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Gary Levy
At the time this article was written Gary
Levy was a member of the Research Branch of the Library of Parliament, Ottawa.
The year 1958 marked a turning point in the
history of the Canadian Branches of the CPA when Nova Scotia invited
representatives from Ottawa and the other provinces for the celebrations of the
200th anniversary of the first elected legislature in Canada. At Halifax. the
delegates appointed a committee to examine the feasibility of regular regional
parliamentary meetings in Canada. In 1960, a conference was held in Winnipeg and
one has been held every year since then, except in 1966 and in 1977 when the
Canadian Branches were hosts to the 12th and 23rd Commonwealth Parliamentary
Conferences. In 1969, it was proposed that conference agendas should include an
item of special interest and an item relating to parliamentary affairs. Over
the years, new rules were adopted which led to the establishment of a permanent
constitution in 1975.
Each year, some eighty parliamentarians from
the thirteen Canadian Branches of the CPA attend the event. The Canadian
Regional Conferences generally take place in August and this year's conference
will be held in Alberta, August 14-18 New Brunswick, British Columbia and
Newfoundland are next in line for the 19th, 20th and 21st annual regional
conferences.
The Canadian Parliamentary seminar,
inaugurated in 1973, has become an established forum wherein Canadian
legislators can discuss common problems and exchange their views and
experiences. The fourth such seminar, held in Ottawa from October 31 to November
3, 1977, saw a further advance in the development of this institution through
the participation of representatives from three Parliaments of Commonwealth
countries in the West Indies.
Up until last year, the meetings were held
in Ottawa in the late fall. At its last meeting, however, the Canadian Regional
Council warmly accepted a proposal from the President of the Quebec National
Assembly that his Branch should this year be host to a special conference where
the discussions will centre on the British Parliamentary System. The Fifth
Seminar will therefore be postponed until the fall of 1979.
The Office of the Regional Representative
was created when the Executive Committee of the General Council of CPA was
established in 1967 to secure representation of all CPA Branches on the
committee. All Branches of the CPA are grouped into seven Regions and, since
1974, each Region is allowed two representatives. Their term of office is for
three years with each period of service so arranged as to ensure that both representatives
of a same Region do not retire at the same time. The first Regional
Representative specifically elected to represent the Provincial Branches was
Harry Blank, MNA, of Quebec, whose term expires in the fall of this year. A new
Canadian Provincial Regional Representative will be nominated at the Canadian
Regional Conference in August.
A Regional Representative is obliged to
attend "mid-year" meetings of the Executive Committee and
Commonwealth Parliamentary Conferences that take place during his term. In
addition, he is usually invited to conferences and seminars that are held in
his Region.
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