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Sir
Robin Vanderfelt
At the time this article was written Sir
Robin Vanderfelt was Secretary-General of the Commonwealth Parliamentary
Association.
Canada has 13 Parliaments and nearly 1100
Members, of whom 950 belong to the CPA.
Thousands more people serve those
Parliaments or its Members as clerks, executive assistants, Hansard writers,
library staff, secretaries, security and catering staff, as engineers,
messengers, telephone operators and in countless other ways.
The country is vast, it does not know
itself; still less do its Parliamentarians know each other. True, there are far
more meetings between Ministers at different levels than there were. Some 80
Members meet annually in Canadian Regional Conferences (in CPA parlance Canada
is a Region). The Speakers meet for just a day or two as part of the Canadian
Regional Council and yet those gathering in Ottawa one year are not always the
same as those who met a year ago In some cases elections, in others promotions,
have seen to that.
Clerks of Parliament have met annually since
1969 having formed their own Association of Clerks at-the-Table. Yet I have been
privileged to attend Canadian Regional Conferences in Regina, Charlottetown,
Ottawa and Quebec to name but four of the Conferences which have taken place
and most of the Members present did not know each other and were visiting
Saskatchewan, Prince Edward Island, Ontario and Quebec for the first time.
This ignorance has to be overcome for the
sake of Canada and for the sake of the institution of Parliament itself which
must be more finely-tuned to the present day and to tomorrow. There is not too
much time.
This Review will help I wish it all success.
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