro­tec­tions and more supports for credit unions.

      Ontario has brought forward legis­lation on bank runs to support their ability to compete and ensure broader market stability. That is im­por­tant with the amount of assets that credit unions are holding. It's im­por­tant to enable direct access to the Bank of Canada's emergency liquidity facilities, and these are discus­sions the minister and I have had.

      I look forward to having many more on these on supporting the very im­por­tant work credit unions and caisses populaires do in Manitoba.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Also, if there is an agree­ment from the com­mit­tee, the Chair will call clauses in blocks that conform to pages, with the under­standing that we will stop at any parti­cular clause or clauses where members may have com­ments, questions or amend­ments to propose.

      Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Clauses 1 through 3–pass; clause 4–pass; clauses  5 through 7–pass; clauses 8 and 9–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 6–The Manitoba Assistance Amendment Act

(Continued)

The Chairperson: We will now consider clause by clause of Bill 6.

      Shall clause 1 pass–oh, sorry, my bad.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 6 have an opening statement?

Hon. Nahanni Fontaine (Minister of Families): First and foremost, I just want to once again reiterate my gratitude to all of the folks that came and presented today. I take every­thing that was said very seriously and, as I said, I do have some of my amazing team here tonight who have been taking notes, and already we are starting to work on some of the recom­men­dations that were brought forward today. So again, miigwech to everybody.

      Bill 6 will enshrine the rights of Manitobans to access adult edu­ca­tion that is ap­pro­priate to their personal circum­stances in the fulfillment of em­ploy­ment and income assist­ance, EIA, program require­ments.

      I was very pleased to see broad support for Bill 6 during its second reading on March 7, 2024. I want to thank my colleagues for their comments, parti­cularly respecting their acknowledgment of the importance of edu­ca­tion and training for individuals on EIA who are trying to achieve financial in­de­pen­dence and stable em­ploy­ment.

      The dev­elop­ment of the bill was informed by con­sul­ta­tions with Manitobans with lifelong expertise in adult edu­ca­tion, including Mrs. Fran Taylor, the direc­tor of the Seven Oaks Adult Learning Centre, and Dr. Jim Silver from the urban and 'inny'–inner-city studies of–from the Uni­ver­sity of Winnipeg. There will be no require­ment to amend regula­tions because of the passage of this bill, as the partici­pation and employ­ment-en­hance­ment measures, it's currently a require­­ment for many Manitobans partici­pating in the EIA program.

      A few concerns were raised after Bill 6 received second reading this spring. One concern was that EIA caseloads could increase as a result. I want to em­pha­size that this bill does not change the eligibility framework for EIA, nor does it sub­stan­tially change current prac­tice. It simply enshrines adult edu­ca­tion as an option for meeting program require­ments in legis­lation.

      I am pleased we have some presenters that agree with us, and we are looking forward to royal assent of Bill 6.

      Miigwech.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mrs. Lauren Stone (Midland): Yes, thank you very much, and I also want to thank all the presenters for coming today and sharing their expertise and their thoughts, and I look forward to diving in some of the reports that were provided to us, at a later date. I know how im­por­tant it is to give vul­ner­able Manitobans as much op­por­tun­ity, free of barriers, not just to survive, but to thrive in our society and move towards financial in­de­pen­dence.

      We know that we do have a labour shortage across our province, and we know that skilled labour is one of the most pressing challenges facing sectors like health care, manufacturing and trades industries. It's im­por­tant that we do protect our adult edu­ca­tion system, as it will ensure adults can develop the skills needed to partici­pate fully in the com­mu­nity and con­tribute to a growing economy.

      Any sort of adult edu­ca­tion has its benefits that stretch far beyond a person's imme­diate environ­ment or situation, and we need to ensure that we do have the right invest­ments in adult learning and skills training to ensure people in Manitoba have the right skills, talent and knowledge at the right time to support economic resilience and growth.

      Thank you.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until other all–until other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Clause 1–pass; clause 2–pass; clause 3–pass; clause 4–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 8–The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

(Continued)

The Chairperson: We will now consider clause by clause of Bill 8.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 8 have an opening statement?

Hon. Nahanni

Fontaine

 (Minister responsible for Women and Gender Equity): To say that I am excited about com­mit­tee tonight, and Bill 8 making it through one more obstacle, or one more process to receive royal assent, is an under­statement.

      As many folks around the table know that I started intro­ducing this bill, I believe, in 2017, this is the sixth iteration of the bill that I've attempted to have passed. It's never gotten to this point; it's never reached past second reading.

      So I am very, very excited and very, very pleased that we're finally here. The purpose of this new act is to protect access to abortion services and to uphold the dignity, security and fair treatment of patients, health-care providers and other health workers.

* (19:00)

      Bill 8 will achieve this by provi­ding safe access zones to prohibit protests and activities meant to harass or influence a person from accessing abortion services or a health-care provider who provides those services.

      No one–no single Manitoban–should be subjected to inti­mida­tion or invasion of privacy based on their personal choice to access a legal health service. I was very pleased and grateful to see the agree­ment from the op­posi­tion on that point during second reading, and I ap­pre­ciate my critic for her comments.

      We've received some comments on the bill, and I would just like to take a couple of minutes to address some of them.

      There was concern that the legis­lation would unfairly restrict the right of freedom of thought, belief, opinion or expression. We conducted extensive legal and con­sti­tu­tional reviews to ensure that Bill 8 strikes a justifiable balance between protesters' rights and pro­tecting access to essential health service as a basic human right.

      I would add Bill 8 is modelled closely on legis­lation in five other provinces and–which have all with­stood charter challenges.

      I also want to em­pha­size Bill 8 does not remove the right of anti-choice Manitobans to protest abortion services. They are welcome to protest as long as they do so outside of an esta­blished access zone, and as I have said for the last six or seven years, they are also more than welcome to protest at the Manitoba Legislative Building.

      Op­posi­tion members have asked: Why not make the legis­lation more com­pre­hen­sive so access to all health-care services are protected from protests?

      We explored extending access zones to cover all health services. Our legal advice was very clear: focus only on measures that are backed up by evidence justifying a reasonable limit on charter rights.

      It is evidence–it is evident that Manitoba facilities provi­ding abortion services are being targeted by anti-choice protesters. We know anti-choice protesters have engaged in verbal harassment, inti­mida­tion, obstruc­tion and more, which impedes Manitobans' access as well as their safety, security and privacy. Applying access zones to all health facilities and services where tar­geted anti-choice protests are not occurring regularly would be an overreach and leave our legis­lation open to con­sti­tu­tional challenges.

      As a result, like other provinces, we are taking a narrower approach to create access zones where there is a clear need to do so to ensure that restrictions on freedom of expression are minimized.

      I also just want to take a quick moment to say miigwech to all of the abortion activists that have supported this, not only here in Manitoba, but cer­tainly across the country, and all of the abortion providers and those that are on the front lines ensuring that Manitobans have access to abortion. This bill is dedi­cated to you.

      Miigwech.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

      Mrs. Cook, please proceed.

Mrs. Kathleen Cook (Roblin): I just have a few comments.

      Initially, my in­ten­tions were to amend this bill. I wanted it to be more com­pre­hen­sive in terms of protecting all Manitoba patients and all Manitoba health-care workers at all Manitoba health-care facilities. And I worked with Leg. Counsel over an extended period of time. But it became clear that an amend­ment such as what I would like to propose would be considered out of scope.

      I still–I want to put on the record that I think it's still possible to take a more even-handed and different approach to this bill. I don't believe the gov­ern­ment should be picking winners and losers when it comes to who can access health-care facilities without wading through protesters or which protests are acceptable or who can protest where. I still believe that that should apply evenly across the board.

      I think all Manitobans should be able to access all health-care facilities, no matter what they're going there for, safely, comfortably, and that goes for health-care workers too.

      And I said this during second reading, and I want to repeat it here so that there's no op­por­tun­ity to misconstrue my contents–my comments–or my intent.

      I believe that abortion services are health-care services, and I just–I really believe that it's not gov­ern­ment's job to decide which protests are acceptable and which ones are not and that they're–I wish that this bill was more even-handed and took a more fair approach to protests across the board at all health-care facilities.

      I ap­pre­ciate the minister's comments and her explanation and, you know, attempting to address those concerns in her opening statement.

      Thank you.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the preamble, the enacting clause and the titles are postponed until other–all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Also, if there is agree­ment from the com­mit­tee, the Chair will call clauses in blocks that conform to pages, with the under­standing that we will stop at any parti­cular clause or clauses where members may have comments, questions or amend­ments to propose.

      Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Clause 1–pass; clause 2 and 3–pass; clause 4–pass; clause 5 and 6–pass; clause 7–pass; clauses 8 through 12–pass; clauses 13 and 14–pass; preamble–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 11–The Statutes and Regulations Amendment and Interpretation Amendment Act

The Chairperson: We will now begin clause by clause of Bill 11.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 11 have an opening statement?

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I do.

The Chairperson: Please proceed, Minister Wiebe.

Mr. Wiebe: Thank you very much, Madam Chair. And good evening to the members of the com­mit­tee here this evening.

      I'm pleased to be here to present Bill 11, The Statutes and Regula­tions Amend­ment and Inter­pre­ta­tion Amend­ment Act, and bring it–bring us through the com­mit­tee stage.

      As you will recall, this bill brings forward amend­ments that are related to keeping the statute book in Manitoba in good order. As previously discussed in the House, the bill deals with three matters primarily:

      (1)  Gender neutrality: Amend­ments will provide two legis­lative tools for updating the language of acts and regula­tions to achieve gender neutrality. The Lieutenant Governor-in-Council is provided with the regulated–regula­tion-making power to make amend­ments to achieve gender-neutral style in Manitoba's regula­tions.

      Amend­ments also provide the Chief Legis­lative Counsel with revision power to replace the exclusive use of masculine or feminine nouns and pronouns or binary pronouns with equivalent gender-neutral nouns and pronouns.

      (2)  Minor amend­ments and corrections in regula­tions: These amend­ments give the Lieutenant Governor-in-Council a restricted, limited regula­tion-making power to make minor or admin­is­tra­tive amend­­­­ments to regula­tions, allowing for efficient updating and corrections of Manitoba's regula­tions; and

      (3)  Proclamation com­mence­ment dates: Amend­ments to the inter­pre­ta­tion act will allow for proclam­ations that bring an act into force be amended or revoked before the coming-into-force date set out in the original proclamation.

      I'd like to note that all statutes and regula­tions will be reviewed by Legis­lative Counsel for general–gender-neutral pre­sen­ta­tion.

* (19:10)

      As a snapshot of the scope of this project, and in response to members of the com­mit­tee's questions previously, there are 512 acts and 1,128 regula­tions in Manitoba that will be reviewed.

      For example, 94 acts and 34 regula­tions contain only references to he, and 239 acts and 238 regula­tions contain references only to he or she.

      Planning is under way in respect to organizing the review of the project, which will be completed using existing resources with no anticipated ad­di­tional costs. And I want to thank our Legis­lative Counsel team for doing this work.

      I'd be happy to answer any questions. I look forward to passage of this bill.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mr. Wayne Balcaen (Brandon West): Well, thank you very much for the op­por­tun­ity to speak on this bill that's before us today at com­mit­tee.

      I had the op­por­tun­ity to speak with the Leg. Counsel staff that were at the bill briefing, and I would like to thank them for their dedi­cation and the time that will be put through this. We just heard over 500 acts, over 1,000 regula­tions that they will go through meticulously to make sure that the gender neutrality is brought forward in this bill.

      I would also like to note that I ap­pre­ciate this gov­ern­ment continuing on the work that our gov­ern­ment had started on neutrality on these bills.

      So, with that, those are my opening comments.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Clause 1–pass; clause 2–pass; clause 3–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 14–The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024

The Chairperson: We will now begin clause by clause of Bill 14.

      Does the 'minner'–minister respon­si­ble for Bill 14 have an opening statement?

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I'm pleased to briefly speak to Bill 14, The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024, better known as MACA, and have it proceed through the com­mit­tee stage.

      As you know, there is an annual omnibus bill that is primarily concerned with correcting typographical, numbering and minor drafting and translation errors in Manitoba's statute book.

      This bill also contains minor amend­ments to several acts. Amend­ments in the bill–in this bill deal with matters that are identified through­out the year by Legis­lative Counsel, gov­ern­ment de­part­ments and other users of our legis­lation.

      The tracking of amend­ments suitable for inclu­sion in MACA is continuous. As soon as the MACA for the current year is intro­duced, amend­ments suitable for inclusion in the next MACA are being prepared by Legis­lative Counsel.

      This year, MACA deals with the amendments in three separate areas.

      Part 1 makes French language im­prove­ments, updates cross-references, citations and terminology and corrects drafting errors to provide clarity and consistency across Manitoba's statute book.

      Part 2 contains amend­ments related to the term associate judge. These parti­cular changes were requested by the judiciary to change the French version of the term from juge puîné [puisne judge] to juge adjoint [associate judge].

      Part 3 makes amend­ments to statutes at the request of the Law Society to reflect the new French name for the Law Society of Manitoba, to be known as Barreau du Manitoba.

      I would like to thank the com­mit­tee for their time and look forward to the passage of this bill.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mr. Wayne Balcaen (Brandon West): Well, once again, thank you for the op­por­tun­ity just put a few quick words on the record for this as the official critic.

      As we know, this is an annual omnibus bill, and we ap­pre­ciate the fact that this will go year after year.

      And again, I would like to reach out and thank the staff from legis­lative services again, because people in the viewing audience and people that are in attendance don't realize the sig­ni­fi­cant work that gets done by this core group of people. So thank you on my behalf.

      I think it's also im­por­tant to note to our hundreds or thousands of viewers tonight and our audience here that I learned at the bill briefing and during dis­cussions that it's very im­por­tant to me is that no substantive changes can happen from this omnibus bill, and therefore, I have no concerns with moving this forward.

      So again, thanks to the Leg. Counsel, and I look forward to further discussion on this bill at com­mit­tee.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Also, if there is agree­ment from the com­mit­tee, the Chair will call clauses in blocks that conform to parts and pages, with the under­standing that we will stop at any parti­cular clause or clauses where members may have comments, questions or amend­ments to propose.

      Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Part 1–pass; part 2–pass; part 3–pass; part 4–pass.

      Shall part–oh, sorry.

      Schedule A–pass; schedule B–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 19–The Drivers and Vehicles Amendment Act

(Continued)

The Chairperson: We will now begin clause by clause of Bill 19. [interjection]

       Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 19 have an opening statement?

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I'm getting too eager here, Madam Chair. I ap­pre­ciate you reining me in.

      Bill 19, the driver vehicle–driver and vehicles act, currently does not allow Manitoba Public Insurance, or MPI, to designate a trailer as salvageable, irrepar­able or rebuilt.

      With the proposed amend­ments to The Drivers and Vehicles Act in Bill 19, the provisions dealing with written-off, salvageable and irreparable motor vehicles would now apply as well to heavy trailers, those with a gross vehicle weight rating over 4,500 kilograms.

      Based on the definitions used in The Highway Traffic Act, the vehicle–The Drivers and Vehicles Act and their regula­tions, anything that references motor vehicles does not include trailers because they are not self-propelled. Currently, trailers auto­matically receive the same normal status designation after they are repaired of after they are reregistered.

      This means that trailers that have been written off can be purchased at a salvage auction and reregistered without being subject to an inspection to verify that they are roadworthy.

      It also means that consumers who subsequently purchase these trailers have no record of their claims history or an accurate esti­mate of their true value. This situation can also happen to trailers purchased from other juris­dic­tions and brought to Manitoba, where they receive normal status upon registration.

      With these proposed amend­ments, MPI will be authorized to designate trailers with the status that accurately reflects their roadworthy con­di­tion and claims history upon registration.

      The bottom line is that this bill is all about road safety, consumer–and consumer pro­tec­tion. These are two things that I'm sure that we can all be in support of.

      Thank you very much, Madam Chair.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official opposition have an opening statement?

* (19:20)

Mr. Doyle Piwniuk (Turtle Mountain): Yes, it's im­por­tant that we become con­sistent when it comes to–especially when there is actually claims with certain vehicles, that trailers are a part of that consistency of knowing exactly the status of any kind of–if that trailer has been in an accident.

      So it's an–very im­por­tant coming from an MPI  back­ground myself, having been insurance agent, I think it's very im­por­tant to also enhance the, basically, consumer pro­tec­tion; to make sure that buyer beware of what they're buying is actually classified properly.

      And just one of the questions of making sure that CARFAX is also part of this whole op­por­tun­ity to give the buyer beware to the consumer.

      And that's some­thing that I would like to just clarify through–with this minister, just to make sure that that's included in the–in this bill.

      Thank you.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Also, if there is agree­ment from the com­mit­tee, the Chair will call clauses in blocks that conform to pages, with the under­standing that we will stop at any parti­cular clause or clauses where members may have comments, questions or amend­ments to propose.

      Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Clauses 1 and 2–pass; clauses 3 and 4–pass; clauses 5 and 6–pass; clauses 7 and 8–pass; clauses 9 and 10–pass; clause 11–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 20–The Highway Traffic Amendment Act

The Chairperson: We will now begin clause by clause of Bill 20.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 20 have an opening statement?

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I do.

The Chairperson: Minister Wiebe.

Mr. Wiebe: I'm pleased to bring forward Bill 20, The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act. This bill amends The Highway Traffic Act to support the imple­men­ta­tion of The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act (Alterna­tive Measures for Driving Offences), which imposed the require­ments for individuals dealt with through alter­na­tive measures to have an interlock–ignition-interlock device in addition to completing an out-of-court impaired driving edu­ca­tion and aware­ness program.

      The Highway Traffic Act already present–pre­vents people from appealing against the ignition-interlock require­ment itself; however, it does not prevent people from appealing the decision of their licence if they refuse to comply with the ignition-interlock require­ment.

      Allowing these appeals would enable these individuals to delay the installation of the interlock–ignition-interlock device, with potential public safety implications.

      The amend­ment will address the appeal loophole in the alter­na­tive measures by allowing Manitoba Public Insurance to imme­diately implement the ignition-interlock require­ment for individuals under­going the alter­na­tive measures program, without the possi­bility of reneging on their obligations for full compliance.

      In this way, the amend­ment will also keep the Licence Suspension Appeal Board from hearing frivolous appeals filed by individuals who have agreed to partici­pate in alter­na­tive measures to avoid criminal prosecution, but then do not comply with that agree­ment, and then have their licences suspended as a result.

      I hope that there is unanimous support of this bill moving forward, and ap­pre­ciate the com­mit­tee's time.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic from the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mr. Wayne Balcaen (Brandon West): I ap­pre­ciate the op­por­tun­ity to speak a little bit about this bill, because it is some­thing that I am quite concerned about and quite passionate about, being a former law en­force­ment officer.

      I spent many years of my career in the traffic section and on general patrol, and would certainly target impaired drivers, because I feel that they cause great dangers on our roads and a very irresponsible act by individuals, putting life in jeopardy.

      So I think this is a very im­por­tant act to close any loopholes and, as we heard from the minister, prevent any frivolous appeals coming before the board.

      I think this robust program that is often sponsored by Manitoba Public Insurance to have police officers dedi­cated to what's called road watches and ensure that impaired drivers are taken off the road.

      Oftentimes, the less serious offences are put through alter­na­tive measures. And the acts are very similar. The–sorry–the punishments are very similar to what would happen if they went through court, but it does save the court time in deferring these cases through the court.

      So closing up any potential loophole certainly helps to ensure that the admin­is­tra­tion of justice is not put into disrepute and people cannot simply thumb their nose an alter­na­tive measures program that is meant to divert them from the court.

      With those words, thank you very much, Madam Chair.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Clause 1–pass; clause 2–pass; clause 3–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

Bill 24–The Intimate Image Protection Amendment Act
(Distribution of Fake Intimate Images)

The Chairperson: We will now begin clause by clause of Bill 24.

      Does the minister respon­si­ble for Bill 24 have an opening statement?

Hon. Matt Wiebe (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Thank you very much, Madam Chair.

      I'm pleased to offer a few comments with regards to Bill 24, The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Amend­ment Act.

      The bill–this bill amends The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Act, which requires the gov­ern­ment to make supports available to assist people who have had or believe they are about to have an intimate image shared without their consent.

      In addition, the act esta­blished a new civil remedy by allowing for a person whose intimate image was distributed without their consent to sue the person who distributed it.

      The emergence of AI-generated so-called deepfake images, which can be hyper-realistic, are a growing concern. It's deeply con­cern­ing that someone acting with malicious intent can create a fake intimate image of another person that appears to be genuine.

      Currently, The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Act is limited to actual photographs or actual film or video recordings. Bill 24 expands the definition to include visual recordings that were created or altered using electronic means including software, machine learning and other types of AI. The amend­ments extend access to civil remedies for those who have had these fake images of them shared without their consent.

      Changes are fully supported by the Canadian Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion and the Uniform Law Conference of Canada. They align with changes made in other juris­dic­tions including New Brunswick, BC, Saskatchewan and PEI. By supporting survivors and giving them ad­di­tional avenues of recourse, they also align with the priorities of the MMIWG2S and Gender-Based Violence Com­mit­tee of Cabinet.

      This is about supporting women, children and all those who are victimized by the sexually exploitive–ex­ploit­ative images, increasing pro­tec­tions for, and em­power­ing victims of, these heinous acts.

      I look for unanimous consent and support of this bill.

      Thank you, Madam Chair.

The Chairperson: We thank the minister.

      Does the critic for the official op­posi­tion have an opening statement?

Mrs. Lauren Stone (Midland): Thank you, and I ap­pre­ciate the op­por­tun­ity to put a few words on the record as it relates to this bill.

      And, you know, it is of utmost priority for our side of the House that we expand and strengthen and enhance our existing legis­lation and laws to protect children, women and vul­ner­able individuals from sexual ex­ploit­ation.

      And I also had a very similar bill on the Order Paper. And I know that the minister and I have the same end goal in mind, and that is to protect individuals from sexual ex­ploit­ation.

* (19:30)

      You know, as we've seen, AI-generated images are moving at a very fast pace across the world, not just here in Manitoba or in Canada but globally, and law en­force­ment has said that, you know, it's expanding at a rate that our laws aren't keeping up with, or necessarily keeping up with.

      We've certainly seen this happen to, you know, stars like Taylor Swift globally; very, very public, but also even within our schools.

      And so I think it's really im­por­tant that we have the tools necessary for our educators to not only enforce but to educate students, staff, educators about the challenges, and about the repercussions of sharing AI-generated sexually explicit images. So it's im­por­tant that we keep that in mind as we move forward.

      You know, we–it's im­por­tant that, on all sides of the House, that we work together, and this is a non-partisan issue; this is about protecting individuals from sexual ex­ploit­ation, and I look forward to this moving into the next legis­lative process stage.

The Chairperson: We thank the member.

      During the con­sid­era­tion of a bill, the enacting clause and the title are postponed until all other clauses have been considered in their proper order.

      Also, if there is agree­ment from the com­mit­tee, the Chair will call clauses in blocks that conform to pages, with the under­standing that we will stop at any parti­cular clause or clauses where members may have comments, questions or amend­ments to propose.

      Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Clauses 1 through 3–pass; clauses 4 through 9–pass; clauses 10 and 11–pass; enacting clause–pass; title–pass. Bill be reported.

      That concludes our bills.

      The hour being 7:32, what is the will of the com­mit­tee?

Some Honourable Members: Rise.

The Chairperson: Com­mit­tee rise.

COMMITTEE ROSE AT: 7:32 p.m.


 

 

Justice Vol. 1

TIME – 6 p.m.

LOCATION – Winnipeg, Manitoba

CHAIRPERSON –
MLA Billie Cross
(Seine River)

VICE-CHAIRPERSON –
Mr. Logan Oxenham
(Kirkfield Park)

ATTENDANCE – 6QUORUM – 4

Members of the committee present:

Mr. Balcaen,
MLAs Chen, Cross,
Messrs. Khan, Oxenham,
Mrs. Schott

APPEARING:

Hon. Adrien Sala, Minister of Finance

Hon. Nahanni Fontaine, Minister of Families and of Women and Gender Equity

Lauren Stone, MLA for Midland

Kathleen Cook, MLA for Roblin

Hon. Matt Wiebe, Minister of Justice and Attorney General

Doyle Piwniuk, MLA for Turtle Mountain

PUBLIC PRESENTERS:

Bill 6 – The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act

Kate Kehler, Social Planning Council of Winnipeg

Josh Brandon, Make Poverty History Manitoba

Jim Silver, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives–Manitoba

Bill 8 – The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

David Grant, private citizen

Bill 15 – The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act

David Grant, private citizen

Bill 19 – The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act

David Grant, private citizen

MATTERS UNDER CONSIDERATION:

Bill 6 – The Manitoba Assist­ance Amend­ment Act

Bill 8 – The Safe Access to Abortion Services Act

Bill 11 – The Statutes and Regula­tions Amend­ment and Inter­pre­ta­tion Amend­ment Act

Bill 14 – The Minor Amend­ments and Corrections Act, 2024

Bill 15 – The Credit Unions and Caisses Populaires Amend­ment Act

Bill 19 – The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment Act

Bill 20 – The Highway Traffic Amend­ment Act

Bill 24 – The Intimate Image Pro­tec­tion Amend­ment Act (Dis­tri­bu­tion of Fake Intimate Images)

* * *