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| British Columbia
| Manitoba
| Quebec
| Senate
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Manitoba
The 4th Session of the 36th
Legislature continued to sit during the months of May and June. A
significant portion of Assembly time was spent on the consideration of
departmental estimates in the three sections of the Committee of Supply.
Three departments, Education, Health and Justice, accounted for nearly
40% of the allotted 240 hours, with these departments clocking in at nearly 35,
38 and 23 hours of consideration respectively.
In the Health estimates, a
considerable amount of time was spent discussing a motion by Diane McGifford
on April 27, which recommended that a free vote be held in the Manitoba
Legislature and in the House of Commons on whether to extend compensation to
all persons who have contracted Hepatitis C from contaminated blood products.
After four days of vigorous debate, the motion was defeated on a voice
vote. Subsequently, Ms. McGifford moved another motion which
expressed support for the position taken by the Quebec National Assembly
regarding Hepatitis C compensation, and urged that an extension of the existing
compensation agreement be entered into to provide compensation for all persons
who contracted Hepatitis C from contaminated blood or blood products. The
motion was debated for several days, and by agreement of the Committee was set
aside in consideration of further developments on this issue. The motion
did not ultimately proceed to a vote.
In addition to estimates
discussions, the latter weeks of the session were spent on the second reading,
committee stage, report stage and third reading consideration of legislation.
By session’s end, 57 pieces of government legislation and 4 private bills
passed through all stages and received Royal Assent. Some of the more
notable pieces of government legislation considered include:
- Bill 2 - The Elections Amendment Act, which
grants authorization for the development of an automated voters list,
updates how advance polls are operated, contains provisions for the
revision of voters lists, extends the right to vote to judges,
incorporates administrative practices regarding inmate voting, and which
also strengthens the investigatory power of the Chief Electoral Officer.
- Bill 35 - The Mental Health and Consequential
Amendments Act, which changes confidentiality provisions, certificate
of leave provisions, expands Review Board appeals, grants the Public
Trustee the ability to make treatment decisions for patients who are under
order of supervision in psychiatric facilities, and changes the private
committeeship provisions. In a gruelling marathon committee meeting
held on June 19, the Standing Committee on Law Amendments met from 9:30
a.m. until 8:00 p.m., with several recesses, to hear from the 37 persons
and organizations who had registered to speak to the Bill.
- Bill 36 - The City of Winnipeg Amendment and
Consequential Amendments Act, which extends terms of City Council from
three years to four, gives the Mayor the authority to determine the size
of and appoint members to the Executive Policy Committee, cast tie
breaking votes and temporarily suspend the Chief Executive Officer, as
well as eliminating community committees. In response to a number of
presentations made at committee, Urban Affairs Minister Jack Reimer
introduced amendments to remove the ability of the Mayor to cast
tie-breaking votes.
- Bill 40 - The Domestic Violence and Stalking
Prevention, Protection and Compensation and Consequential Amendments Act,
which provides victims of stalking and victims of domestic violence with
the ability to seek a wide range of civil remedies, and which creates two
different types of orders, protection orders and prevention
orders, that will be available for victims of stalking and domestic
violence.
- Bill 43 - The Victims’ Rights and Consequential
Amendments Act, which outlines a series of rights for crime victims,
including the ability to have information about and meaningful involvement
with criminal proceedings taken against accused persons, the unqualified
right to free legal advice about victims’ rights, the ability to request
restitution, and the entitlement to be informed about rights, potential
involvement in restorative justice as well as the status of criminal
proceedings.
- Bill 57 - The Regional Health Authorities Amendment
Act, which seeks to ensure that health service delivery by health
corporations within a regional health authority are based on written
agreements between the regional health authority and the health
corporation, agreements which include specification of the services
purchased, funding of facilities, and a dispute settlement resolution
process.
Royal Assent was granted to the
government legislation and the private bills on June 29. The
session concluded sitting on that date.
One issue that dominated
Question Period during the last two weeks of sitting and which received
considerable media coverage in the local and national news concerned
allegations by a candidate in the 1995 provincial election that vote splitting
had occurred. Darryl Sutherland, who had run as a candidate for
the Native Voice Party, alleged that he and other candidates, had received
advice and funding from prominent Progressive Conservatives, with the intention
of syphoning votes away from the NDP in the ridings of Dauphin, Swan River and
Interlake. Elections Manitoba had conducted an investigation of the
matter in 1995, and had determined at that time that there was no evidence of
wrongdoing. In response to the resurgence of the issue, Justice
Minister Vic Toews moved a government motion to appoint a public inquiry
headed by the Chief Electoral Officer to investigate the matter under the
provisions of The Manitoba Evidence Act. The motion
was subsequently amended to appoint retired Chief Justice Alfred Monnin
to head the inquiry, after Chief Electoral Officer Richard Balasko asked
that his name be withdrawn, citing concerns with having the confidence of the
Members of the Assembly. The amended motion was adopted on June 29.
Myrna Driedger was elected to represent the Charleswood
constituency for the Progressive Conservatives in a by-election held on April
28, 1998. She most recently served as the Chief Executive Officer of Child
Find Manitoba, has 23 years experience as a registered nurse, and appears in
the Who’s Who of Canadian Women. In addition she has served on a
number of committees, including the Abuse Prevention Services Adult
Advisory Committee of the Canadian Red Cross, a provincial steering
committee on the issue of child prostitution, the Community Safety Committee of
Downtown Biz, the Poverty Advisory Committee and Homeless Children and Youth
Action Committee of the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg. She has helped to
create a program to decrease the number of aboriginal children and youth at
risk of abduction, abuse and exploitation The Charleswood seat had become
vacant with the resignation of Jim Ernst last fall.
Patricia Chaychuk
Clerk Assistant
Senate
The eight-week period between
the resumption of sitting following Easter break and the adjournment for summer
is usually a busy one for the Senate. In addition to debating legislation
already before the Senate from the House of Commons as well as several Senate
initiated items, there are several Government bills sent to the Senate for
speedy consideration prior to the summer adjournment. The scale of the workload
can be measured by the fact the Senate adopted eighteen Government Commons
bills during this period, out of a total of thirty-one enacted thus far this
session. Twelve of these Government bills arrived in the Senate following
Easter, and of these six arrived in June including two supply bills. Four other
Government bills that arrived recently are still on the Order Paper and will be
taken up when the Senate returns to business in late September.
Of the Government bills
considered by the Senate, several are of particular interest. One is Bill C-4, an
Act to amend the Canadian Wheat Board Act. The bill which changed the
governing structure of the Wheat Board and made its buying operations more
flexible generated enormous interest in the prairie provinces. The Senate
Committee on Agriculture and Forestry travelled extensively to gather testimony
from farmers and others who either defended or opposed the existence of the
Wheat Board. In the end, the Committee proposed several amendments to the bill
which sought to accommodate the contending views. These amendments were adopted
by the Senate and subsequently accepted by the House of Commons.
Another bill, Bill C-36, seeking
to implement numerous provisions of the February budget, drew considerable
attention because of the federal Government's $2.5 billion millennium
scholarship fund to assist post-secondary students in financial need. Debate in
the Senate concentrated on the complaint that the establishment of the fund
constituted an intrusion in the field of education, a domain of exclusive
provincial jurisdiction. Two amendments were proposed to the third reading
motion of the bill, but in the end, the bill was adopted without amendment on
June 17 and was among those bills that received Royal Assent on June 18, the
last day of sitting before the summer adjournment.
Still another bill that was the
object of some amendments was Bill C-19, affecting the Canada Labour Code
(Part I) as well as some other Acts. Specifically, Senator Noel Kinsella
objected to the drafting of the bill and the fact that its language was not
gender neutral. He first raised this as an issue when he spoke to the second
reading of the bill June 8 and sought unsuccessfully to have the subject-matter
of the bill studied in committee. During the committee hearings, he again
attempted to make changes to the language of the bill by proposing more than
seventy amendments, but all were rejected. In a final attempt, a twenty-two
page omnibus amendment was moved during debate on the third reading. The
amendment was defeated and Bill C-19 was adopted and passed without any
changes.
Two Senate Public Bills obtained
third reading in June. The first was Bill S-11, sponsored by Senator Erminie
Cohen. It seeks to add social condition as a prohibited ground of
discrimination to the Human Rights Code. In speaking to the bill at third
reading June 9, Senator Cohen noted how poverty tends to marginalize people and
can result in serious breaches in equality rights.
The second, Bill S-13 proposes
to establish a foundation to be financed by the tobacco industry that would
have as its principle objective the reduction of adolescent smoking through the
promotion or establishment of various educational programs.
When the Bill S-13 was first
debated in the Senate, it was the object of a point of order that resulted in a
significant ruling by Speaker Gildas
Molgat. The first point of order raised on March 17 concerned the financial
provisions of the bill; another point of order was subsequently raised on March
25 questioning whether the bill should have been presented as a private bill.
The Speaker ruled on the two
points of order April 2. With respect to the public or private nature of Bill
S-13, the Speaker determined that the bill was introduced as a public bill and
that in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, it could proceed as a
public bill. He also ruled that there was nothing in the bill suggesting that
it appropriated government funds and therefore, there was no need for a royal
recommendation. Finally, the Speaker found that, at least within the context of
the bill, the charge imposed on tobacco products was a levy and not a tax.
Accordingly, as this was not a tax measure that must be introduced in the House
of Commons through a Ways and Means motion, the bill was properly before the
Senate.
Still another legislative
measure, Bill S-15, to provide an alternative to the traditional Royal Assent
ceremony has been reported by the Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee
with amendments, but the Senate has yet to adopt the report and proceed to
third reading.
As with most legislatures, the
final day of sitting prior to any extended adjournment tends to be hectic and
intense. This was certainly true of the Senate on June 18. In the course of a
lengthy sitting, there were several recorded divisions as well as some good
debate. Among the more intriguing debates was that on the motion endorsing the
recommendations of the Krever Commission that had been originally moved by
Senator John Lynch-Staunton, the Leader of the Opposition. Once the
amendment and sub-amendment proposed by the Opposition were defeated by
recorded votes, Senator Michael Kirby on behalf of the Government moved
an amendment limiting Senate's support of the Krever Commission to its first
recommendation and recognizing the leadership role of the federal government in
developing a suitable compensation package for those infected with hepatitis C
through the blood system. Initially the Opposition seemed to object to the
amendment, but following a candid exchange between Senator Lynch-Staunton and
Senator Sharon Carstairs, Deputy Leader of the Government, the Senate
agreed to adopt the amendment and the motion as amended without one dissenting
voice.
Legal and Constitutional Affairs
has been one of the busier committees of the Senate thus far, having received
13 legislative references. One of the bills studied by this committee was Bill
C-220, a bill that had been successfully marshalled by Tom Wappel, MP
through the House of Commons as a Private Member's Bill. The object of the bill
was to deprive convicted criminals the opportunity to benefit from the proceeds
of any book they might write relating to their crime. On June 10, more than seven
months after receiving the reference, Legal and Constitutional Affairs reported
that the bill should not be further proceeded with. In a lengthy statement to
the Senate, Senator Lorna Milne, the Chair of the committee, explained
that, while the committee appreciated the aims of the bill, it is fundamentally
flawed in that it violates the fundamental right of free speech. After several
other Senators made supporting statements, the report was adopted.
In the wake of the episode with
Senator Andrew Thompson, the Senate charged the Standing Committee on
Privileges, Standing Rules and Orders to review the issue of attendance. In an
attempt to deal with this complex question comprehensively, the report proposed
to clarify the process of registering attendance. The committee also proposed
to define the term "attendance to business" in a way that recognizes
the different work performed by Senators aside from being in the Senate during
sittings. In addition, the committee also recommended that the deduction from
Senators' remuneration and allowance be raised to $250 per sitting day for
non-attendance. The report was adopted June 9.
On June 16, the Speaker was
required to rule on a question of privilege raised June 11 by Senator Anne
Cools. She had objected to the announcement that two MPs were proposing to
circulate petition forms supporting the abolition of the Senate to all their
colleagues. In his ruling, the Speaker explained that no prima facie
case of privilege had been established. As the Speaker pointed out, the right
of citizens to petition Parliament on any matter within its jurisdiction is as
old as Parliament itself and, accordingly, it is difficult to see how it can be
a breach of privilege. Be that as it may, the matter is not fully resolved
since Senator Cools has given notice of a motion to have her question, the
Speaker's ruling and the definition of prima facie case referred to the
Committee on Privileges, Standing Rules and Orders.
Senator Cools also complained
about the non-attendance of MPs at meetings of the Special Joint Committee on
Child Custody and Access. After debating the issue as an inquiry, Senator Cools
went one step further June 16 when she gave a notice of a motion to rescind the
decision of the Senate to participate in the Special Joint Committee. It is
expected that the motion will be debated by the Senate when it resumes sitting
in September.
There have been a significant
number of changes in the membership of the Senate in the months leading up to
June adjournment. Among the Senators who left upon reaching the mandatory age
of retirement are Senator Richard Stanbury (Ontario), Senator Duncan
Jessiman (Manitoba), Senator Jacques Hébert (Quebec) and, as of
August 16, Senator Philippe Gigantès (Quebec). To fill the vacancies the
Government has made several appointments, though the Senate is not yet at full
strength. As of August 1, there are still three positions to be filled. The
five most recent appointments are Senator Lois Wilson (Ontario), Senator
Frank Mahovlich (Ontario), Senator Calvin Ruck (Nova Scotia),
Senator Richard Kroft (Manitoba) and Senator Marian Maloney
(Ontario).
Charles Robert
Deputy Principal Clerk
British
Columbia
The current legislative session
continued through July, with a crowded order paper of government initiatives.
To accommodate debate on some contentious matters, the House has been sitting evenings
for several weeks, including several very late nights and one 20-hour
continuous sitting.
Legislation
The central focus of debate in
the House from late June to mid-July was Bill 26, the Labour Code Amendment
Act. Introduced by Labour Minister Dale Lovick (Nanaimo), the bill
would make it easier for unions to organize in B.C.’s non-residential
construction industry. The official opposition, the Liberals, immediately
focussed intense criticism on the bill and extended second reading debate for
some time.
In this, they were aided by the
success of a rare procedural manoeuvre. One of their members, prior to the
usual lunchtime adjournment, moved adjournment of the House without first
moving adjournment of the debate. The significance of the tactic was not
noticed by those government members present in the House at the time, who
allowed the motion to pass. The motion for second reading of the bill thus
became a “dropped order”, forcing the government to place a motion on the order
paper for reinstatement of second reading. The reinstatement motion was opposed
by the Liberals, who pointed to a precedent of the U.K. House of Commons in
which a dropped order was not proceeded with. Speaker Gretchen Mann Brewin
(Victoria-Beacon Hill) was forced to rule on the procedure for reinstatement.
In doing so, she ruled that the re-instatement motion was in order but was
debatable. The opposition then engaged in a protracted debate on the motion,
which passed after five days of debate. The bill finally received second
reading on July 14th, after some 80 hours of debate.
Though the Labour Code
amendments have dominated House business, other significant legislation has
been introduced. On July 17, the government introduced controversial changes to
the Lottery Act. This was in response to a British Columbia Supreme
Court ruling that the regime under which charity casinos had operated in the
province from 1986 to 1997 was improperly structured, and thus was in
contravention of the Criminal Code. The legislative changes seek to
protect the government and charities from legal action in regard to casino
licensing fees that may, as a result of the ruling, have been illegally paid.
The new law would apply retroactively to 1986.
Municipal Affairs Minister Jenny
Kwan (Vancouver-Mt. Pleasant) introduced a bill that, with 321 sections,
makes substantial amendments to the Municipal Act. The bill, part of an
ongoing reform of local government in British Columbia, provides formal
recognition of municipalities as an independent order of government. It also
gives broader corporate powers to municipalities, especially in the area of
public-private partnerships, by limiting interference from the provincial
government.
The Muskwa-Kechika Act would
establish a vast park area in north-eastern British Columbia. At 4.4 million
hectares, the Muskwa-Kechika Management Area, as it is formally called, is
approximately the size of Nova Scotia and contains astonishing biodiversity:
elk, caribou, bison, bears, lynx and dozens of rare and endangered bird
species. Just over one million hectares are to be protected as parkland, with
the remainder designated as special management zones. These zones, in which
only limited, controlled development can occur, are acknowledged to be
important buffer zones, and are being held up as a model for future
environmental protection. The Act is the result of extensive consultation
between government and northern British Columbians, including industry leaders,
environmentalists, scientists, guides, trappers and outfitters and aboriginal
groups.
Nisga’a Treaty
Wednesday, July 15th marked an
historic event in the relationship between the B.C. and federal governments and
aboriginal people. Negotiators representing the federal and provincial governments
and the Nisga’a people finalized the first comprehensive modern aboriginal
treaty in the country. After several years of negotiating with the 6,000-member
Nisga’a people, negotiators signed an Agreement-in-Principle in 1996, which was
referred to a standing committee for public input. A further two years was
required to draft the final text of the treaty, which is widely seen as
providing a model for other aboriginal treaties currently under negotiation in
the province.
Under the proposed treaty, the
Nisga’a people will receive title to 1,930 km2 of Crown land in the
Upper Nass Valley in north-western British Columbia, as well as control over
forests and natural resources. Privately held land is not subject to the
treaty. The Nisga’a will also receive approximately $200 million in
compensation payments and government projects in the area. Self-government
provisions have been described as resembling those of municipalities, but with
some extra powers. They include jurisdiction over health, education and social
services for the Nisga’a, as well as the power to create a police force and
justice system. The Nisga’a government will have the power to tax. In return,
exemptions from federal and provincial income and sales taxes currently enjoyed
by the Nisga’a will end.
Relatively few non-aboriginal
people live on the lands affected, yet early concerns have been raised about
their status. They will not be able to vote for the Nisga’a government, but
will be subject to the laws it creates. However, they will have the option of
using the provincial court system to resolve criminal and civil matters.
Another area of contention is
the ratification process for the treaty. The opposition and other critics are
calling for a provincewide referendum. The government has rejected this option,
instead announcing that a free vote will be held in the Assembly on the
enabling legislation.
Legislative Committees
The Assembly has established a
Special Committee to Review the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI). Chaired
by New Democrat MLA Joan Smallwood (Surrey-Whalley), the committee has
begun receiving briefings on the status of Canada's negotiations with the OECD.
The committee is charged with receiving public submissions on the potential
effects of the treaty on British Columbia.
The Special Committee to Review
the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act was restruck by
the Assembly. At it's first meeting after the session, New Democrat member, Moe
Sihota (Esquimalt-Metchosin), was elected Chair. The committee plans to
hold one final public hearing before reporting to the Legislature on October 4,
1998.
The Select Standing Committee on
Agriculture and Fisheries, with New Democratic Party MLA Bill Hartley (Maple
Ridge-Pitt Meadows) as Chair, will be active this winter holding public
hearings on an agrifood policy for British Columbia. The Ministry of
Agriculture and Fisheries has been in the process of developing an agrifood
policy in consultation with stakeholder groups since 1994, when the ministry
saw the need to examine how food production in the province would be impacted
by post-GATT open borders on food imports and the termination of the Crow rate
and feed freight assistance. The consultation process will produce a final
draft by December, which, through the committee, will be put forward for
consideration by the people of B.C. It is intended that through the stakeholder
and public hearing process, an agrifood policy acceptable to all parties will
be ready to present to the Legislature at the next session.
A Special Committee has also
been appointed to select and unanimously recommend the appointment of an
ombudsman, pursuant to section 2(2) of the Ombudsman Act. Dulcie
McCallum is currently the ombudsman, but her position expires, by statute,
in early August. An order-in-council has extended her term until the committee
reports its recommendation to the House
Resignation of Member
On June 23rd, following events
that garnered national attention, MLA Paul Reitsma resigned as member
for Parksville-Qualicum. Mr. Reitsma was discovered to have been writing
letters to local newspapers under an assumed name in which he attacked his
political opponents and praised himself. Following disclosure of the letters,
he was removed from the Liberal caucus, and local residents launched a recall
campaign under the Recall and Initiative Act - the only such legislation
in Canada. When it appeared that enough signatures had been collected on the
recall petition to enable recall, Mr. Reitsma announced his resignation. A
by-election has not yet been scheduled.
Death of Former Speaker
On July 1st, former MLA and
Speaker Emery Barnes died, following a battle with cancer. First elected
for the New Democrats in 1972, Mr. Barnes had previously played professional
football in the United States and Canada, and had been a social worker in B.C.
Long a champion for the underprivileged, he once attracted significant
attention to the plight of the poor by living for a month in east Vancouver on
the stipend provided to welfare recipients. He was elected Speaker of the House
in 1994, remaining in that position until his retirement in 1996. Current
members from all sides of the House eulogized “Big Em”, noting in particular
his warmth and spirit, and the respect with which he treated friend and foe
alike. His memorial service in Vancouver attracted over a thousand mourners.
Neil Reimer, Committee Clerk and
Wynne MacAlpine, Researcher
Quebec
The extensive hours of meeting
at the Assembly took place from 26 May 1998 to 19 June 1998. During this
period, the Assembly passed thirty-six Government bills - three of which were
adopted within the framework of a motion to suspend rules of procedure - two
private members' public bills and sixteen private bills. Among the more
significant of these are the following:
With regard to health:
- the Tobacco Act, which proposes a body of rules
to regulate the use, sale, advertising and promotion of tobacco and
tobacco products. For example, the operators of restaurants of thirty-five
seats or more where smoking is permitted will be required to set aside
enclosed, ventilated smoking areas. All sales of tobacco to minors are
prohibited as well as all direct and indirect sponsorship associated with
a sports, cultural or social event. The bill provides for a transitional
period for sponsorship contracts already in effect, and a subsidy may be
granted to persons or bodies having proved to the Minister that they have
renounced all sponsorship from the tobacco industry.
- the Act respecting Héma-Québec and the
haemovigilance committee, which covers the supply of blood and blood products
as well as the product collection, processing and distribution operations.
Héma-Québec now replaces the Red Cross in Quebec .
With regard to employment:
- the Act respecting income support, employment
assistance and social solidarity, which introduces, among other
things, three financial assistance programmes and provides for
information, vocational guidance and placement services in order to foster
the economic and social autonomy of individuals and to assist individuals
in their efforts to enter, re-enter or remain on the labour market.
With regard to the environment:
- the Act to provide for the protection of groundwater,
under which no person will be authorized to establish facilities to
extract groundwater, all or part of which is to be marketed for human
consumption, in bottles or other containers, or to increase the rate of
flow in facilities that extract groundwater, all or part of which is to be
used for such purposes, above a certain rate of flow. This bill is of
temporary application, since the provisions contained therein will cease
to have effect on 1 January 1999 at the latest.
With regard to finance:
- the Act respecting the distribution of financial
products and services - before which passage several consultations
were held - which replaces the Act respecting market intermediaries.
It creates a single financial services bureau, the Bureau des services
financiers, whose mission is to protect the public, to issue to qualifying
representatives a certificate authorizing them to act as representatives
in insurance of persons, damage insurance agents or brokers, claims
adjusters, financial planners, group savings plan representatives,
investment contract representatives or scholarship plan representatives.
Representatives will be required to pursue their activities for a firm
which much register with the Bureau. Every legal person having an
establishment in Quebec may register as a firm to offer financial products
and services through representatives, including deposit institutions such
as trust companies and credit unions. Finally, certain insurance products,
such as travel insurance, vehicle rental insurance and credit and debit
card insurance, may be offered by distributors who are not insurance
representatives.
With regard to culture:
- the Act to establish the Grande bibliothèque du
Québec, which provides for the establishment of a library to be known
as the Grande bibliothèque du Québec. The mission of the library will be
to offer democratic access to culture and knowledge. The Grande bibliothèque
(GBQ) will be situated in Montreal.
Speaker’s Ruling
This spring, the Chair was asked
to rule on various matters, two of which were particularly interesting.
In the first case, the Speaker declared
out of order a request by a Member to rise on a point of privilege. The matter
related to another Member of the Assembly with regard to comments he allegedly
made and confidential documents that were tabled in the House on 3 and 4 June
1998 and which implicated the Minister of Revenue.
In his ruling, the Speaker
indicated that the freedom of speech privilege enjoyed by Members ensures that,
when Members accomplish acts within the framework of parliamentary debates,
only the rules of parliamentary law apply. Since this is a constitutional
privilege, it has precedence over all other inferior rules of law contained in
the legal hierarchy, in this case the Act respecting the Ministère du Revenu
and the Act respecting Access to documents held by public bodies and the
Protection of personal information.
Given the absence of rules of
parliamentary procedure regarding the right to privacy, the Speaker of the
Assembly is not empowered to question whether comments made or documents tabled
in the Assembly are contrary to statutes. The Speaker of the Assembly is
empowered to interpret only those statutes containing parliamentary procedure.
Consequently, the Speaker does not have the authority to decide on whether a
Member has allegedly breached certain legislative provisions while outside of
the Assembly, thus warranting a Member to rise on a point of privilege in the
Assembly.
The Chair was also asked to rule
on the validity of suspending the Assembly's proceedings while a recorded
division is in progress. While referring to Standing Order 44, the Speaker
reminded the Assembly that he may, at any time, suspend or adjourn and that
there are no exceptions to the rule regarding the power exercised by the Chair
to preserve order and decorum. As for the second paragraph of Standing Order
103 (which stipulates that if at the hour of rising any division is in
progress, or any question is then being put from the Chair, the proceedings
shall not be adjourned until the sense of the Assembly shall have been
declared), it applies only if a division is in progress at the time appointed
for the suspension or rising of the Assembly.
Other Matters
Since May 1998, the Assembly has
undertaken the task of upgrading its material components and software and has
thus begun replacing its micro-computer resource pool. The project, which
should be completed by March 1999, includes the installation of a new work
environment: word processing shall pass from WordPerfect to Word; Windows 98
will be the initial operating system installed but will subsequently be
replaced by Windows NT5; and Microsoft will be the integrated office technology
used. The choice has not yet been made with regard to the type of software that
shall be used for collaborative work.
On 19 June 1998, the last day of
the session, the Assembly appointed a new Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, Jacques
Girard. Mr. Girard had been Director of Legal Services and Political
Parties Registrar at Elections Canada since 1992. He held a similar position at
the Office of the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec from 1989 to 1991. On the
eve of his appointment, a special bill was passed by the Assembly in order to
formalize Mr. Girard's status, thus making him eligible for the position of
Chief Electoral Officer, given that he had been residing in Ontario for over
two years and no longer had the elector qualifications required for this
appointment.
A by-election held on 1 June
1998 in the riding of Argenteuil was won by Liberal candidate David
Whissell, who was officially welcomed in the Assembly on 10 June 1998,
after having been sworn in by the Secretary General.
Finally, the resignation of the
Liberal Member for Marguerite-Bourgeoys, Liza Frulla, took effect on 1
August 1998. The political parties at the National Assembly now stand as
follows: 74 Members of the Parti Québécois; 45 Members of the Québec Liberal
Party; 3 Independent Members (including 1 Member from the Action démocratique
du Québec Party); 3 vacant seats.
Johanne Lapointe
Secretariat of the Assembly
Translation by Sylvia Ford
Secretariat of the
Assembly
Committees' Report
The spring session was
characterized by considerable time spent in committee for the clause-by-clause
consideration of bills, and an equally great amount of time spent on orders of
initiative, consultations and public hearings on various matters of public
interest.
The Committee on Public Finance,
gave clause-by-clause consideration to a bill containing 490 sections which
henceforth enables Quebec chartered deposit institutions to offer all types of
insurance products. It also undertook an order of surveillance of the Caisse de
dépôt et placement du Québec. This Government agency manages, amongst other
things, the Quebec Government employees' pension plans. In order to more
clearly understand certain issues, the Committee held in-camera sittings to
hear the president and chief executive officer of the Caisse with regard to
contentious issues. One of the recommendations included in the recently tabled
report suggests that an ombudsman handle the cases involving entrepreneurs who
feel they were the victims of wrongful actions or decisions made by the Caisse.
In June, this Committee also
tabled a progress report regarding another order of initiative, this time on
lobbying. The members agreed to hold public consultations on a proposal
concerning the advisability of supervising this activity via a self-regulatory
mechanism.
The Committee on Social Affairs
also kept a very busy schedule with the hearings of the head officers of the
Quebec Pension Board, within the framework of the examination of its
orientation, activities and management and the examination of certain
regulations under the Board's jurisdiction. It also held public hearings on a
bill concerning income support, employment assistance and social solidarity.
Consideration of the bill respecting the reform of social assistance could not
be concluded since it was referred back to the Assembly by means of a motion to
suspend rules of procedure to ensure its passage before the summer holidays. Finally,
a bill prohibiting smoking in certain enclosed spaces and regulating the sale
of tobacco and all advertising and promotion involving tobacco products was
also referred to this Committee for clause-by-clause consideration.
The Committee on Culture, which
had previously held an extensive consultation on the establishment of an
institution whose aim is to provide democratic access to culture and knowledge,
was given a mandate to examine the bill establishing a library to be known as
the Grande bibliothèque du Québec. While pursuing the mission to assert the
importance of reading and to promote Quebec publishing, the Grande Bibliothèque
will also be given custody of the second copy of every published document
deposited, together with a mandate to promote such documents and make them
available to the public.
The Committee on Public
Administration produced its third report on the accountability of deputy
ministers and the heads of public agencies. Referring to the Auditor General's
most recent annual report, the Committee's goal was to clarify the
administrative deficiencies discovered in certain ministries and agencies, and
the thirty-eight recommendations that it made indicate its desire to ensure
that corrective measures be taken as soon as possible. The Committee also
examined the issue regarding casual employment in the public service and came
to the conclusion that the Government should give permanent status to casual
employees who have been at a specific post for five consecutive years.
It should also be mentioned that
for the first time since its establishment, the Auditor General, of his own
authority, tabled a special report in the Assembly. The Committee on Public
Administration was thus required to urgently meet in order to examine the
report on the administrative management of the Public Curator. Rectification
proposals were included in the Committee's report.
One of the more important
mandates of the Committee on Institutions was undertaken in June with the
holding of a consultation on the Calgary Declaration. Close to twenty experts
were asked to express their views on the question during these hearings. The
Committee also heard organizations with regard to a bill amending the
Professional Code so as to allow for the fusion of certain professional orders.
Moreover, the clause-by-clause consideration of a bill amending the Election
Act and the Referendum Act was also entered upon, since the
provisions of the Referendum Act, which are taken from the Quebec
Election Act, concerning the control of electoral expenses had been
rendered inoperative following a ruling, handed down on 9 October 1997 by the
Supreme Court of Canada, in favour of Robert Libman, former leader of
the Equality Party.
After having held consultations
on a bill amending the Mining Act and the Act respecting the lands in
the public domain, the Committee on Labour and the Economy concluded the
clause-by-clause consideration of this bill, which makes substantial changes to
the mineral exploration licences and leases and which replaces the
ground-staking method for obtaining mineral claims by the computerized map
designation method. The Committee also heard the organizations interested in
legislation introducing amendments to the building code and the construction
industry laws.
The Committee held in-camera
meetings with physicist Pierre Couture, whose scientific work at
the Electricity Research Institute of Hydro-Québec had led to the development,
some years ago, of a power-train designed for a hybrid electric vehicle. Following
these meetings with Dr. Couture, the members of the Committee heard
Hydro-Québec's head officers who had been involved in the decision that was
taken at the time to abandon a part of the project.
In recent years, certain events,
such as the floods of July 1996 that occurred in the Saguenay region, have
helped put into perspective the significance of the water management issue in
Quebec. Thus, the Committee on Transportation and the Environment was mandated
to hold consultations within the framework of the clause-by-clause
consideration of a bill providing for the protection of groundwater by
prohibiting the establishment of facilities to extract groundwater to be
marketed for human consumption. It should be noted that these provisions are of
temporary application, since they will cease to have effect on 1 January 1999.
The Committee also held a consultation with regard to a bill that introduces a
new framework for road transport in Quebec. The bill in question, the Act
respecting owners and operators of heavy vehicles, aims at increasing the
safety of road users and preserving the integrity of the road network.
During this busy work period,
the Secretariat of Committees was visited by the Clerk of the Committee on
Natural Resources, National Wealth and the Environment from the Chilean House
of Representatives, within the framework of a training programme organized by
the Follow-up Committee of the Parliamentary Conference of the Americas. The
Secretariat also was host to a delegation of four executive officers of the
Haitian Senate Committees' Branch on the occasion of a study programme on
parliamentary committee operations. A few weeks prior to this, a professional
from the Secretariat of Committees, Denise Lamontagne, had been sent to
the Haitian Parliament for a one-week observation period.
Finally, Doris Arsenault
was recently appointed Director of the Secretariat of Committees. Mr. Arsenault
had been coordinating this branch for the past eight years. He is also Clerk of
the Committee on the National Assembly and of the Committee on Agriculture,
Fisheries and Food.
Nancy Ford
Clerk of the Committee on Labour and the Economy
Translation by Sylvia Ford
Secretariat of the Assembly
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