LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

Monday, October 3, 2022


The House met at 1:30 p.m.

Madam Speaker: O Eternal and Almighty God, from Whom all power and wisdom come, we are assembled here before Thee to frame such laws as may tend to the welfare and prosperity of our province. Grant, O merciful God, we pray Thee, that we may desire only that which is in accordance with Thy will, that we may seek it with wisdom and know it with certainty and accomplish it perfectly for the glory and honour of Thy name and for the welfare of all our people. Amen.

      We acknowl­edge we are gathered on Treaty 1 territory and that Manitoba is located on the treaty territories and ancestral lands of the Anishinaabeg, Anishininewuk, Dakota Oyate, Denesuline and Nehethowuk nations. We acknowl­edge Manitoba is located on the Homeland of the Red River Métis. We acknowl­edge northern Manitoba includes lands that were and are the ancestral lands of the Inuit. We respect the spirit and intent of treaties and treaty making and remain committed to working in part­ner­ship with First Nations, Inuit and Métis people in the spirit of truth, recon­ciliation and col­lab­o­ration.

      Good afternoon, everybody. Please be seated.

ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS

Madam Speaker: Intro­duction of bills? Com­mit­tee reports? Tabling of reports?

Ministerial Statements

Madam Speaker: The hon­our­able Minister of Families–and I would indicate that the required 90 minutes notice prior to routine proceedings was pro­vided in accordance with rule 26(2).

      Would the hon­our­able minister please proceed with her statement.

Women's History Month

Hon. Rochelle Squires (Minister responsible for the Status of Women): Madam Speaker, I'm proud today to stand up and announce that October, of course, is Women's History Month in Canada. It is an annual tradition for us to celebrate the achievements of women throughout our history and recognize the trailblazers who have shaped our country and our way of life.

      Here in Manitoba, we recognize the essential role that women in communities across our province have played in shaping our province's past and future.

      Manitoba has a proud history of strong, ambitious women, standing up and fighting for change. Right here in this Legis­lative Assembly, we have seen some historic moments for women with the first Clerk of the executive assembly to be here in our presence today. We have the first elected Indigenous woman in the province's history with the MLA for The Pas-Kameesak here. As well, of course, we have the first woman Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) in our midst as well right here.

      So, con­gratu­la­tions to all these women for the groundbreaking roles that they play and for the gen­era­tions of women behind them that they are inspiring.

      I encourage all Manitobans to take a moment this month to think about, learn and celebrate amazing women who have helped shape this province.

      In 2020, our government announced a way to celebrate these women with the empower awards. Last year, we had a ceremony at the Fort Gibraltar and recognized two winners, Divya Sharma and Lorie English, for the hard work that they did during the pandemic, especially to support women in our community.

      We're pleased to announce earlier this year that we would be opening up these awards once again. This year, the theme is women working towards reconciliation and healing.

      Two deserving Manitoba women, one adult and one youth, will be honoured at the 2022 Empower Women Awards on October 20th of 2022. Many women and youth were nominated this year, from a variety of sectors and areas of Manitoba.

      The award winners will be selected based on the overall strength of their nomination as well as com­munity involvement and intersectionality of their efforts, along with addressing systemic issues, lasting change and scale of response.

      I look forward to learning about each of this year's nominees, which include artists and dancers, com­munity organizers and activists, former and aspiring politicians, and aviation and STEM educators.

      I want to thank all of those who are nominated, as well as those who did the nominating, for recognizing the importance work of those in our com­mu­nity, and I certainly look forward to seeing members of the Legis­lative Assembly attend that ceremony to recog­nize, esta­blish and honour these women.

      So, happy Women's History Month.

      Thank you very much, Madam Speaker.

Madam Speaker: Further min­is­terial statements? [interjection]

      Oh, pardon me, the hon­our­able–sorry–the honourable member for Notre Dame.

MLA Malaya Marcelino (Notre Dame): Madam Speaker, since 1992, October has been celebrated as Women's History Month, making this year its 30th anniversary. It is a time to celebrate the remark­able achievements of women throughout history, and to reflect on the changes we still need to make to achieve gender equality today.

      We must also use this time to remember that we still have much more to do. Every achievement a woman has made has been done in spite of the barriers that we continue to face. The gender pay gap in Canada persists, and is even more pronounced for racialized and Indigenous women as well as new­comers and women with disabilities.

      Women are still overrepresented in low-wage jobs and in low-paid care-sector jobs. Even though this is crucial work, these jobs are undervalued be­cause of their gendered associations. Many racialized and newcomer women work in severely underpaid care sectors, including home care, long-term care and as direct support professionals. Despite the critical importance of this work, particularly as we face a health-care staffing crisis, many are forced to work with no benefits or full-time status.

Supporting these women workers needs to be central to our Health human resource strategy for our province as we continue to navigate this pandemic and as we prepare for Manitoba's aging population. This work is critical to care.

      This Women's History Month, let's uplift the achieve­ments of all women, and continue to fight for justice and equity for women workers.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Ms. Cindy Lamoureux (Tyndall Park): I ask for leave to respond to the minister's statement.

Madam Speaker: Does the member have leave to respond to the min­is­terial statement? [Agreed]

Ms. Lamoureux: Here in Canada, we recognize Women's History Month in October, and I always appreciate using this opportunity to talk a bit about milestones we have accomplished as women and con­cerns that are very real and applicable to us to this day.

      This year, however, I would like to use this as an opportunity to highlight a few women in this House.

      Madam Speaker, I want to start with the Minister of Municipal Relations (Ms. Clarke). In the spring, the minister went out of her way and dedicated time to sit down with myself and a member from the NDP to talk about ways us, as MLAs, could better work together. This initiative she took really inspired me and demon­strated the importance of working together.

      The second member I would like to recognize is the member for The Pas-­Kameesak (Ms. Lathlin). Madam Speaker, this member has always been kind in her approach and I believe that, because of this, when she talks, people listen. This member motivates me to remain focused.

      Lastly, Madam Speaker, I want to recognize our Clerk, Patricia Chaychuk. Patricia does an incredible job at maintaining records of parliamentary pro­ceed­ings and ensuring orders of the day are followed. There is a lot more to the job, but what I really admire about her is her professionalism. No matter the topic or proceeding, I believe her professionalism speaks to the respect she has for our institution.

* (13:40)

      Madam Speaker, my hope is that by highlighting women on both sides of the House, as sitting MLAs and our Clerk, who we all know really runs this House, we remind ourselves of the impact that women in all parties, partisan or non-­partisan, have in our workplace and I think we need more of it.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Madam Speaker: Further min­is­terial statements?

      The honourable Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage–and I would indicate that the required 90 minutes notice prior to routine proceedings was provided in accordance with our rule 26(2).

      Would the hon­our­able minister please proceed with his statement.

Islamic History Month

Hon. Andrew Smith (Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage): I rise today to recog­nize and celebrate Islamic History Month, which our province observes annually in the month of October.

      Manitoba became the first Canadian province to proclaim an Islamic History Month, and through many contributions to our cultural, social, scientific and economic spheres, Muslim communities have played an important role in our continually evolving provincial and national identities.

      For over 150 years, Muslims have called Canada home. The first census, conducted in 1871, reported 13 Muslims among the population of Canada. By the time the nation's first mosque was built in 1938, there were close to 700 Muslims in our country. It is truly a Canadian act, as the mosque was founded and built by a 'colotion' of people from different faiths.

      Following changes to the national immigration policies in the 1960s, Canada's Muslim community grew, and today it is one of the country's most di­verse groups, representing many distinct cultures, ethnicities, languages, practices and traditions.

      Locally, this diversity was demonstrated recently at Winnipeg's Eid celebration in May. This event attracted over 10,000 members of the Muslim community to gather, pray and give charity in congregation with each other

      Whether you are in a small town or a big city, the impact of Manitoba's Muslim community is evident through their contributions to volunteerism in the arts, creative industries, sports, business, medicine, educa­tion, the trades, politics and, of course, public service. This 'dedigation' to com­mu­nity building exemplifies one of the core values that unites so many of us Manitobans.

      However, we cannot, Madam Speaker, overlook the fact that many Muslims, locally and abroad, have endured many struggles. And despite instances of hurtful acts, Manitobans have chosen to move forward in unity to continue to enhance life in our province based on our commitment to 'faciltilate'–facilitate respect, understanding and celebration of diversity. When people of all backgrounds are welcomed, our collective perspective expands, creating a province that is richer and more fulfilling for all Manitobans.

      Madam Speaker, I'd encourage all Manitobans to take advantage of the activities and events taking place throughout the month to better understand the contributions of Muslims to our province, and I ask those present to join me in celebrating the start of Islamic History Month 2022.

      Thank you.

Mr. Diljeet Brar (Burrows): It is my honour to rise today to speak to Islamic heritage month. Under our previous government, Manitoba became the first province in Canada to proclaim such a month to recognize and celebrate the history and heritage of Manitoba Muslims.

      Diversity is our strength. We are fortunate to share cultural traditions with our neighbours.

      This month we are celebrating and recognizing the importance of Islamic history and heritage. Manitobans and Canadians have an opportunity this month to learn more about the history of Islam in Canada and recognize many achievements of Muslim Canadians in the arts, sports, academics, sciences, literature and their communities.

      It is also a time to acknowledge the ongoing challenges and barriers that Muslim Canadians face. This month is an opportunity to recognize and address continuing racism and hate that we must fight against.

      Together, we must combat all forms of dis­crimination, Islamophobia and hate-fuelled violence directed at Muslim communities. This month is a time to continue working towards a compassionate, in­clusive and safer Canada for everyone.

      As we celebrate Islamic heritage month this month, I encourage all Manitobans to take the time to participate in local cultural events and learn more about the resiliency and strength of Muslim Canadians in Manitoba and around the world.

      I want to wish a happy Islamic heritage month to all.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Madam Speaker, I ask leave to speak to the minister's statement.

Madam Speaker: Does the member have leave to respond to the statement? [Agreed]

Mr. Gerrard: In Manitoba, Madam Speaker, we have an ever-growing Islamic community. It includes many born in Canada and many who immigrated from various countries around the world.

      We are fortunate here to have leaders in the Islamic com­mu­nity, including Albert El Tassi and Shahina Siddiqui, who have worked very hard to build bridges with other communities in our province.

      Because of this work, on many occasions, political and faith leaders in Manitoba have stood strong against discrimination directed against those in the Islamic community.

      Some years ago, I attended a talk in Winnipeg by Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish, a Palestinian doctor, born and raised in the Jabalia refugee camp in Gaza. He worked as a doctor in both Israel and Gaza before coming to Canada. As a humanitarian, he sees the need for im­proved health and education for women as the way forward.

      On January 16, 2009, his three daughters and his niece were killed in the fighting in Gaza. In spite of the loss of his daughters and, indeed, in response to it, he wrote a book titled I Shall Not Hate, dedicated to finding a way for us all to live together in peace.

      The Islamic community has demonstrated that it has both strength and compassion. In the last year, I've worked closely with many in the local Islamic community to help refugees who've escaped from Afghanistan or are trying to escape and to come to Manitoba, including many who want to join their relatives here. The stories I hear are compelling and heartbreaking, and it's heartwarming that Manitobans are listening and helping.

      Last Saturday evening, the Nigerian Association of Manitoba banquet featured both Christian and Islamic prayers before dinner, an acknowledgement of the two major faiths of people from Nigeria.

      Thank you for the op­por­tun­ity to speak.

Merci. Miigwech.

Members' Statements

Daniel Alexander Stokes

Hon. Eileen Clarke (Minister of Municipal Relations): Life as we know it can change in a day or even a moment.

      Too often we neglect to say the things we wish later that we had or would spend a bit of time more with someone we–really needed that time or a gesture of kindness and friendship could've changed some­one's day or even their life. We need to live without regrets; it would make our world a better place for everyone.

      On July 24th, 2022, the life of David [phonetic]–Daniel Alexander Stokes, my special assist­ant, ended very quickly, at the young age of 24 years. His family was devastated by his sudden death, as were we, his political family and friends. He was a healthy and a vibrant young man with so much energy and so many friends in his life. His future was full of opportunities, and he was an inspiration to all who knew him.

      His service of remembrance was attended by an overwhelming number of family, friends and col­leagues. Even his special pet, Murphy, attended with his family. I had so much respect for this young man who had such a pride and confidence and could share his personal feelings with all of us. He fulfilled the requirements of his government position with skill and diplomacy.

      Days after his service, his parents, Angie and Rich, and his siblings, Adam and Lauren, came to our office to pick up his personal belongings, receive some special gifts from his colleagues and share a time of remembrance with our staff and work friends.

      What we expected to be a tearful and sombre event turned into many funny stories from everyone, including his family, about Daniel and his structured life. He had been a shining star in all our lives; we had so many amazing memories. The meeting ended with a family photo of all of us, many hugs and our hearts feeling a sense of appreciation for his short life and his time with all of us.

      Many people live long and productive years while some are only given a short time to fulfill God's plan for them. At Daniel's service, the priest spoke of his strong and unwavering commitment to his faith. That was the young man as we knew him.

      Daniel is missed but he lives in our hearts and he walks the halls of this Legislature, keeping an eye on all of us.

So today I encourage all of you, speak the words, do the deeds, be respectful to all others and live your life with purpose and conviction. Tomorrow is not promised.

I ask you all to show your support for Daniel's family, his mom and dad, Rich and Angie, his brother Adam and his uncle, Patrol Sergeant Ward Gordon, who are with us today.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

* (13:50)

International Walk to School Month

Ms. Lisa Naylor (Wolseley): Madam Speaker, October is International Walk to School Month and October 5th is Walk to School Day. During this month, children and their families are encouraged to walk to school instead of driving. And in Manitoba, activities are organized by the Green Action Centre as part of their Walktober campaign.

      I want to welcome staff from the Green Action Centre that are here today.

      Walktober focuses on creating healthy routines of active transportation within the community and is an opportunity for students to explore their neigh­bour­hood and build confidence by safely walking or biking to school. They provide workshops and activity kits for classrooms, including activities that can be adapted to rural areas. For many years, Green Action Centre has promoted the model of a walking school bus in neighbourhoods where that is feasible.

      There are many benefits to walking. Time spent outdoors in the fresh air means a more energized start to the day for students. This helps improve students' concentration and the added physical activity contributes to better health. Active school travel reduces car trips, which reduces our carbon footprint. It also reduces traffic congestion around schools that is directly linked to poor air quality from the con­centration of greenhouse gas emissions around the entrance to schools.

      Studies show that diesel school buses contribute to the development of asthma in children and can harm brain and lung development. Walk to school month is an excellent time to bring attention to the harms of fossil-fuelled forms of travel, explore solu­tions such as transitioning to electric school buses and reduce barriers to using active travel in urban areas.

      Manitoba students are not alone: International Walk to School Day takes place in 40 countries around the world. And while walking to school may have been the norm for many of us in the past, today families must be more intentional about joyful movement, taking the time to breathe in the outdoors and to appreciate and protect the environment we are trying to preserve for our children.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Makenna Stratton

Hon. Andrew Smith (Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage): Madam Speaker, I rise today to tell a story of a courageous youth and her family who live in my constituency.

      Makenna Stratton has always been a loving, caring and energetic child with many, many friends. September of 2021, she was so happy to be starting grade 7 at Christ The King School with her peers.

      On October 20th, her mother Monique brought her to the Children's Hospital and were then told some­­thing no parent ever wants to hear: that Makenna had cancer, acute myeloid leukemia, or AML.

      This form of leukemia is high risk, aggressive blood and bone marrow cancer that requires extremely aggressive treatment. She was admitted that day and set up on a clinical trial, with chemotherapy to begin on October 22nd.

      Before therapy was to start, she gracefully opted to have her long hair shaved off and donated to make wigs for others undergoing chemotherapy. It was at this point that the reality of the journey with childhood cancer began for Makenna and her family.

      Her rigorous treatment plan was five cycles of adult-strength chemotherapy, just over 100 doses, and countless blood and platelet transfusions, all of which took six and a half months to complete. She spent 203 days on CK5, the pediatric cancer ward at HSC Children's Hospital, and 13 days at PICU, fighting for her life against a 'neuropenic' infection.

      While Makenna was enduring the battle, she had overwhelming support from her family and extended network of friends and volunteers from many organiza­tions. One such group in particular, the Candlelighters Childhood Cancer Support Group of Manitoba and their director, Naomi Fehr, raised $27,000 in 24 hours after reading a post from Monique about her daughter's situation in January of this year. The money was raised in order to feed all the families on the pediatric cancer ward through to the end of February.

      After so many difficult months of fighting cancer, I am happy to say that on May 10th, Mighty Makenna, as she's become known for her courage and bravery, was discharged from CK5, and she rang her remission bell that very day.

      Please join me in recognizing Makenna and her family: Monique, Geoff and Tyler Stratton, who are here with us today.

All Abilities Soccer Program

Mr. Jamie Moses (St. Vital): Madam Speaker, today I recognize the Bonivital Soccer Club for launching a new initiative called the All Abilities Soccer Program, starting with a pilot project this October 29th and 30th.

      Every child deserves a chance to build lasting friendships, make memories and feel like they be­long. The All Abilities Soccer Program, created by dedicated coach Jason Moist, who is in the gallery with us today, along with club executive director Steven Gzebb, will look to provide children and youth, ages nine to 16, with intellectual or physical dis­abil­ities, an opportunity to learn and play soccer. The fully inclusive program is designed and adapted for children and youth with any ability.

      The All Abilities Soccer Program strives for an inclusive environment where all children and youth are given their opportunity to shine. Whether a child uses a wheelchair, walker, lives with an intellectual, communication or developmental disability, the club's goal is to provide support to all and welcome all to the field.

      The emphasis of this program is on development and meaningful partici­pation, rather than competition. The All Abilities Soccer Program will benefit children by helping them develop a sense of belonging to community and club, learn the value of being part of a team, improve self-esteem, as well as improve fitness and social skills.

      Families will receive a fun and meaningful ex­perience for all. Games and activities will be adapted to ensure every child's participation. The program is  run in a safe and healthy environment, and participants' parents will have the opportunity to network with other families for support and infor­ma­tion sharing.

      For details on All Abilities Soccer Program, please visit bonivitalsoccer.com.

      I invite all members to join me in celebrating the work of the Bonivital Soccer Club, coach Jason Moist, executive director Steven Gzebb, and all staff and volunteers at the club.

      Thank you.

Norma Wood & Joe Wiwchar

Hon. Cameron Friesen (Minister of Finance): Madam Speaker, today I recog­nize Norma Wood, the head leader of the Morden Achievers 4-H Club. Norma has been a part of Morden Achievers 4-H since it started 40 years ago. Norma embodies the key values of 4-H: head, heart, hands and health.

      Former 4-H leader Cathy Sandercock said you cannot think about 4-H without one person's name coming to mind, and that's Norma. As a leader, her kitchen table was a safe place for children of every faith, background and education level.

      She shared sewing skills and a zest for knowledge with four generations of youth in the com­mu­nity. She  led the club; she co‑ordinated com­muni­cation competi­tions, achievement nights, ditch cleaning, fund­raisers, and even decorated the 4-H parade float every year in Corn and Apple with volunteers. She's been recognized as the longest serving 4-H leader in the province.

      Thank you, Norma, for sharing your knowledge and investing in children all these 40 years.

      Madam Speaker, I rise today to recog­nize Morden resident Joe Wiwchar. Joe has managed the Manitoba Baseball Hall of Fame and museum since it–the day it opened in 1999, at Access Event Centre in Morden, collecting artifacts, celebrating outstanding athletes, coaches and officials and, of course, running the annual induction ceremony.

      He's considered a cornerstone of the Manitoba baseball com­mu­nity. He's been an amazing repre­sentative of baseball, working with countless youth and as a baseball coach continuously since 1953. Joe has worked with prov­incial, western, and national teams. He's been a player, a coach, an umpire, a mentor and an administrator.

      One of the quotes Joe loves to live by is: I feel that the greatest reward for doing is the opportunity to do more.

      Madam Speaker, we want to wish Joe all the best as he slides into retirement and thank him for the countless hours that he has given to baseball in Manitoba.

Introduction of Guests

Madam Speaker: I would now like to draw the attention of all hon­our­able members to the public gallery where we have with us today Tina Beaudry-Mellor, who is the former Saskatchewan Party minister of advanced edu­ca­tion and the status of women and innovation, who is the guest of the honour­able Minister of Families (Ms. Squires).

* (14:00)

      On behalf of all hon­our­able members here, we welcome you here to the Legislature today. 

Oral Questions

St. Boniface Hospital Foundation
Donations for ER Remodel

Mr. Wab Kinew (Leader of the Official Opposition): Madam Speaker, for years Brian Pallister and the Premier cut our health‑care system. They forced those on the front lines and patients to undergo tre­men­dous adversity and difficult situations. And instead of investing in health care, the Premier forced our hospitals to ask for private money to fund essential health‑care services.

      I'll table a letter from the St. Boniface Hospital Foundation which hit doorsteps in Winnipeg recently. It asks for donations to help fund the construction of the emergency room at St. Boniface Hospital, asking Manitobans to chip in private dollars to pay for the emergency room at St. B, which the gov­ern­ment should rightly be footing the bill for.

      Why is the Premier forcing our hospitals to ask for donations for essential health‑care services?

Hon. Heather Stefanson (Premier): Thank the Leader of the Op­posi­tion for the question.

      In fact, we've been out listening to Manitobans, Madam Speaker. We've been taking action when it comes to health care on their behalf and we've been getting things done.

      The Leader of the Op­posi­tion mentions the St. Boniface ER expansion, and I'm proud to announce, as I did months ago, along with the Minister of Health (Ms. Gordon), at St. Boniface, Madam Speaker, $141‑million invest­ment into the emergency room at St. Boniface Hospital.

      Madam Speaker, we will continue to take action on behalf of Manitobans.

Madam Speaker: The honourable Leader of the Official Opposition, on a supplementary question.

Mr. Kinew: Madam Speaker, instead of funding new surgery spaces at the Concordia Hospital, the Premier said that the Concordia hospital foundation would have to ask for donations.

      That's wrong. We should be investing in public health care. We should be investing in essential services like operating rooms in which to deliver surgeries.

      Now today, again, we learn that foundations are fundraising for another essential project. This time it's the emergency room at the St. Boniface Hospital.

      This project shouldn't depend on private dona­tions from Manitobans. This is the Health budget. This is the clearest definition that we could be talking about: building an emergency room. We should be investing in our hospitals instead of cutting them.

      Will the Premier stop forcing hospitals to ask for donations for projects they should be paying for, such as the St. B ER?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, once again, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is misleading and doesn't–won't stick to the facts, Madam Speaker.

      So, the facts are that we are investing more than $1 billion more than the NDP ever did in our health‑care system in the province of Manitoba because we are listening to Manitobans, we're taking action and we're getting things done; $141 million more for the emergency room for St. Boniface Hospital.

      It is nothing new in the province of Manitoba. It's been taking place for decades, where philanthropy is live and well in Manitoba, where Manitobans want to contribute to our health-care system, Madam Speaker, and we will continue to rely on them and work closely with them to ensure that Manitobans get the health care they need when they need it.

Madam Speaker: The honourable Leader of the Official Opposition, on a final supplementary.

Mr. Kinew: I just wanted to acknowl­edge that the Premier confirmed that she's going to rely on private donations to fund essential health-care services.

      It's much like on the first day of this session when she said she was going to increase the amount of contracting out. First with Concordia Hospital, and now with St. Boniface Hospital, we see this gov­ern­ment–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Kinew: –relying on private money to pay for essential services that should be paid for by the gov­ern­ment.

      It's a fun­da­mental Canadian value that you should have uni­ver­sal access to health care through a public system. And yet we're just not getting that sort of invest­ment from this gov­ern­ment. The Premier needs to reverse course.

      Will she stop forcing St. Boniface Hospital Foundation to ask for donations for their emergency room and instead pay for it out of the public resources?

Mrs. Stefanson: Surely, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is not saying that we should cancel the foundations through­­out our province, Madam Speaker. These com­­­mu­nity con­tri­bu­tions have been the backbone of our province for decades.

      I'll rely–I'll remind the member opposite, during the dark days of the previous NDP gov­ern­ment, com­mu­nity con­tri­bu­tions took place even back then. But I'll remind him again–$141 million to the emergency room at St. Boniface Hospital.

      We will continue to make invest­ments to these in­sti­tutions in the province of Manitoba, Madam Speaker. Question is, what's his plan, or does he have one?

Madam Speaker: The hon­our­able–[interjection] Order.

      The honourable Leader of the Official Opposition, on a new question.

Winnipeg Health Region
Number of Surgeries Performed

Mr. Wab Kinew (Leader of the Official Opposition): Madam Speaker, our plan on this side of the House is simple: uni­ver­sal public access to health care for Manitobans.

      We know that one area where this gov­ern­ment has failed Manitobans is when it comes to getting timely access to surgeries. Too many Manitobans are waiting, and new data from the Winnipeg Regional Health Author­ity proves just how dire this situation actually is.

      The Stefanson gov­ern­ment performed 440 fewer surgeries in the entire Winnipeg health region last year than the year prior. I'll table the proof of this. It's clear that there is a failure when it comes to the prov­ision of surgeries. It's why so many Manitobans are speaking out against this gov­ern­ment on health care.

      Will the Premier tell this House why her gov­ern­ment performed fewer surgeries last year than when Brian Pallister was the premier?

Hon. Heather Stefanson (Premier): Well, Madam Speaker, first of all, I want to thank those who are taking time out of their busy schedules to work and help us out on the diag­nos­tic and surgical task force. They are working day in and day out to ensure that Manitobans can get the surgical and diag­nos­tic procedures they need when they need them.

      We have invested more than $110 million in the surgical and diag­nos­tic areas within our province and we will continue to make those invest­ments. We are partnering out there in the com­mu­nity to ensure that we expand the number of surgical procedures that can take place to ensure that more Manitobans get access to those surgical procedures, not less.

      If the NDP were in charge, they wouldn't allow that at all. That's thousands of surgical procedures that they wouldn't allow at all. They would say no to that. I can tell you, we will stand for Manitobans and get them the health care they need when they need it, Madam Speaker.

Madam Speaker: The honourable Leader of the Official Opposition, on a supplementary question.

Mr. Kinew: Madam Speaker, the problem is that Manitobans are not getting the health care they need with this gov­ern­ment.

      Again, I'll table another set of docu­ments here, further proof of this gov­ern­ment's failure to deliver surgeries. If we zoom in at the Health Sciences Centre, we see that there were many more surgeries last year than the year prior, and there were thousands fewer surgeries that year than in 2019.

      The record of this gov­ern­ment is clear. Their actions have only made the surgical backlog worse–500 fewer surgeries in our province at the HSC. That's because–that means seniors are waiting for hip, knee and other im­por­tant procedures. That's wrong.

      Will the Premier explain to the House why the PC gov­ern­ment is falling further behind when it comes to surgeries?

Mrs. Stefanson: Madam Speaker, the docu­ment that the Leader of the Op­posi­tion just tabled before this House obviously indicated some years that we were going through a worldwide pandemic–a worldwide pandemic. That's when things were shut down. It was a very, very challenging time. And there weren't as many surgical and diag­nos­tic procedures taking place at that time.

      Now, I mean, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion doesn't like the truth. He doesn't like the facts. But the facts are that we are investing more than $110 million more to ensure that Manitobans get the surgical and diag­nos­tic procedures that they need when they need them, Madam Speaker. And we are–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mrs. Stefanson: –looking to expand that capacity beyond just our hospitals here. We're making to–we're making sure that Manitobans get those procedures when they need it.

      Madam Speaker, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion has already said he wouldn't do that. We will make sure that Manitobans get the surgical and diag­nos­tic procedures they need when they need it.

* (14:10)

Madam Speaker: The hon­our­able Leader of the Official Op­posi­tion, on a final sup­ple­mentary.

Mr. Kinew: Madam Speaker, when we dive into the Premier's time as Health Minister, we see that Manitoba's health-care system collapsed. It was an un­pre­cedented situation anywhere in North America. Now, when we look at the proof, the gov­ern­ment that–the docu­ments that this gov­ern­ment publishes with respect to surgeries, we see that there are a hundred fewer surgeries being performed in the province. I'll table the docu­ment for the Premier's perusal.

      We see that the Stefanson gov­ern­ment's record is clear. They are doing even a worse job than the Pallister gov­ern­ment at provi­ding surgeries to Manitoba. No one in Manitoba thought that Brian Pallister did a good job of managing the health-care system, and yet, apparently, things are even worse now.

      Will the Premier finally abandon the cuts to health care which have caused so many Manitobans hardship these past many years?

Mrs. Stefanson: Madam Speaker, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion continues to put false infor­ma­tion on the record within this House. The facts of the matter are that we are investing more than $1 billion more than they ever did in–during their time when they were in office.

      But I will say, Madam Speaker, we will not let our  ideology get in the way of making sure that Manitobans get the surgeries and diag­nos­tic pro­cedures that they need when they need them. Even Gary Doer got that, back in the day; former NDP Premier Gary Doer contracted out for some services.

      I shudder to think what will happen if this member, this Leader of the Op­posi­tion, ever becomes the leader and the premier of this province, because I tell you, that means that thousands upon thousands of surgeries and diag­nos­tic procedures will be cancelled. That's not what Manitobans want.

Private Agency Nursing
Gov­ern­ment Use

MLA Uzoma Asagwara (Union Station): Madam Speaker, I'd like to table new infor­ma­tion we received through freedom of infor­ma­tion. It shows the use of private agency nurses is accelerating under the PC gov­ern­ment. In the first half of 2022, Southern Health spent $3.4 million. They are now on pace to have the highest use of agency nurses ever.

      What is the minister doing to address this over­reliance–[interjection]–it's an overreliance. Despite the fact that they want to heckle–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

MLA Asagwara: –and talk me down, Madam Speaker; it is an overreliance on private agencies.

      What is the minister doing to address this?

Hon. Audrey Gordon (Minister of Health): I thank the member for Union Station for the question because, Madam Speaker, it gives me an op­por­tun­ity to remind Manitobans that last year, when the Red Cross nurses came to Manitoba to assist us during the COVID pandemic, members opposite stood in this Chamber and said, send them home. But our gov­ern­ment took the steps necessary during a challenging time to increase seats at the college of nursing: 259 seats. And then we went further and added 30 ad­di­tional seats at the Red River College.

      Madam Speaker, $4.3 million for 37 ad­di­tional nurse training seats at Uni­ver­sity College of the North, in the North–

Madam Speaker: The member's time has expired.

      The hon­our­able member for Union Station, on a sup­ple­mentary question.

MLA Asagwara: Madam Speaker, last week the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) praised all the contracting out her gov­ern­ment has done of health services with the private sector. The result of that approach is that there are over 2,400 vacant nurse positions in the public system, and tens of millions of dollars are being spent on private agencies. Meanwhile, our hospitals can't keep up with the waits that we've never seen before.

      As we've shown today, in the southern region, $3.4 million was spent in just the first six months of 2022.

      Will the minister explain why her gov­ern­ment's approach means more and more for-profit private agencies?

Ms. Gordon: Madam Speaker, I want to remind Manitobans that it was under the dark days of the NDP that individuals who wanted to come to Manitoba, internationally educated nurses, could not get licen­sure here. They said, no. On July 26th, our gov­ern­ment said yes.

      We are adding more nurses to the system; 115 nurses graduated–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Ms. Gordon: –last October. And more, Madam Speaker, will be added to the system, because the college of nursing has added a third intake.

      We will continue to work with organi­zations like the college of nursing to add more nurses to the system–some­thing they were not willing to do.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for Union Station, on a final supplementary.

MLA Asagwara: Madam Speaker, the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) has said it very clearly that she's contracting out health care.

      Their approach is actively undermining public health care in Manitoba. There are more than 2,400–that's 2,400–nurse vacancies in the public system. Nurses in the public system are currently being mandated like never before.

      Meanwhile, private agencies are provided more money and more flexibility. This needs to change. In the southern region, $3.4 million was spent in just the first six months of 2022.

      Why is the minister in­creasingly relying on for-profit, private agencies?

Ms. Gordon: Madam Speaker, for the internationally educated nurses that are watching today's discussion, I want them to know that our gov­ern­ment is here to support them. The dark days of the NDP, they heard no and received no support, but our gov­ern­ment is provi­ding $23,000 of financial assist­ance for in­dividuals to get 'licent' and to go imme­diately into our health-care system.

      Our new undergraduate nurse employees program saw 63 third- and fourth-year nursing students join the health system, Madam Speaker.

      We are taking action. Where they said no, our gov­ern­ment said yes.

Surgical and Wait Times
Dev­elop­ment of Dashboard

Ms. Nahanni Fontaine (St. Johns): Russell Audet, a young farmer, has been waiting for over two weeks for a spinal surgery after a tragic ATV accident. Several times, he's been told that his surgery has been scheduled, only to be told hours later that he's been pushed back.

      Unfor­tunately, Russell's situation is not unique. Thousands of Manitobans are waiting for surgeries without any idea of when they're going to be scheduled. That's why the Premier needs to deliver on a surgical wait dashboard.

      Will she do so today?

Hon. Audrey Gordon (Minister of Health): I want to put some facts on the record.

      Last week, there were 1,117 non-emergent sur­geries completed and 227 emergent surgeries were completed. This is over 101.5 per cent of pre-pandemic levels and I want to thank all the health-care workers at the front line that are working and so committed and passionate to provi­ding care and surgeries to Manitobans during this very, very dif­ficult time.

      Last year, our gov­ern­ment procured over 13,000 pro­cedures through the RFSA process. We will continue to do the same to ensure Manitobans receive care.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for St. Johns, on a supplementary question.

Ms. Fontaine: The physical pain this young farmer and thousands of other Manitobans waiting for sur­geries that–are ex­per­iencing is 'unfathonable,' Madam Speaker.

      To make matters worse, Manitobans are waiting for surgeries and they don't know when they are going to be able to have their procedure.

      The PCs promised to launch a diag­nos­tic and surgical wait dashboard in July. They missed that dead­line. Then they promised to launch it in September, and they've missed that deadline as well.

      Madam Speaker, Russell and Manitobans deserve to know when his surgery will be scheduled.

      When will this gov­ern­ment finally launch the dashboard they promised?

Ms. Gordon: Under the NDP gov­ern­ment, that individual would not receive surgery here in this province or have the op­por­tun­ity to receive service outside of the province, Madam Speaker. The–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Ms. Gordon: The dashboard, Madam Speaker, we want to ensure that we get it right. We want to ensure that it's user friendly for all Manitobans. We will get it right.

      We will release the dashboard to Manitobans as soon as it's ready, Madam Speaker.

* (14:20)

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for St. Johns, on a final supplementary.

Ms. Fontaine: Madam Speaker, I clearly pointed out that they're not getting it right and, in the process, Manitobans are suffering. And they're suffering in pain.

      A surgical wait dashboard would let Manitobans know how long it will take to get the procedures they need. It would provide the data on how many people are waiting for procedures and when those procedures are going to be done in a day.

      Madam Speaker, thousands are waiting in pain and they're not knowing that they're going to be able to receive the procedure and when they're going to get it.

      When will this government finally deliver on launching a surgical wait dashboard?

Ms. Gordon: Under the NDP, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion has said they would be suffering in pain for as long as they have to, Madam Speaker.

      Wait times for the last five years have been routinely published on the gov­ern­ment website, in­cluding most surgeries, diagnostics and cancer care services. We want to ensure Manitobans have access to accurate infor­ma­tion–user-friendly infor­ma­tion. The dashboard will be released, Madam Speaker. It's just the NDP fear mongering again. There's no facts.

      We will release the dashboard.

Peguis First Nation
Permanent Flood Protection

Ms. Amanda Lathlin (The Pas-Kameesak): Peguis First Nation com­mu­nity members are disappointed. They waited all summer to hear from this gov­ern­ment if they would commit to helping out and build permanent flood pro­tec­tion infra­structure. Yet, they've heard nothing.

      Five times over the past 16 years, Peguis First Nation has had to deal with flooding. It's time for permanent flood pro­tec­tion infra­structure.

      Will the minister make a commit­ment today?

Hon. Doyle Piwniuk (Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure): I want to thank the member for The Pas-Kameesak for that question.

      I'm not quite sure where she's getting her infor­ma­tion from, Madam Speaker, because myself and my colleague, the hon­our­able member–Minister for Indigenous Recon­ciliation and Northern Relations, both–met with Chief Hudson to talk about Peguis, and we're–actually, we were supposed to have a meeting–[interjection]–actually, we were supposed to have a meeting with Patty Hajdu, Minister Patty Hajdu, but when the Queen passed away, the meeting has been postponed.

      So I'm not quite sure, Madam Speaker, where she's getting that–her infor­ma­tion from. [interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

      The honourable member for The Pas-Kameesak, on a supplementary question.

Ms. Lathlin: In fact, I got my infor­ma­tion directly from Chief Hudson.

      Every time Peguis First Nation is flooded, mas­sive damage is done to homes and lives are upended. In fact, 917 lives are still displaced from that com­mu­nity here in Winnipeg, yet no permanent solution has been invested in.

      Permanent solutions would save peoples' homes and it would save millions of dollars. Why won't the minister do the common sense thing and invest in permanent flood pro­tec­tion?

Mr. Piwniuk: The member should 'auckshy' realize that a lot of times when it comes to the respon­si­bility for–when it comes to flood pro­tec­tion, it's with the Indigenous Services Canada, Madam Speaker. They're the ones that are leaders on when it comes to flooding, and they're the ones that are actually the ones that look at long term. And they have to lead on this project. And we actually have con­ver­sa­tions already with the federal gov­ern­ment to look at a long-term strategy.

      We're looking at short term. Our staff have been out there to Peguis First Nation during the flood and making sure that they had all the assist­ance. We even sent them 50 pumps to help out with the First Nation. And we actually have con­ver­sa­tions with Chief Hudson right now, and we're doing every­thing we–are–possible to make sure that we move forward and have a permanent solution.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for The Pas-Kameesak, on a final supplementary.

Ms. Lathlin: Peguis First Nation com­mu­nity mem­bers were forcibly relocated to their current area in 1907. They were moved from an 'ambundant' farming area to a flood zone. And yet, they still don't have permanent flood pro­tec­tion infra­structure. This is wrong, Madam Speaker.

      The minister could commit to investing in permanent flood pro­tec­tion and infra­structure. Will he do so today?

      Ekosi.

Mr. Piwniuk: Madam Speaker, the member for the Pas-Kameeak [phonetic], she could take a history lesson, because it was the federal gov­ern­ment that moved the First Nations to–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Piwniuk: –the location right now.

      The thing is, we are working with the federal gov­ern­ment to make sure that we do things right–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Piwniuk: –Madam Speaker, and making sure that we do permanent structures when it comes to long-term op­por­tun­ities, to make sure that we–there's flood mitigation for Peguis First Nation.

      We're there to help them, Madam Speaker. What is their plan?

Madam Speaker: Order. Order.

      With all this noise that was emanating from the floor, I could not hear what was being said. And I'm going to ask for everybody's co‑operation.

      There's heckling, then there's yelling. And I don't think any of that serves this House, and especially when the Speaker can't hear what is being said so I could rule on some­thing.

      So I'm going to ask for everybody's co‑operation, please.

Edu­ca­tion System Funding
Use of Consulting Firms

Mr. Nello Altomare (Transcona): This gov­ern­ment would rather give money to consultants than spend it in the classroom. First, it was one and a half million on their failed bill 64, then it was a quarter of a million on a curriculum evaluator. Now, through FIPPA, Madam Speaker, we've learned that they're spending a further one and a half million on an edu­ca­tion funding review. I'll table the docu­ments.

      The minister could have saved this money and listened to what Manitobans want: no more cuts to edu­ca­tion.

      Will the minister listen to Manitobans and stop making the cuts to edu­ca­tion?

Hon. Wayne Ewasko (Minister of Education and Early Childhood Learning): I ap­pre­ciate the question coming from the member from Transcona where he's at least acknowl­edging the fact that, yes, we do actually answer FIPPA requests, Madam Speaker.

      And it gives me an op­por­tun­ity, Madam Speaker–I will get into further answering of the member's question in a few seconds, but I do want to say thank you to all of the teachers, the students, the support staff, our custodial staff, our bus maintenance personnel, to make sure that we had started this year off in more of a normal–a normalcy. So thank you. A big shout-out to absolutely everybody involved for kicking off the '22 school year without a hitch.

      Thanks, Madam Speaker.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for Transcona, on a supplementary question.

Mr. Altomare: While the minister continues to defer and deflect, educators continue to work in their class­rooms in a system that's been underfunded since 2016. And that's a fact. It's laid out in the frames, Madam Speaker.

      Seven Oaks had to cut 28 staff. Brandon School Division had to cut 11. One and a half million could have been spent on provi­ding children with the supports they need.

      While the minister is sitting there deferring, will they stop making these un­neces­sary hires of these consultants?

Mr. Ewasko: It's very interesting that the member, my friend and former colleague within the edu­ca­tion profession, stands up and puts misinformation out on the record, Madam Speaker.

      He knows that this year alone, Madam Speaker, we're putting in $460 million into the '22-23 school year. That includes, Madam Speaker–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Ewasko: –$51 million of an increase in annual operating budget; $77 million in ad­di­tional fund­ing to  assist with financial pressures; $22 million to strength­en student learning and supports; and $2 million to expand the Elders and Knowledge Keepers in Schools Initiative.

      Madam Speaker, not going to take any lessons from this member from Transcona or his self-promoting leader as well. We–

Madam Speaker: The member's time has expired.

      The honourable member for Transcona, on a final supplementary.

Mr. Altomare: I'll just remind the minister that in 2016, the Province used to cover 62 per cent of edu­ca­tion costs total. It is now down to 56 per cent, Madam Speaker. That is shameful and that is on the record.

* (14:30)

      Parents and teachers will be the first to tell this gov­ern­ment that funding is not keeping up with demands. School divisions are being forced to make cuts while this gov­ern­ment is giving millions to consultants, some­thing they regularly do. They gut the De­part­ment of Edu­ca­tion and then have to hire consultants to do the work that we used to do. That's just wrong, Madam Speaker.

      Will the minister stop this giving of millions to consultants and invest in our schools?

Mr. Ewasko: Madam Speaker, we know on this side of the House that parents, teachers, staff, they want a gov­ern­ment leading them in the way to make sure that they're working on–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Ewasko: –literacy and 'numeraskies'–numeracy skills and including also Indigenous education and inclusion.

      I know math is hard, and I know that the member from Transcona, really, if he starts dipping into the numbers, Madam Speaker, he's going to see that there's $460 million of new funding going to school divisions. We're working quite closely with our edu­ca­tion partners–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Ewasko: –all across this great province of ours.

      I know that the member from Transcona decided to run in Transcona under the leadership of the member from Fort Rouge because he saw–

Madam Speaker: The hon­our­able member's time has expired. [interjection] Order.

Disabled EIA Recipients in Long-Term Care


Hourly Rate Charges for Escorted Appointments

Mr. Dougald Lamont (St. Boniface): In June, I met with five con­stit­uents with dis­abil­ities under the age of 60 who are living in long‑term care. They may have MS, strokes, brain injuries or a 'degenderative' disease, and they have to pay for their own upkeep out of EIA, which leaves them with less than $10 a day, or ten hundred and seventy–$270 a month in disposable income.

      They want to have dignity and in­de­pen­dence, but in 2018 this PC gov­ern­ment started charging them $30 an hour and a minimum of three hours to get them to ap­point­ments accompanied. One third of their monthly income might go for just one X-ray or test.

      Will this gov­ern­ment imme­diately reverse the decision and ensure these people can get to their ap­point­ments free of charge as they did before?

Hon. Rochelle Squires (Minister respon­si­ble for Accessibility): Madam Speaker, our gov­ern­ment recognizes that people living with dis­abil­ities have certainly under­gone a very challenging time with the onset of a global pandemic in the last few years.

      That is why we've made some historic invest­ments in dis­abil­ity services. That is why we've also raised the wages for people who work in the sector, because we know that there is a massive shortage of skilled work in that sector, so we've enhanced the wages for the direct service workers and have made other invest­ments to ensure that people with dis­abilities can get the services that they need when they need it most.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for St. Boniface, on a supplementary question.

Mr. Lamont: As I mentioned, all these people living in care are paying part of their own way, either from EIA, which has barely changed in 36 years, or from a sliding scale based on household income.

      The shared costs can be financially crushing for a spouse and family. So, to relieve their loved ones, they may get a divorce and take EIA instead. It is hard to imagine a policy that is more cruel than one that forces an individual with a dis­abil­ity to break ties with their family because it makes them feel like a burden.

      This needs to change. We will work with every MLA to end this imme­diately.

      Will the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) and minister commit today to ending this inhumane policy?

Ms. Squires: Our gov­ern­ment recognizes that families were struggling, and that is why we came out with an $87-million affordability package earlier this month, which included $50-a-month increase to every EIA recipient's household income. That is the first increase that has occurred since 2004.

      And we've also increased other invest­ments. We've created a dis­abil­ity income support program, Madam Speaker, because we want people with–who are having severe and prolonged dis­abil­ities not to be on EIA at all, but to be on a separate income support program where they can receive a wage, receive the benefits and the services that they need.

Increase in Crime
Com­mu­nity Safety Initiatives

Ms. Cindy Lamoureux (Tyndall Park): This prov­incial gov­ern­ment has a respon­si­bility in keeping Manitobans safe. Just over the last week, and just in Tyndall Park, people have posted on Facebook how garages have been broken into, cameras and windows have been damaged, personal items have been stolen from yards and hydro meters in Burrows have been ripped off of busi­nesses.

      Madam Speaker, we have amazing com­mu­nity patrol groups working with our police services, but there are prov­incial de­part­ments, such as addictions, Housing and Edu­ca­tion, just to name a few, that have an impact on our com­mu­nities.

      With crime rising in Manitoba, what specific actions is the Premier or Justice Minister taking or going to take that will contribute to keeping Manitobans safe?

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I thank the member opposite for the question. There's no doubt that all of us are concerned whenever we hear instances of crime, Madam Speaker.

      When it comes to the prov­incial gov­ern­ment over the course of the last several months, we've made many invest­ments when it comes to com­mu­nity in­vest­ments, whether it's Bear Clan in Winnipeg, work­ing with the Winnipeg Police Service to try and ensure that we get guns that are used in illegal manners off of the street. We've invested other resources when it comes to child pro­tec­tion, other resources when it comes to helping those who need addictions treatment led by the various ministers in this gov­ern­ment.

      We've also spoken to the federal gov­ern­ment about changes that have to happen with the Criminal Code. And I hope that the member opposite will join us in trying to ensure that those calls for Criminal Code changes are suc­cess­ful from the federal gov­ern­ment, Madam Speaker.

Knife-Related Violent Crime
Bail Con­di­tion Recommendation

Mr. James Teitsma (Radisson): Manitobans have been shocked by random acts of violence, often using knives. Sadly, many of the individuals committing these crimes have previously been involved with our justice system and they're sometimes out on bail.

      Can the Minister of Justice please explain how our gov­ern­ment has taken steps to address the issue of knife-related violent crime?

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I want to thank the member for Radisson for his question and for his advocacy on this issue. I know that it's in­cred­ibly frustrating for those who are victims of crime when it comes to knife attacks or other means of violence, Madam Speaker.

      That is why we've said to the federal gov­ern­ment, currently under the Criminal Code, it's virtually im­possible to deny bail for an individual who's com­mitted a crime using a knife. We would like to see changes to the Criminal Code to make it similar to using a gun in a crime and reverse the onus when it comes to bail to make it more difficult for someone who is accused of that kind of a violent crime from getting bail, Madam Speaker.

      I know when this provision came out, the Liberals spoke against it; the NDP said nothing. While the Liberals took the wrong position and the NDP took no position, this gov­ern­ment will always stand with the victims, and the Progressive Conservatives will work to make a safer Manitoba.

Agri­cul­tural Crown Land Leasing
Request to Reverse Changes

Mr. Diljeet Brar (Burrows): The new system for awarding Crown lands is not working. I've spoken to hundreds of producers over the last three years. None will defend the system the PC gov­ern­ment has put in place. Carson Callum of the beef producers says that the changes do not line up with what they recom­mended.

      Why has the minister not reversed his gov­ern­ment's changes to the Crown land system?

Hon. Derek Johnson (Minister of Agriculture): I'd like to thank my critic for the question.

      As we know, the Agri­cul­ture Crown lands are a very im­por­tant source of land for young farmers and for the livestock industry. And, obviously, to support a vibrant and sus­tain­able agri­cul­ture sector, stake­holders have told us–many con­sul­ta­tions have been held–that rent was challenging due to recent climate changes driven by droughts and floods.

      To help our ranchers recover from the extreme climate, a temporary reduction is begin­ning from 2023 to 2025. Madam Speaker, this will return almost $4 million to ag Crown land users.

Madam Speaker: The honourable member for Burrows, on a supplementary question.

Mr. Brar: The PC gov­ern­ment consulted none before changing the Crown land's regula­tion several years ago.

      The right approach would be to restore a system that prioritizes young producers. Matthew Atkinson from beef producers' Crown lands com­mit­tee says the new system makes it very difficult for the young pro­ducers to outbid those more esta­blished. It's leaving our younger producers behind.

      When will the minister reverse his gov­ern­ment's changes to the Crown land system?

Mr. Johnson: I'd like to thank my colleague for the question.

* (14:40)

      As I mentioned, the temporary rent reduction authorized by Treasury Board will begin in 2023, Madam Speaker. It will decrease the rent on agri­cul­tural Crown lands on a declining basis with rents reduced by 50 per cent this coming year, followed by 33 per cent in 2024 and 15 per cent in 2025, resulting in $4 million to support the ranchers.

      Public en­gage­ment is currently on EngageMB. I suggest the member log on and fill it out.

Madam Speaker: The time for oral questions has expired.

Petitions

Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library

Mr. Nello Altomare (Transcona): I wish to present the following petition to the Legis­lative Assembly.

      The background of this petition is as follows:

      The Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Altomare: –has been served by notice by the Red River Valley School Division to vacate the premises currently situated in the auditorium of École Héritage school by March 31, 2023.

      (2) The auditorium was originally built in the 1960s by renowned Manitoba architect Étienne Gaboury, and it has been home to JRL for 48 years.

      (3) A photo of the auditorium captioned the regional library is published in a 2008 document titled heritage buildings in RM De Salaberry and St. Pierre Jolys. It is marked as an im­por­tant modern building that could attain the status of heritage site.

      (4) The JRL and Red River Valley School Division have flourished from a mutually beneficial memorandum of under­standing for 54 years.

      (5) Their shared collection boasts over 50,000 books and has the fourth largest collection of French-language literature in rural Manitoba.

      (6) Students that are bused in from the neighbouring munici­palities that do not have a public library, such as Niverville, Grunthal and Kleefield [phonetic], are provided with free access to the public library and its fourth largest collection of French books in rural Manitoba during the school year.

      We petition the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      (1) To request the Minister of Labour, Consumer Pro­tec­tion and Gov­ern­ment Services to consider grant­ing the auditorium to the JRL by March 'fird'–1st, 2023.

      (2) To request the Minister of Edu­ca­tion to recog­nize the value that JRL provides to the student popu­la­tion of ÉHS, as well as the com­mu­nities of Village de Saint‑Pierre‑Jolys and the RM De Salaberry.

      (3) To request the Minister of Edu­ca­tion and the Minister of Francophone Affairs to recog­nize that an MOU between the Red River Valley and JRL is mutually, financially and culturally beneficial.

      (4) To request the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to recog­nize the heritage potential of this important building and its status in the com­mu­nity; and

      (5) To request the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to prevent any renovations to the auditorium that would destroy and devaluate the architectural integrity of the building.

      And this petition has been signed by many Manitobans.

      Thank you.

Madam Speaker: In accordance with our rule 133(6), when petitions are read they are deemed to be received by the House.

Foot-Care Services

Mr. Diljeet Brar (Burrows): Madam Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly.

      To the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba, the background of this petition is as follows:

      The population of those aged 55-plus has grown to approximately 2,500 in the city of Thompson.

      A large percentage of people in this age group require necessary medical foot care and treatment.

      A large percentage of those who are elderly and/or diabetic are also living on low incomes.

      The northern regional health author­ity previously provided essential medical foot-care services to seniors and those living with diabetes until 2019, then subsequently cut the program after the last two nurses filling those positions retired.

      The number of seniors and those with diabetes has only continued to grow in Thompson and surrounding areas.

      There is no adequate medical care available in the city and region, whereas the city of Winnipeg has 14 medical foot-care centres.

      The implications of inadequate or lack of podiatric care can lead to amputations.

      The city of Thompson also serves as a regional health-care service provider, and the need for foot care extends beyond just those served in the capital city of the province.

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      To urge the provincial government to provide the services of two nurses to restore essential medical foot-care treatment to the city of Thompson effective April 1st, 2022.

      And this has been signed by many Manitobans.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Drug Overdose Reporting

MLA Uzoma Asagwara (Union Station): I wish to present the following petition to the Legis­lative Assembly.

      To the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba, the back­ground of this petition is as follows:

      (1) Across the province, many Manitobans continue to struggle with addictions, and the pandemic has led to even more death and worsened the ongoing public health crisis of opioid overdoses.

      (2) Three hundred and seventy-two Manitobans died from an overdose in 2020; that's over one a day, and 87 per cent higher than in 2019.

      (3) Manitoba is expected to exceed over 400 overdose deaths in 2021, but the data is not publicly available since the last public reporting of opioid deaths was published in 2019.

      (4) The data for overdose drug deaths from 2020 and 2021 was compiled through media inquiries, and this needs to change.

      (5) Access to timely data on the harms of drugs helps to inform both gov­ern­ment and stake­holders on where to take action and target resources needed in various com­mu­nities.

      (6) Manitoba is the only province not provi­ding regular, timely data to the federal gov­ern­ment opioid infor­ma­tion portal.

      (7) Manitobans deserve a gov­ern­ment that takes the growing drug crisis seriously and will report the data publicly in a timely matter to target actions and allow for account­ability.

      We petition the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      To urge the prov­incial gov­ern­ment to enact Bill 217, The Fatality Inquiries Amend­ment Act (Overdose Death Reporting), to require the Province to publish the number of drug overdose deaths, as well as the type of drug, on a gov­ern­ment website in a timely fashion.

      This has been signed by many Manitobans.

Hearing Aids

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Madam Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly.

      The background to this petition is as follows:

      A hearing aid is a battery-powered electronic device designed to improve an individual's ability to perceive sound. Worn in or behind a person's ear, they make some sounds louder, helping people hear better when it's quiet and when it's noisy.

      People who suffer hearing loss, whether due to aging, illness, employment or accident, not only lose the ability to communicate effectively with friends, family or colleagues, they also can experience un­employment, social isolation and struggles with mental health.

      Hearing loss can also impact the safety of an individual with hearing loss, as it affects the ability to hear cars coming, safety alarms, call 911, et cetera.

      A global commission on the state of the research for dementia care and prevention released an updated consensus report in July 2020, identifying 12 key risk factors for dementia and cognitive decline. The strongest risk factor that was indicated was hearing loss. It was calculated that up to 8 per cent of the total number of dementia cases could potentially be avoided with management of hearing loss.

      Hearing aids are therefore essential to the mental health and well-being of Manitobans–[interjection]

Madam Speaker: Order.

Mr. Gerrard: –especially to those at significant risk of dementia, Alzheimer's, a disorder of the brain affecting cognition in the ever-growing senior population.

      Audiologists are health-care professionals who help patients decide which kind of hearing aid will work best for them, based on the type of hearing loss, patient's age and ability to manage small devices, lifestyle and ability to afford.

      The cost of hearing aids can be prohibitive to many Manitobans, depending on their income and circumstances. Hearing aids cost on average $995 to $4,000 per ear, and many professionals say the hear­ing aids only work at their best for five years.

      Manitoba residents under the age of 18 who require a hearing aid, as prescribed by an otolaryn­gologist or audiologist, will receive either an 80 per cent reimbursement from Manitoba Health of a fixed amount for an analog device, up to a maximum of $500 per ear, or 80 per cent of a fixed amount for a digital or analog programmable device, up to a maximum of $1,800. However, this reimbursement is not available to Manitobans who need the devices who are over the age of 18, which will result in financial hardship for many young people entering the workforce, students and families. In addition, seniors representing 14.3 per cent of Manitoba's population are not eligible for reimbursement, despite being the group most likely in need of a hearing aid.

* (14:50)

      Most insurance companies only provide a minimal partial cost of a hearing aid, and many Manitobans, especially retired persons, age old pensioners and other low-income earners do not have access to health insurance plans.

      The Province of Quebec's hearing devices pro­gram covers all costs related to hearing aids and assistive listening devices, including the purchase, repair and replacement.

      Alberta offers subsidies to all seniors 65 and over and low-income adults 18 to 64 once every five years.

      New Brunswick provides coverage for the purchase and maintenance not only–not covered by other agencies or private health insurance plans, as well as assistance for those for whom the purchase would cause financial hardship.

      Manitobans over age 18 are only eligible for sup­port for hearing aids if they are receiving Employment and Income Assist­ance, and the reimbursement only provides a maximum of $500 an ear.

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      (1) To urge the provincial government to consider hearing loss as a medical treatment under Manitoba Health.

      (2) To urge the provincial government to provide income-based coverage for hearing aids to all who need them, as hearing has been proven to be essential to Manitobans' cognitive, mental and social health and well-being.

      Signed by Hope Stadt, Freda Carlson, Elaine Maier and many, many other Manitobans.

Louise Bridge

Mr. Jim Maloway (Elmwood): I wish to present the following petition to the Legis­lative Assembly.

      The back­ground of this petition is as follows:

      (1) Over 25,000 vehicles per day cross the Louise Bridge, which has served as a vital link for vehicular traffic between northeast Winnipeg and the downtown for the last 110 years.

      (2) The current structure will undoubtedly be declared unsafe in a few years as it has deteriorated extensively, becoming functionally obsolete, subject to more frequent unplanned repairs and cannot be widened to accommodate future traffic capacity.

      (3) As far back as 2008, the City of Winnipeg, City, has studied where the new re­place­ment bridge should be situated.

      (4) After including the bridge re­place­ment in the City's five-year capital budget forecast in 2009, the new bridge became a short-term construction priority in the City's trans­por­tation master plan of 2011.

      (5) City capital and budget plans identified re­place­ment of the Louise Bridge on a site just east of the bridge and expropriated homes there on the south side of Nairn Avenue in anticipation of a 2015 start.

      (6) In 2014, the new City admin­is­tra­tion did not make use of available federal infrastructure funds.

      (7) The new Louise Bridge Com­mit­tee began its campaign to demand a new bridge and its surveys confirmed residents wanted a new bridge beside the current bridge, with the old bridge kept open for local traffic.

      (8) The NDP prov­incial gov­ern­ment signalled its firm commit­ment to partner with the City on replacing the Louise Bridge in its 2015 Throne Speech. Unfor­tunately, prov­incial infrastructure initiatives, such as the new Louise bridge, came to a halt with the election of the Progressive Conservative gov­ern­ment in 2016.

      (9) More recently, the City tethered the Louise Bridge replacement issue to its new trans­por­tation master plan and eastern corridor project. Its recom­men­dations have now identified the location of the new Louise bridge to be placed just to the west of the current bridge, not to the east as originally proposed. The City expropriation process has begun.

      (10) The prov­incial budget due in mid-April 2022 is the Province's op­por­tun­ity to announce its portion of funding for this long overdue vital link to northeast Winnipeg and Transcona.

      We petition the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      (1) To urge the Premier to financially assist the City of Winnipeg in her new 2022 prov­incial budget to build this three-lane bridge in each direction to maintain this vital link between northeast Winnipeg, Transcona and the downtown.

      (2) To urge the prov­incial gov­ern­ment to recom­mend that the City of Winnipeg keep the old bridge fully open to traffic while the new bridge is under con­struction; and

      (3) To urge the prov­incial gov­ern­ment to consider the feasibility of keeping the old bridge open for active trans­por­tation in the future.

      And this petition is signed by many, many Manitobans.

Prov­incial Road 224

Ms. Amanda Lathlin (The Pas-Kameesak): I wish to present the following petition to the Legis­lative Assembly.

      The back­ground to this petition is as follows:

      (1) Prov­incial Road No. 224 serves Peguis First Nation, Fisher River Cree Nation and surrounding com­mu­nities. The road is in need of sub­stan­tial repairs.

      (2) The road has been in poor con­di­tion for years and has numer­ous potholes, uneven driving surfaces and extremely narrow shoulders.

      (3) Due to recent popu­la­tion growth in the area, there has been increased vehicle and pedestrian use of Prov­incial Road 224.

      (4) Without repair, Prov­incial Road 224 will continue to pose a hazard to many Manitobans who use it regularly.

      (5) Concerned Manitobans are requesting that Prov­incial Road 224 be assessed and repaired urgently to improve safety for its users.

      We petition the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      To urge the Minister of Infra­structure to complete an assessment of Prov­incial Road 224 and implement the ap­pro­priate repairs using public funds as quickly as possible.

      This petition has been signed by many, many Manitobans.

      Ekosi.

Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library

MLA Malaya Marcelino (Notre Dame): Madame la Présidente, je désire présenter la pétition suivante à l'Assemblée législative.

      À l'Assemblée législative du Manitoba, le contexte de cette pétition est le suivant :

      (1) La Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library, B-R-G, a été avisée par la Division scolaire Vallée de la rivière Rouge, DSVRR, de libérer les locaux actuellement situés dans l'auditorium de l'École Heritage School, ÉHS, d'ici le 31 mars 2023.

      (2) L'auditorium a été construit dans les années 1960 par le célèbre architecte manitobain Étienne Gaboury et la B-R-G y est installée depuis 48 ans.

      (3) Une photo de l'auditorium intitulée « La bibliothèque régionale » est publiée dans un document de 2008 intitulé « Bâtiments patrimoniaux des MR De Salaberry et Saint-Pierre-Jolys ». Il est indiqué qu'il s'agit d'un bâtiment moderne important qui pourrait atteindre le statut de site patrimonial.

      (4) B-R-G et DSVRR ont prospéré grâce à un protocole d'entente mutuellement bénéfique pendant 54 ans.

      (5) Leur collection commune compte plus de 50 000 livres et possède la quatrième plus grande collection de littérature de langue française dans les régions rurales du Manitoba.

      (6) Les élèves qui sont transportés par autobus des municipalités voisines qui n'ont pas de bibliothèque publique, comme Niverville, Grunthal et Kleefeld, ont accès gratuitement à la bibliothèque publique et à sa quatrième plus grande collection de livres en français dans les régions rurales du Manitoba pendant l'année scolaire.

      Nous présentons à l'Assemblée législative du Manitoba la pétition suivante :

      (1) demander au ministre du Travail, de la Protection des consommateurs et des Services gouvernementaux d'envisager de concéder l'auditorium à la B-R-G d'ici le 1er mars 2023;

      (2) demander au ministre de l'Éducation de reconnaître la valeur que la B-R-G apporte à la population étudiante de l'ÉHS, ainsi qu'aux communautés du Village de Saint-Pierre-Jolys et de la MR De Salaberry;

* (15:00)

      (3) demander au ministre de l'Éducation et au ministre des Affaires francophones de reconnaître qu'un protocole d'entente entre la DSVRR et la B-R‑G est mutuellement bénéfique, financièrement et culturellement;

      (4) demander au ministre du Sport, de la Culture et du Patrimoine de reconnaître le potentiel patrimonial de cet important bâtiment et son statut au sein de la communauté;

      (5) demander au ministre du Sport, de la Culture et du Patrimoine d'empêcher toute rénovation de l'auditorium qui détruirait et dévaloriserait l'intégrité architecturale du bâtiment.

      Cette pétition a été signée par Michelle Gendron, Katrina Poirier, Denise Perron et–

Translation

Madam Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly.

To the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba,

The background for this petition is as follows:

(1) The Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library (JRL) was notified by the Red River Valley School Division (RRVSD) to vacate premises currently located in the auditorium of the École Héritage School by March 31, 2023.

(2) The auditorium was built in the 1960s by famous Manitoban architect Étienne Gaboury, and it has been home to the JRL for 48 years.

(3) A photo of the auditorium captioned "The Regional Library" was published in a 2008 document titled "Significant Heritage Buildings of De Salaberry and St. Pierre Jolys". It is described as an important modern building that could attain the status of heritage site.

(4) The JRL and the RRVSD have flourished by means of a mutually beneficial memorandum of understanding for 54 years.

(5) Their shared collection boasts over 50,000 books and includes the fourth largest collection of French-language literature in rural Manitoba.

(6) During the school year, students who are bused in from neighbouring municipalities that do not have a public library, such as Niverville, Grunthal and Kleefeld, are provided with free access to the public library and its fourth largest collection of French-language literature in rural Manitoba.

We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

(1) To urge the Minister of Labour, Consumer Protection and Government Services to consider granting the auditorium to the JRL by March 1, 2023.

(2) To urge the Minister of Education to recognize the value that JRL provides to the student population of ÉHS, as well as the communities of Village de Saint‑Pierre-Jolys and the RM De Salaberry.

(3) To urge the Minister of Education and the Minister responsible for Francophone Affairs to recognize that a memorandum of understanding between the RRVSD and the JRL is mutually, financially and culturally beneficial.

(4) To urge the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to recognize the heritage potential of this important building and its status in the community.

(5) To urge the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to prevent any renovations to the auditorium that would destroy or devalue the architectural integrity of the building.

This petition was signed by Michelle Gendron, Katrina Poirier, Denise Perron and–

English

      That's it. Thanks.

Mr. Jamie Moses (St. Vital): I wish to present the following petition to the Legis­lative Assembly.

      To the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba, the background to this–of this petition is as follows:

      (1) The Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library, JRL, has been served notice by the Red River Valley School Division, RRVSD, to vacate the premises currently situated in the auditorium of École Héritage school, ÉHS, by March 31st, 2023.

      (2) The auditorium was originally built in the 1960s by renowned Manitoba architect Étienne Gaboury, and it has been home to the JRL for 48 years.

      (3) A photo of the auditorium captioned the regional library is published in a 2008 document titled heritage buildings in the RM De Salaberry and St. Pierre Jolys. It is marked as an im­por­tant modern building that could attain the status of a heritage site.

      (4) JRL and RRVSD have flourished from a mutually beneficial memorandum of under­standing for 54 years.

      (5) Their shared collection boasts over 50,000 books and has the fourth largest collection of French-language literature in rural Manitoba.

      (6) Students that are bused in from the neighbouring communities that do not have public libraries, such as Niverville, Grunthal and Kleefeld, are provided with free access to the public library and its fourth largest collection of French books in rural Manitoba during the school year.

      We petition the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      (1) To request the Minister of Labour, Consumer Pro­tec­tion and Gov­ern­ment Services to consider granting the auditorium to the JRL by March 1st, 2023.

      (2) To request the Minister of Edu­ca­tion to recog­nize the value that JRL provides to the student popu­la­tion of ÉHS, as well as the com­mu­nities of Village de Saint‑Pierre‑Jolys and the RM De Salaberry.

      (3) To request the Minister of Edu­ca­tion and the Minister of Francophone Affairs to recog­nize that an MOU between the RRVSD and JRL is mutually, financially and culturally beneficial.

      (4) To request the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to recog­nize the heritage potential of this important building and its status in the com­mu­nity.

      (5) To request the Minister of Sport, Culture and Heritage to prevent any renovations to the auditorium that would destroy and devalue the architectural integrity of the building.

      And this petition has been signed by many Manitobans.

Foot-Care Services

Mr. Eric Redhead (Thompson): Madam Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

      To the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba, the background of this petition is as follows:

      The population of those aged 55 and up has grown to approximately 2,500 in the city of Thompson.

      A large percentage of people in this age group require necessary medical foot care and treatment.

      A large percentage of those who are elderly and/or diabetic are also living on low incomes.

      The northern regional health author­ity previous provided essential medical foot-care services to seniors and those living with diabetes until 2019, then subsequently cut the program after the last two nurses filling those positions retired.

      The number of seniors with those–and those with diabetes have only continued to grow in Thompson and surrounding areas.

      There is no adequate medical care available in the city and the region, whereas the city of Winnipeg has 14 medical foot-care centres.

      The implications and inadequate or lack of podiatric care can lead to amputations.

      The city of Thompson also serves as regional health-care service provider, and the need for foot care extends beyond just those served in the capital city of the province.

      We petition the 'legislaty' Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      To urge the provincial government to provide the services of two nurses to restore essential medical foot-care treatment in the city of Thompson effective April 1st, 2022.

      This has been signed by many, many Manitobans.

Mrs. Bernadette Smith (Point Douglas): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly.

      The background to this petition is as follows:

      (1) The population of those aged 55-plus has grown to approximately 2,500 in the city of Thompson.

      (2) A large percentage of people in this age group require necessary medical foot care and treatment.

      (3) A large percentage of those who are elderly and/or diabetic are also living on low incomes.

      (4) The northern regional health author­ity previously provided essential medical foot-care services to seniors and those living with diabetes until 2019, then subsequently cut the program after the last two nurses filling those positions retired.

      (5) The number of seniors and those with diabetes has only continued to grow in Thompson and sur­rounding areas.

      (6) There is no adequate medical care available in the city and region, whereas the city of Winnipeg has 14 medical foot-care centres.

      (7) The implications of inadequate or lack of podiatric care can lead to amputations.

      (8) The city of Thompson also serves as a regional health-care service provider, and the need for foot care extends beyond just those served in a capital city of the province.

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

      To urge the provincial government to provide the services of two nurses to restore essential medical foot-care treatment to the city of Thompson effective April 1st, 2022.

      And this has been signed by Steve Prubal [phonetic], Darlene Beardy, Greg Stott and many other Manitobans.

Madam Speaker: Further petitions?

      Grievances?

ORDERS OF THE DAY

GOVERNMENT busi­ness

House Business

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Government House Leader): Thank you, Madam Speaker and others.

      I'd like to announce that the Standing Com­mit­tee on Agri­cul­ture and Food will meet on Wednesday, October 5th, 2022, and, if necessary, on Thursday, October 6th, 2022, at 6 p.m. to consider Bill 22, The  Environ­ment Amend­ment Act (Pesticide Restrictions).

Madam Speaker: It has been announced that the Standing Com­mit­tee on Agri­cul­ture and Food will meet on Wednesday, October 5th, 2022, and, if necessary, on Thursday, October 6th, 2022, at 6 p.m. to consider Bill 22, The Environ­ment Amend­ment Act (Pesticide Restrictions).

Mr. Goertzen: Thank you again, Madam Speaker and others.

      I'd like to announce that the Standing Com­mit­tee on Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment will meet on Wednesday, October 5th, 2022, at 6 p.m. to consider the following: Bill 13, The Social Services Appeal Board Amend­ment Act; Bill 14, The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment, Highway Traffic Amend­ment and Manitoba Public Insurance Cor­por­ation Amend­ment Act; Bill 24, The Real Property Valuation Board and Related Amend­ments Act; Bill 208, The Teachers' Pensions Amend­ment Act; and Bill 240, The Jewish Heritage Month Act.

* (15:10)

Madam Speaker: It has been announced that the Standing Com­mit­tee on Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment will meet on Wednesday, October 5th, 2022, at 6 p.m. to consider the following: Bill 13, The Social Services Appeal Board Amend­ment Act; Bill 14, The Drivers and Vehicles Amend­ment, Highway Traffic Amend­ment and Manitoba Public Insurance Cor­por­ation Amend­ment Act; Bill 24, The Real Property Valuation Board and Related Amend­ments Act; Bill 208, The Teachers' Pensions Amend­ment Act; and Bill 240, The Jewish Heritage Month Act.

* * *

Mr. Goertzen: Could you please resolve into Commit­tee of Supply.

Madam Speaker: It has been announced that the House will consider Estimates this afternoon. The House will now resolve into Committee of Supply.

      Mr. Deputy Speaker, please take the chair.

Committee of Supply

(Concurrent Sections)

Room 254

Health

Mr. Chairperson (Dennis Smook): It looks like we're all here.

      Minister, are you ready to continue? Minister, if you can hear us, could you give us a wave, please?

      Will the Com­mit­tee of Supply please come to order. Before we begin, I have a leave request for this section of the Com­mit­tee of Supply. Is there leave to allow the op­posi­tion to sit at the opposite side of the table to allow them to see the screens that are situated in the room?

      Is there leave? [Agreed]

      This section of the Com­mit­tee of Supply will now resume con­sid­era­tion of the Estimates for the Department of Health. Questioning for this de­part­ment will proceed in a global manner.

      The floor is now open for questions.

MLA Uzoma Asagwara (Union Station): I'd like to welcome the minister back to Estimates. I hope that she had a good summer, an enjoyable summer, and I look forward to hearing the feedback regarding the questions I'm going to ask specific to Health.

      I'd like to start by asking the minister about the $50 million that were prioritized for addressing the surgical and diag­nos­tic backlog. Earlier in the Estimates proceedings, the minister advised that the entire $50 million–for priority procedures worth $10 million, and for the COVID backlog, $40 million had been spent–that was what the minister advised the allocation of that spending was.

      I'd like to point the minister to page 25 of their annual report. There it shows the total number of surgeries in the WRHA declined on a year-over-year basis between '20 and 2021, and 2021-22.

      Can the minister explain the reason for that decline?

* (15:20)

Hon. Audrey Gordon (Minister of Health): I want to welcome the member for Union Station back to the Estimates process. And for all those around the table, I welcome them to today's Estimates for the Min­is­try of Health.

      I am going to seek some clari­fi­ca­tion from the member. The annual report that they are referring to is for, I believe, the Winnipeg Regional Health Author­ity and its Main Operating Room (OR) Surgical Cases on page 25. Please clarify if that is the case.

      And the member has also referenced $50 million for diag­nos­tic and surgical recovery. Those are two separate items. So, the $50 million for the backlog and to address diagnostics and surgeries is separate from the infor­ma­tion that's being reported in this annual report.

      So, if I could just seek some clari­fi­ca­tion from the member regarding the question, please.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: Yes, the minister is correct, I am referring to the chart on page 25–the table on page 25 that is titled Main Operating Room (OR) Surgical Cases.

      I guess the gist of my question is, how did $50 million get spent on priority surgeries and yet the reported number of surgeries completed in the WRHA has declined? So that's what I'm trying to assess here, if the minister can provide some clarity.

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) for the question. I do want to put some clari­fi­ca­tion on the record.

      So, the amounts that are shown in the annual report for the WRHA, those are dollars that are separate from the $50 million. The WRHA is using its own baseline operating funding that they receive annually to carry out these surgeries. The $50 million is separate from what is showing here. The surgeries are not reported as part of this because the $50 million can include surgeries under our request for supply arrangement, it can include medical remuneration and more and it could be done at facilities that are outside of the WRHA. So, we're doing a bit of mixing apples and oranges here, because it's separate.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: I'm sure the minister can understand that Manitobans may be concerned that $50 million was touted by this gov­ern­ment as a way to address the surgical and diag­nos­tic backlog, and one would imagine that with those efforts being made by the gov­ern­ment that in fact we would see im­prove­ments in the number of surgeries being performed and reportedly being performed in the WRHA–that there would be some sort of relationship there in terms of surgeries–Manitobans getting long-awaited surgeries that they des­per­ately need. So I would hope the minister can ap­pre­ciate that there will be many folks very concerned about why it is that there's a marked decrease in surgeries being performed.

      I'm going to ask the minister again to please pro­vide clarity as to why the number of surgeries being performed, completed, in the WRHA has declined year over year over year, to the point of nearly 500 less surgeries performed from 2021–sorry, 2020–'20-21 to 2021-2022.

      Thank you.

Ms. Gordon: I'm pleased to remind Manitobans that during the pandemic several individuals were re­deployed from their home units and their home health facilities to assist in our intensive-care units for very sick individuals, and so we saw a marked decrease in the number of surgeries that were being done.

      Now, this spring, in the Omicron wave, the–we had individuals begin to return to their home loca­tions, but that's just this year, spring of 2022. So, the decreases that the member is referring to are natural decreases that occurred as a result of the pandemic and the slow down in surgeries that everyone is aware of and led to some of the backlog that we're dealing with right now.

      And so the $50 million should–is separate, and it's dollars that have not just provided to WRHA for surgeries, and the report the member is referring to is an annual report solely for the Winnipeg Regional Health Author­ity, and in this report, they are using their baseline operating funding to carry out those surgeries.

* (15:30)

      The $50 million the member refers to for priority procedures and for the backlog is separately reported, Mr. Chair.

      Thank you.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that response.

      And again, I'm sure the minister can ap­pre­ciate that Manitobans will wonder how it is that $50 million can be set aside and invested to address a backlog, and yet we don't see those decisions increasing operating capacity within the public health-care system which the vast majority of Manitobans access and will need to access and should access universally.

      I'd like to ask about the number of beds in our hospitals. So, the number of beds has again gone down in Winnipeg hospitals. I'm sure the minister is well aware of this. Another 30 beds were lost this year. That's a total loss of 154 beds since 2017-18.

      My question to the minister is, why are we still losing hospital beds?

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for Union Station for the question. I do recall that this question was raised in the previous Estimates process and an answer was provided.

      I do want to remind the member that we tried to maintain a bed map, Mr. Chair, but it's a fluid thing. Beds change according to the needs of our patient popu­la­tion and is a snapshot in time. So there are individuals that are having outpatient surgeries, so there's less of a need for them to have in-patient care in a bed.

      The member may recall, because they worked in the health system back in 2000, the early 2000s, when gamma knife surgeries were being performed and there was less of a need for a person to spend an extended period of time in a hospital bed.

      So, Mr. Chair, it's a fluid report, and each time we take a snapshot it's just a snapshot for that parti­cular period of time. But it does change on a regular basis.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that response.

      I'd actually like to go back to my question re­garding the WRHA report that shows a decrease in the number of surgeries performed year over year and a sub­stan­tial decrease from 2020-2021 to 2021-2022.

      Can the minister just be very clear, because I was–I'm actually–when I reflected on her response, it's a little murky. Can the minister be very clear: is she saying that none of the $50 million that were allocated for priority surgeries, that none of those dollars would've been spent on surgeries performed in the WRHA?

      Can the minister just be very, very clear with that?

Ms. Gordon: The member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) is correct; I am not saying that, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: Okay, so can the minister provide clarity: Out of that $50 million, how much of those funds were allocated to the WRHA to address the surgeries?

      The minister just finished saying that they're separate, that the WRHA used their own dollars to perform the surgeries and the $50 million was separate. Now I'm asking for clarity and the minister's saying she didn't.

      So, you know, which one is it? Were–is any of the $50 million that were allocated for priority pro­cedures, were any of those funds spent in the WRHA to address surgeries? And if yes, how much?

* (15:40)

Ms. Gordon: I do want to place on the record that the–some of the funds from the $50 million has been used to procure, oh, close to 15,000 procedures, and to date we have spent $50.136 million; so over the $50 million that our gov­ern­ment earmarked for this purpose.

      The dollars flow to different entities: to physicians, to diag­nos­tic services, to surgery. The–I'd point the member to page 64 of our annual report, where there is a breakdown of the $50 million. It has been audited, and so I encourage the member to take a look at that–that $50.136 million, Mr. Chair.

      Thank you.

MLA Asagwara: I have to say, it's–I'm–just a little bit strange because the minister started by being very clear that the dollars–the $50 million–was separate from the WRHA dollars that were respon­si­ble for addressing these surgeries, which we know have sig­nificantly decreased in surgeries being performed in the author­ity.

      And then the minister seems to pivot and says, no, that's not exactly what she was saying when she said that. And so I suppose I'm just really hoping the minister can be very clear.

      I have asked for the minister to explicitly provide for us if those dollars, if any of the $50 million, were spent–were allocated, rather, for the WRHA to spend on surgeries being performed. It's a pretty straight­for­ward question. I'm hoping the minister can just provide a clear answer so we can move on from this and understand why is it that that $50 million that, you know, they touted as a way to address the backlog does not–did not have an impact on actually in­creasing surgical capacity in the public system, which is what Manitobans need. Vast majority of Manitobans are accessing health care and surgeries in the public system.

      And so, the minister has kind of reversed course here and stated that my summary of her comments were incorrect, and so I'm asking for clarity.

      Of the $50 million that were allocated for the surgical and diag­nos­tic backlog, how much of that money was used or allocated to the WRHA to address the surgeries being performed within the region where we see such a sig­ni­fi­cant decrease in surgeries being performed?

Ms. Gordon: I want to clarify for the member for Union Station that, again, the member began the questioning with a specific line item in the annual report for the WRHA and the question was–started out with why have surgeries decreased?

* (15:50)

      The years that the member referenced were two years that were in the middle of a pandemic–I think possibly the second, third and fourth wave of the pandemic–so I clarified by answering that there are times when individuals were redeployed from their surgery units to help out in our ICUs during the pandemic. And so, naturally, we saw a slowdown in surgeries, and there were times that non-emergent surgeries were not being carried out.

      So, I explained the reason for the decrease in surgeries in–during the pandemic. Now, we are here in Com­mit­tee of Supply to consider the 2022-2023 budget, Mr. Chair, so I remind the member of that, and it also gives me an op­por­tun­ity to talk about our  gov­ern­ment's commit­ment under Budget 2022: $110 million to address the surgical and diag­nos­tic backlog for a total of $160 million.

      Mr. Chair, just in terms of updated surgeries, as of September 29th, there were 1,169 non-emergent surgeries completed for the week of September 19th to 25th at Winnipeg sites. This is 46 more surgeries than the number completed during a similar week in 2019, which would be September 23rd to 29th of that year, when 1,123 surgeries were completed.

      So, the member can see that the surgeries are starting to increase–have started to increase now that all individuals have been returned to their surgical unit. And it also means that Winnipeg's surgery pro­gram was operating at 104.1 per cent of pre-pandemic levels for that week.

      All emergent and urgent surgeries, including cardiac and cancer procedures continue, Mr. Chair, to be prioritized. Non-urgent surgeries are reviewed by physicians to prioritize patients who medically should not wait any longer for procedures to be performed.

      And I want to high­light, as well, the number of emergent surgeries performed for the week, which remain steady; and there were 241 emergent or life-saving surgeries performed September 19th to 25th in Winnipeg, up 14 from the previous week and up 31 from a similar time period in 2019. And there were 259 surgical slates in Winnipeg the week of September 19th to 25th. This is two below pre-COVID norms, but this means slates were being scheduled at 99.2 per cent of pre-pandemic baseline standards in Winnipeg, Mr. Chair.

      As a reminder, I also want the member to know that the number of surgeries performed during a slate–it will vary widely depending on the acuity of the patient and the complexity of the procedure. And I'll give you an example: an endoscopy will not take as long to perform as neurosurgery.

      So the time allotted for surgical slates in 2022 may vary from those performed pre-pandemic due the demand, resulting in fewer surgeries being performed. And, again, COVID has also resulted in patients waiting longer for procedures than they did in the past, causing them to be sicker, Mr. Chair. This results in longer surgical and recovery times, which impacts the number of surgeries that can be performed during a slate.

      About 26 cardiac surgeries were performed the week of September 19th to 25th, which is up seven from the previous week; 24 surgeries were non-urgent, elective in nature, while two were emergent. There were 22 cardiac surgeries performed during a similar period in–

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able minister's time has expired.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that breakdown of infor­ma­tion.

      I just–I will move on from this line of questioning because it's unfor­tunately not producing the infor­ma­tion from the minister that I know Manitobans really need to hear at this time, especially as they still don't have access to a dashboard which would inform them, in terms of surgical waits.

      You know, ultimately, the whole narrative around the $50 million being announced re­peat­edly by this gov­ern­ment was that it was going to address the backlog of surgical waits and diag­nos­tic test waits. And we see plainly from the WRHA reporting that, unfor­tunately, hundreds–hundreds–of surgeries less were performed, and year over year have been performed.

      And so, you know, it's disappointing that the minister just won't simply answer my question and provide the clarity that I'm seeking in–on behalf of Manitobans.

      And I think, more im­por­tantly, it's in­cred­ibly disappointing for Manitobans to know that despite the $50 million being announced time and time again, it hasn't, in fact, resulted in more surgeries being performed.

      In fact, we see a tre­men­dous amount less of surgeries being performed in the WRHA. And every single one of those numbers represents a family and a Manitoban who's, you know, suffering and waiting in pain.

      So, I'll go back to my question around hospital beds. Certainly, I can ap­pre­ciate the minister stated in terms of fluctuations in the health-care system. However, the minister is well aware that bed capacity–available beds in our health-care system, and the lack of available beds, is creating a nightmarish reality in our hospitals. People do not have access to beds; we have a staffing crisis that is contributing to challenges in terms of bed capacity.

      So, I suppose my question for the minister is, what is she doing to ensure that we are bolstering bed numbers in our public health-care system and when does she expect us to stop losing beds in our hospitals?

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) for the question. They know from having worked in the health system that beds require staff and–in order for them to be available to Manitobans.

      And I just want to put on the record that pre-pandemic, if we look at our ICU beds, the bed base was 72, and post-pandemic, we are at 108, Mr. Chair. And that means at HSC Winnipeg, there's 47 ICU beds; St. Boniface, 36, of which 20 are cardiac; Grace, 13; Brandon, 12. Again, the total is 108 plus two cardiac E1 beds at St. Boniface.

* (16:00)

      But that was only possible, Mr. Chair, because our gov­ern­ment undertook a very aggressive training and–com­pre­hen­sive training program to ensure that a total of 149 nurses in the last year have completed the 12-week critical-care orientation program, and 29 of those individuals graduated in May.

      Then, at the end of August, we saw 19 more nurses graduate from that same program, and mid-September 23 individuals had enrolled for the next program class starting on September 12th.

      So our gov­ern­ment recognizes–and I hope the member for Union Station is aware as well–that beds can be opened when we bring more training, more nurses, more allied help, more doctors into the system, and that is why our gov­ern­ment announced $19.5 million to add 259 nurse training seats, five post-secondary in­sti­tutions as part of our larger plan to add close to 400 new nursing edu­ca­tion seats. And I was pleased to join my colleague from immigration and advanced edu­ca­tion where we announced $30 million to add 28 ad­di­tional beds to our intensive-care units, Mr. Chair.

      So, once again, it requires nurses and that is why we are supporting hundreds of internationally educated nurse applicants to obtain their licensure and start practising in Manitoba. And each individual is eligible to receive $23,000 of financial aid, Mr. Chair–first time in the history of the province that that has been available.

      Another first, Mr. Chair, is the undergraduate nurse employees program. So, last December, we saw 63 third- and fourth-year nursing students join our health-care teams to support the delivery of health services for Manitobans while gaining valuable paid ex­per­ience in a clinical setting.

      So we are doing our part as a gov­ern­ment re­cruiting, retaining, making available mentorship pro­grams. Esta­blish­ing a prov­incial float pool is in the works; incentives to encourage nurses to work more shifts per week. That is how we are able to increase our bed map, and it shows that our efforts are working, Mr. Chair, because, as I mentioned, before the pandemic our ICU bed base was 72, and post-pandemic, with the training that our gov­ern­ment has invested in, that number has increased to 108.

      So it's very im­por­tant for Manitobans to know that we are taking the steps necessary to increase our bed base, to increase, not just here in Winnipeg, but across the entire province.

      Mr. Chair, last week I was up in Norway House and had an op­por­tun­ity to tour their health-care centre of excellence, and they shared with me that they would be increasing, when this new site opens, from four dialysis stations to eight.

      So, again, increases are being seen across the province, and our gov­ern­ment remains committed to working with all stake­holders, Indigenous com­mu­nities, all our RHAs, to increase our bed base so Manitobans receive the care they need.

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able minister's time has expired.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that response. The minister acknowl­edged some­thing that we are all very well aware of, and certainly Manitobans are well aware of, that, you know, while we see a loss of another 30 beds this year–a total loss of 154 since 2017 and '18–that we also have seen a mass, almost exodus, of the health-care pro­fes­sionals needed to staff those beds.

      And so while I can ap­pre­ciate the minister listing off an­nounce­ments that we've heard many times be­fore regarding what this gov­ern­ment is doing to try and educate some more nurses, the minister has not provided any clarity as to how that will impact the fact that we are actively losing beds in our hospital system, which, you know, the lack of beds in our health-care system right now, today, is having a huge negative impact on the health out­comes of Manitobans.

      And when we have these com­mit­tees and we have these con­ver­sa­tions, it is so im­por­tant that we talk about health out­comes, we talk about the real impacts of this gov­ern­ment's decision making on Manitoba families. And so I would ask the minister to provide clarity.

      She's listed off a lot of initiatives that she's saying her gov­ern­ment is under­taking, but when does the minister expect to stop losing hospital beds? We've lost another 30 beds this year. That matters. That affects people.

      And so with all of these initiatives in mind, when does this minister expect to stop losing hospital beds? And this infor­ma­tion really does matter for Manitoba families who depend on those beds.

Mr. James Teitsma, Acting Chairperson, in the Chair

Ms. Gordon: I do want to put on the record and correct some infor­ma­tion that the member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) has stated–that individuals are coming into the system and that is why we have seen the college of nursing add a third intake starting next year in May, because the dean of the college of nursing has stated very publicly that for every seat they receive four applications.

* (16:10)

      So, nursing is a very rewarding and fulfilling career. We continue to see individuals coming into the health system.

Mr. Chairperson in the Chair

      With regard to the bed map, or the bed base, this is very fluid, Mr. Chair. It changes every year. Let's go back to 2007-2008: there were 2,488 beds. And today, '21-22, there's 2,534. So this is not a static number.

      We also see some facilities are asking for changes to be made to the way their rooms are structured, so there may be multi patients in a room. And we've had locations request that they change–we–they change the configuration so that they can have behavioural beds. And in those situations, they may not want two, or three or four people in the same setting, so they change the bed base, which leads to better health out­comes for Manitobans.

      So this is not a static number. We certainly want to provide facilities with the autonomy and the in­de­pen­dence to make changes based on the popu­la­tion that they are serving and the severity of the health con­di­tions that they are ex­per­iencing.

      And we're–we have those con­ver­sa­tions all the time. My colleague in the Min­is­try of Seniors and Long-Term Care will tell you that, while he has carried out con­sul­ta­tions across this province for the seniors' strategy, that we're hearing changes–facilities are requesting changes to the way personal-care homes are built. They should be small houses, they're called. So that will look very different in the future. We're not going to see our bed base remaining static.

      And with regard–specific regard to the WRHA figures, the explanation note No. 1, for example, states clearly that in 2020-2021, beds included 30 temporary beds which were closed in August 2021. They were never meant to be permanent beds. The WRHA added those beds as a temporary measure based on what was happening in the health system at that time.

      And this is the in­de­pen­dence and autonomy we want to provide to our facilities and our service delivery organi­zations to use the operational funding that's provided by our gov­ern­ment to make those decisions on the ground, to ensure Manitobans receive the care that they need.

      Those decisions are not being made here in the Legis­lative Building by politicians, they're being made by health system leaders. And we are going to continue to support their efforts to provide Manitobans with the best care that they clinically and medically have deter­mined that they need, and the types of beds that they need to provide those services, and how the beds will be structured and where they will be placed.

      And again, Mr. Chair, those are not decisions that are being made on Broadway, those are being made by system leaders at the bedside who deter­mine, for example, like the WRHA has–and the member can read it there, it's note No. 1–that 30 temporary beds, for example, were closed in 2021 by the region. And those are temporary for reasons; I do not have that infor­ma­tion handy.

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able minister's time has expired.

MLA Asagwara: Can the minister provide clarity around the surgical fund for this year? So, the fund for 2022‑2023 has been spent–sorry, rather, how much of that fund has been spent to date? And how many ad­di­tional surgeries over the previous year will that support?

* (16:20)

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for the question.

      The second quarter results–actually, the second quarter just ended on September 30th, and so the second quarter results are currently not available. That's a major reporting, That won't be available for several weeks Mr. Chair. But the Diag­nos­tic and Surgical Recovery Task Force, led by Dr. MacDonald and David Matear, they do provide regular reporting.

      And I do also want to bring to the member's attention that the '21-22 results are audited and how the funds are spent are audited, and there's been no previous concern. But the second quarter results are not available at this time, Mr. Chair.

      Thank you.

MLA Asagwara: On–thank you, thank the minister for that response.

      I might go back to that, but I'd like to ask about a summary on page 31 of the annual report. So, the pre­sen­ta­tion of summary accounting for Health: can the minister explain for us what the adjustments are on the consolidation line? And, again, that's on page 31.

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) for the question.

      If we look at one specific line, funding to health author­ities, under consolidation and other adjust­ments, the entry there is to avoid duplicating account­ing entries. So that amount is actually included in the other reporting entities column, so it's–so that that full amount is reflective of the SDO's actual results. So the–it's backing out the entries that we have made so that we don't duplicate what the service delivery organi­zation–Prairie Mountain, WRHA–the entries that they have included in their accounting.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for her response.

      And I'm just wondering if she can provide for us what the current vacancy rate in her de­part­ment is, and can she provide that vacancy rate by division?

      Thank you.

* (16:30)

Ms. Gordon: With–in response to the member's question, that granular detail we are not able to provide at that time. So the specificity of the infor­ma­tion, we–I will take that under ad­vise­ment, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for taking that under ad­vise­ment and I look forward to receiving that infor­ma­tion and clarity.

      Can the minister provide the names of her political staff?

      Thank you.

Ms. Gordon: I'm pleased to answer that question. It's Matthew LaPage–L‑a‑P‑a-g-e; Vanessa Wiebe–W‑i‑e‑b‑e; Tyler Thomas–T‑h‑o‑m‑a‑s; and Mathew Grivicic–G‑r‑i‑v‑i‑c‑i‑c.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: Thank the minister for her response.

      What is the current vacancy rate within Insured Benefits branch–sorry, within the Insured Benefits branch. So, obviously, that's the branch that deals with health cards.

      Thank you.

Ms. Gordon: I would like to take that question under ad­vise­ment and provide the member with an answer at a later date.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for offering to take it under ad­vise­ment, and I look forward to receiving that infor­ma­tion as soon as it's available.

      Can the minister provide an explanation for what the expenditures in 5(a) Transition are? And that is on page 64. It is listed pretty plainly on page 64, but there's obviously a lack of clarity on my end as to what the expenditures are for the 5(a) Transition. So, if the minister could outline that, I'd ap­pre­ciate it.

* (16:40)

Ms. Gordon: On page 64, under 5(a) Transition those are budgetary items from the gov­ern­ment de­part­ment that are transitioning to Shared Health. So, for example, Selkirk Mental Health Centre, Cadham Lab is moving into our prov­incial Shared Health author­ity. So those are budgetary items that are transitioning.

      Thank you, Mr. Chair.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that response.

      So, the number is completely flat. Is the minister saying that it–the reason why the number is totally flat is because it's just simply reflecting the transition of those services or–it just seems a little too perfect that the number is the same, so I just would ap­pre­ciate a little bit more clarity there.

Ms. Gordon: Technically, there is no variance to be reported and the numbers that are here under the 5(a) Transition section has been audited, Mr. Chair.

      Thank you.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for that response.

      Capital construction was underspent by $161 million in 2021 and '22.

      Can the minister provide a list of projects not done in '21-22 and does the minister anticipate a similar underspend in 2022-23?

Ms. Gordon: Again, I just want to reiterate that the Estimates that we should be con­sid­ering is '22-23, but the member continues to take us back in time to a period where our Province was undergoing a lot of dif­fi­cul­ties, and that was during the pandemic period.

      So, for example, projects in hospitals were delayed; some were not completed because con­tractors were not allowed in. And the member will–knows much about that because I have received letters from the member on behalf of con­stit­uents who were asking about visitation to be able to even get into the hospital to visit family members and friends.

      So, during the height of the pandemic that the member continues to go back to, yes, there were projects that were not completed, projects that were not done and that is unfor­tunate. But the focus of our gov­ern­ment in the '22-23 fiscal year is to advance the clinical pre­ven­tative services projects, of which there is over 30 of those initiatives all across the province of Manitoba to ensure Manitobans receive care closer to home, Mr. Chair.

      So that is the focus of our gov­ern­ment. That is the focus of the de­part­ment. That's the focus of Shared Health and all the health regions. And I do want to bring to the member's attention page 47, under explanations, about capital invest­ments, it says: delays in proceeding with various projects as a result of restricted access to health-care facilities during the COVID‑19 pandemic.

      So right there in the report, Mr. Chair, is the reason for projects not being completed, but I look forward to–I've done a lot of shovel turning, many an­nounce­ments across the province. I look forward to ribbon cuttings and the opening of facilities to Manitobans to pour in and receive the care that they need.

      So we are focused on great projects such as the St. Boniface Hospital expansion that is well under way. I saw drone photos of the work that is being done, and just amazing. The Portage hospital, Neepawa–there are so many projects.

      So, when the member asked what I hoped to see in this year, is that a lot of those projects are above ground and many of those are also completed, Mr. Chair.

      Thank you.

MLA Asagwara: I'm not sure if the minister just didn't hear the second half of my question.

      I referenced 2021-2022 to draw attention to the fact that capital construction was underspent by $161 million, and then subsequent to me high­lighting that, I did ask if the minister anticipated a similar underspend for 2022-2023.

* (16:50)

       So I was specific and I did talk about the Estimates book that this minister is referencing. So if she could provide clarity, if she anticipates a similar underspend in 2022-2023, I would greatly ap­pre­ciate that.

      Thank you.

Ms. Gordon: Certainly, we continue to see supply chain issues across all our projects, and the health system leaders are carrying out strategic sourcing. In this climate of–it's difficult to predict. And so what will inflation–how will inflation impact on price increases for–as an example. But a lot of efforts are being taken to deliver the projects on time and on budget, but certainly it's difficult for me to say what–you know, we are seeing, even shortages in staffing, staff that are working on projects. But certainly we hope to, as I said earlier, bring in these projects on time and on budget. But, again, it's difficult to predict in this climate of uncertainty, in terms of economics.

MLA Asagwara: I thank the minister for her response. I believe I've actually asked my–the ques­tion I'm going to ask, previously, but didn't get clarity around this. So I'd like to dig into this again.

      The sup­ple­ment to Estimates docu­ment identifies a series of risks–excuse me–a series of treatment plans that are proposed. But there's a lack of detail in terms of what the treatment plans actually are.

      Can the minister provide a clearer idea of what the treatment plans are, when they might be complete and whether they'll be released to the public?

Ms. Gordon: I thank the member for Union Station (MLA Asagwara) for the question.

      As the member knows, because they were part of a briefing that was held here in my office, we have endeavoured to be as trans­par­ent as possible in terms of sharing our treatment planned and–for COVID‑19, flu and infectious disease spread, we have shared that, Mr. Chair, in a briefing. And we'll endeavour, when­ever possible, to be trans­par­ent and share as much infor­ma­tion as we can.

      However, it has not come to my attention by the De­part­ment of Finance that they will be releasing the plans that are listed here, Mr. Chair.

      But again, our de­part­ment has certainly taken steps to have the Leader of the Op­posi­tion, the Health critic, come in and–into room–I think it was room 54, with Health leadership–it actually was not in my office, I want to correct the record there–and have them briefed on our COVID‑19 bivalent plan, our flu, which includes the high-dose flu vaccine, and how we plan to ensure there isn't a spread of other viruses like Monkeypox and other respiratory viruses. I know that the chief public health officer was part of that discussion, as well as the CEO of Shared Health and our health system.

      So, we are going to continue to be trans­par­ent, but again, I am not aware of the minister–the De­part­ment of Finance making–

Mr. Chairperson: The hour being 5 p.m., com­mit­tee rise.

Room 255

Finance

Mr. Chairperson (Brad Michaleski): Will the Commit­tee of Supply please come to order. This section of the Com­mit­tee of Supply will now resume con­sid­era­tion of the Estimates for the De­part­ment of Finance.

      Questioning for this de­part­ment will proceed in a global manner.

      The floor is now open for questions.

Mr. Mark Wasyliw (Fort Garry): Question is for the minister.

      Since 2019 and the election, Minister Fielding received two mandate letters from Premier Pallister, I think one originally in 2019 in the fall and another one on March 3rd, 2020.

      I'm wondering if the minister can confirm whether or not he has received a mandate letter from Premier Stefanson.

* (15:20)

Hon. Cameron Friesen (Minister of Finance): I thank the member for the question.

      Also, I just want to call attention to the fact that I'm joined in the room today by various persons within the De­part­ment of Finance, at the Treasury Board Secretariat, in the hydro–or, I should say, in the gov­ern­ment Crown Services secretariat.

      So, at the table, I have my deputy minister, Richard Groen, with me. I have Ryan Klos, who's the executive financial officer for Finance. And I also have Ann Ulusoy, who's the Treasury Board secretary. And I have Andrea Saj, who's the Prov­incial Comptroller.

      We have other people in the room, and we can identify them as they have op­por­tun­ity to come to the table.

      The member is speaking, of course, to the man­date letter of my predecessor. And I would caution that, of course, my predecessor had respon­si­bilities that are different than the ones that I am respon­si­ble for. My predecessor, as the minister of Finance, also had the respon­si­bility for the Public Utilities Board. He was the minister of Labour. I do not hold the respon­si­bility for the minister of Labour; that goes to the minister for consumer pro­tec­tion, labour and gov­ern­ment services, and Public Utilities Board is now also his respon­si­bility, and I have the respon­si­bility for Hydro.

      There has been no new mandate letter in place of the old one that I've received from Premier Stefanson.

Mr. Wasyliw: So, given that there was no new man­date letter that's been put in place, do you feel bound by the previous two mandate letters from the former premier Pallister?

Mr. Friesen: I thank the member for the question.

      I think I might understand the road that he's trying to go down. The question he's posing is: Do I feel bound by instructions from executive gov­ern­ment that were issued in 2016? That was when I would have received a mandate letter as the former minister of Finance. As the member pointed out, my predecessor in this role in 20–approximately 19–received a letter of mandate as well.

      I guess what I would say to the member, at a high level, is that the world has changed and so those instructions–very good instructions–instructions that attempted to reflect the economic and fiscal chal­lenges of the time, have to be seen through the context, the lens of that time.

      So, as I reflect back here, just at the table, of my–on my own mandate letter, I recall that in 2016, after 16 years of NDP gov­ern­ment, my gov­ern­ment had come to form gov­ern­ment with a strong mandate by the people of Manitoba.

      And at that time, the province of Manitoba was suffering from years and years of unachieved budgetary targets–expenditures that were con­sistently exceeding reve­nues–and warnings coming suc­ces­sive­ly in years to that former NDP gov­ern­ment, saying, you don't have a revenue problem; you've got a spending problem. And those warnings went un­heeded and, of course, Manitoba suffered debts, downgrades that followed that, failure to make progress.

      We know that after 16 years of NDP gov­ern­ment, Manitoba was an uncompetitive landscape in which to make invest­ments, and we saw that more and more of Manitoba was getting behind because it had a very uninspired tax regime: some of the lowest tax brackets in the entire country. It had an array of tax credits that had really never looked very coherent; people didn't always understand what those tax credits were trying to accom­plish or who they were trying to benefit.

      So, in that context, I did receive instructions from the then-premier to do things like stabilize the finances; to make good invest­ments in the services, in health care and edu­ca­tion; to review Manitoba's array of tax credits and look for benefit, and take–and provide advice that is evidence-based and on the basis of what we were trying to accom­plish. There were instructions around reducing the regula­tory burden that faced organi­zations and busi­nesses and industry and non-profits and individuals.

      And there was challenges–there were challenges that, at that time otherwise that–and we sought to address those challenges.

      And then thereafter, in 2019, there were new instructions given. And today the member asks, well, are you bound by those instructions? I think if you had asked the minister in 2019 if he was bound pre­domi­nantly by the instructions given in 2016 he would've said no, because the world is changing.

      And so today, in 2022, on October the 3rd, if you ask me am I bound by the instructions in that mandate letter, well, I would say that a mandate letter is only one form of provi­ding a minister and a de­part­ment with guide­lines.

      I think that guideposts can be helpful. I think that parameters can be helpful. I think that the former premier used to say–I think he said it publicly–that if you aim at nothing, you hit it every time. Which is kind of a funny statement, but it still rings true in that we need to be able to articulate where we're going, and we need to be able to have a plan of how we're going to get there. And we need to measure progress against those stated goals to indicate if we're making progress.

      So I think to sum up, I would say to the member that the world has changed. He's talking about a time before COVID‑19, he's talking about a very different time economically, and I'd be happy to speak this afternoon about how the world is changing, how the Canadian economic outlook is deteriorating and the challenges ahead, and how our gov­ern­ment continues to respond to those challenges.

Mr. Wasyliw: So the minister tells us that the current Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) has not issued a mandate letter in relation to his min­is­try. But he says there's other guideposts that they have–or she has put in.

      I'm wondering if the minister can explain what guideposts he has been given, and what priorities the current Premier has given this minister; and what he feels is bound–binding him in his min­is­try in relation to the current Premier's agenda.

Mr. Friesen: I thank the member for the question, and I welcome the op­por­tun­ity to speak exactly as he says about the highlights of Budget 2022, and where this gov­ern­ment is focusing its efforts.

      As I said, in order to identify challenges, in order to make efforts to address those challenges and in order to be accountable on the journey towards those challenges–and meeting those goals–I'm on page 28 of Budget 2022: Fiscally Respon­si­ble Out­comes and Economic Growth Strategy.

      There are five key areas that I want to refer the member to.

* (15:30)

      The first is strengthening health care. The member will notice that our gov­ern­ment made a principal pledge for $110 million in new invest­ment to reduce the diag­nos­tic and surgical backlog caused during COVID‑19 when surgeries and procedures had to go offline to allow the health‑care system to re­orient itself to face the challenge of the global pandemic. But he will also see a $17‑million imple­men­ta­tion of year 1 for our five‑year action plan for mental health and com­mu­nity wellness.

      He also sees, under strengthening health care, a seniors' strategy–$20 million, and $32 million in initiatives for the Stevenson review. I was the minister who contracted with Lynn Stevenson to come in and review our system after the challenges of COVID‑19 and the impact on our personal-care homes; $11 million for nursing enrolment increases like we heard about this afternoon in question period by the Minister of Health (Ms. Gordon); $812 million for a rural base–what we call our cornerstone projects–to address the clinical pre­ven­tative services plan.

      And, of course, in this budget, still $630 million for COVID responses, because we know that the system must continue to respond to that challenge. But besides that, of course, I would welcome the op­por­tun­ity this afternoon to speak about other parameters making life more affordable.

      And, of course, in this budget, very, very sig­ni­fi­cant efforts to help Manitoba families deal with rising prices, the edu­ca­tion property tax rebate rising to 37.5 per cent for all homeowners and for farm families. But also another parameter, or another guidepost, building our economy–those invest­ments in the Venture Capital Fund of $50 million.

      Immigration pro­gram­ming invest­ments, focusing on tax competitiveness, as I said, for Manitoba busi­nesses. There's another section of this budget that talks about investing in our com­mu­nities with recon­ciliation activities, a $5-million fund; $125 million of new funding in schools; the new arts, culture and com­mu­nity sports fund, $100 million over three years. Those applications are out the door. There are groups across this province who are writing applications and returning them, and this stands in addition to the Building Sus­tain­able Com­mu­nities fund, which has been a very, very suc­cess­ful fund in this province, but doubled in the fiscal year to account for ad­di­tional interest in the program.

      There's more I could say but, finally, I wanted to point to the part of the Budget 2022 which speaks about protecting our environ­ment: $6 million for 12 initiatives under the made-in-Manitoba green and climate plan, $50 million of accelerated re­habilita­tion of orphaned and abandoned mine sites, expansion of our Con­ser­va­tion and Climate Fund. There's new funding for forestry programs. And, of course, we have allocated over $100 million for the Lake Manitoba and Lake St. market–Martin outlet channel project for enhancing flood pro­tec­tion.

      So perhaps I could just indicate to the member these, Sir, as good reminders to the citizens of Manitoba and to the members of the op­posi­tion of where the gov­ern­ment is putting its efforts in order to get good benefit for all Manitobans.

Mr. Wasyliw: I have some questions in relation to the family affordability package.

      I–as the minister is well aware, Manitobans who are in the lowest income bracket, those families spend up to 50 per cent of their income on shelter, food and fuel. And, of course, the affordability package also benefits high-income-bracket earners in Manitoba, and their proportion of shelter, food and fuel drops to 30 per cent. And by imposing a flat rate, both high-income families and low-income families get the same amount, even though the impacts of the cost-of-living crisis is very different between the lowest bracket and the highest bracket.

      Now, economists would describe and have described this package as regressive, meaning that it's squandering money that basically could be going at a higher rate to lower income bracket and reducing the amount that the lower income bracket is getting as a result of the broad application of the benefit.

      So I'm wondering, what was the gov­ern­ment think­ing, here? Why were they giving a benefit to high-income families that need it less than giving a larger benefit to low-income families that obviously need it more?

Mr. Friesen: I thank the member for the question.

      I know the ground on which he would like to quarrel. I will challenge him today, though, to sub­stantiate comments he's made in respect of economists taking umbrage. So, I really welcome the member to produce the names of these economists to which he refers who are saying that this suite of affordability measures has–somehow has got it wrong.

      I want to clear up any mis­under­standing the member has about the gov­ern­ment's affordability payments. I understand that he's stuck on hard turf right now because we hear the op­posi­tion parties clearly doing–trying to do two things at once: trying to say that these measures are woefully inadequate, and then at the same time, every day in the House, saying they don't go far enough.

      And, clearly, that presents a challenge to mem­bers of the op­posi­tion who are simultaneously arguing that somehow the measures don't do enough, and the measures go too far at the same time. Certainly, we've been puzzled to hear these oscillating statements from members of the op­posi­tion.

      I want to high­light the fact that our gov­ern­ment is taking action with an affordability package–a $96‑million package–that includes, as the member said, payments to Manitoba families with children under 18 years old and family net incomes of less than $175,000 combined income. The benefit is for $250 for a single child and $200 ad­di­tional for every child thereafter. We know that the average payment for families will arise at somewhere under $500; it will total $63 million in benefits, and it will go to families of more–of approximately 282,000 children.

      Let the record show that the member for Fort Garry (Mr. Wasyliw) called this squandering money. I really would challenge the member to walk up the driveways of residences in his con­stit­uency and remind the people who are struggling with the highest CPI increases in the last 40 years–with the highest BPS rate hikes by the Bank of Canada in 40 years, by 300‑basis-point changes in a matter of months–that they have no needs and this is squandering money. I wonder how that con­ver­sa­tion would go with his con­stit­uents; I could guess.

      However, there's more to the package than that. Of course, what the member glossed over is that there is another payment right now going to Manitoba seniors with less than $40,000 in family income. So it, perhaps, argues exactly the point that the member is making, in that this is a payment that benefits seniors at the low end of the earning spectrum.

* (15:40)

      Why? Because they are dis­propor­tion­ately affected by those increases which I had spoke about;  $16 million for that initiative, more than 52,000 seniors households, and I even have the–oh, I can't reflect on the presence or absence of members at com­mit­tee, so I won't be able to talk about whether or not the Minister respon­si­ble for Seniors is seated here at the table.

      Both of these payments are designed as a refund­able tax credit; they will not be taxed. But remember, in addition to these things, also, this is the gov­ern­ment that has just recently announced the minimum wage rising, increasing by $1.55 on October 1st. This just happened two days ago. And then further, it will rise to $15 per hour by next year.

      In addition to this, Rent Assist benefits for families not enrolled in EIA were enhanced from 75 to 80 per cent, a median market rate, and right now, that basic needs amount for EIA–non-Rent Assist EIA individuals is going up for the first time in years in this province. And then in addition to these things, of course, we have also announced support for food banks.

      So, while I understand the point that the member is trying to make, he's not able to make it in respect of an affordability package that is very broad based, that sets thresholds and actually provides benefits for those most in need.

      What I would like to end by saying, if I under­stood the time left, is that I take the opposite approach of the member. The measures that we have spoken about today are actually progressive; they are not regressive in that those of more modest income earn­ings–these benefits are proportionately larger in their households and therefore of–are more–are of more benefit than would be the case for someone at the higher end of the spectrum who still qualifies.

Mr. Wasyliw: I think the minister knows full well that the average household income in Manitoba is $98,000, and that the cut-off threshold for this benefit is almost double that at $170,000.

      A family making $170,000 in Manitoba is a high tax bracket earner. And what this gov­ern­ment has chosen to do is give smaller payments to Manitobans, many to high-income tax bracket earners. And if this payment was more targeted to the average actual household in Manitoba, this gov­ern­ment could give more sig­ni­fi­cant relief.

      And so I take the minister's comment about talking to con­stit­uents and I'm concerned about how out of touch this gov­ern­ment is because we have been talking to con­stit­uents in Riel, in Radisson, in Rossmere, in Lagimodière, in Fort Richmond. And I'll tell you that when you do talk to a high tax bracket earner, and they've been told that they're receiving this cheque, they go, oh, that's great, we don't need it, we're going to donate it to charity.

      Now instead of treating high tax earners as people that need sig­ni­fi­cant help from this province, why not double the benefit for those families who make the household average of $98,000? Why are you giving less benefits to the low tax bracket earners than you otherwise should and would do?

Mr. Friesen: I want to make a few things clear to the member. Member knows that Bank of Canada increases have happened six times in the last eight months. The member knows that the most recent change was a 75-basis-point change, preceded by a 100-basis-point change, the impact of which has been felt across Manitoba in households.

      The member knows that the CPI latest infor­ma­tion for the month of August is showing an 8 per cent increase of costs, that is August over August, and that is for that array, that basket of goods: every­thing from appliances to a basket of groceries and filling up a tank of gas and paying for rent, and all of those costs. And so the gov­ern­ment has been responding with some of the most sig­ni­fi­cant measures designed to leave more money in the pockets of Manitobans.

      Of course, last year that included our edu­ca­tion property tax rebate, at 25 per cent; this year, that payment to Manitoba homeowners is in the neigh­bourhood of 37.5 per cent to homeowners and farm families, while a 10 per cent benefit still is derived by other categories that pay property taxes. In addition to that, our resi­den­tial renters' tax credit is a new credit that puts $525 in the hands of every family. But in addition to those things, this affordability package acts now to address the real impacts that Manitoba families are facing in their finances.

      And let's be clear: today, the member has made his stripes very clear. He called it squandering money. We talked about a benefit to families with children–282,000 children–and he said squandering money. We talked about a benefit under $40,000 for the lowest income earning seniors in the province, and he called it squandering money. We talked about increases to the basic amount in EIA for individuals without chil­dren, and he called it squandering money. So I think it's–today it's quite clear that the member will simply criticize these things.

* (15:50)

      But what is that member's own record and his party's record on making life affordable? He knows that the basic personal amount was not increased by the previous gov­ern­ment, and it took millions and millions of dollars out of the hands of individuals simply by virtue of the fact that the tax system, in a punitive way, taxed individual income earners far more quickly in this province than it did in other provinces.

      Now, I would say that was a way of making Manitobans squander their money by paying the gov­ern­ment too early. As a matter of fact, when we took  gov­ern­ment, that basic personal amount dif­ference between Saskatchewan and Manitoba was almost double. You could earn almost double in Saskatchewan what you could earn in Manitoba.

      We have been taking action. We have been allow­ing the lowest income earners, who he speaks about today, to keep more of their hard-earned money.

      And on page 41 of the budget and budget papers, he will see a helpful chart there that indicates that $162 million has already been saved by the lowest income earners because of the basic personal amount adjustments. More than 15,700 Manitobans no longer pay income tax at all due to the fact that we've been increasing that basic personal amount.

      But on what the member refers to as the tax brackets, remember it was his gov­ern­ment that didn't index tax brackets. Manitoba has some of the lowest tax brackets in all of Canada due to simply indexation of those brackets.

      That second bracket, now, in Manitoba, has risen from $67,000, where the NDP artificially held down that bracket amount to siphon the maximum amount of money away from Manitobans who were earning income to almost $75,000.

      So, once again, I say to the member, to his question, do I feel that, you know, a teacher's child who is married to a contractor or a social worker who has a household with an entrepreneur, if–are they ex­per­iencing challenges right now raising children? I say absolutely they are, and our gov­ern­ment is there to help.

Mr. Wasyliw: I would certainly encourage the Finance Minister to get out of the sort of gov­ern­ment bubble and actually go into Radisson, go into Rossmere, speak to the people in Southdale and Riel and actually talk to these families that are in the high income brackets.

      And they will tell you what they tell us: That they view this as a–completely cynical, that nobody asked for their help, if they have–make $170,000 in family income that it's not going to have a measurable difference to their quality of life.

      They see it as a cynical political move of literally buying votes with their own tax dollars prior to a by‑election in Kirkfield Park. And they will give unsolicited advice to the gov­ern­ment, which they should heed, that they should lower the threshold of $170,000 to the actual average in Manitoba of $98,000 so that those families can actually get the support they need so that they can get through this cost of living crisis.

      Now, this minister talks about being evidence based. Well, let's talk about that.

      How did you arrive at the $170,000 threshold? Why did you include the high-income bracket in this cheque? What was that decision based on? What evidence was it based on and what was the thinking process that those people needed help so therefore the people in the lowest tax bracket get less? So, please, can you share that with the com­mit­tee?

Mr. Friesen: Yes, the member and I simply don't agree. This gov­ern­ment has been listening, and it has been listening to Manitobans who say that they are facing the challenges of rising prices.

      But of course, the previous NDP gov­ern­ment for years and years was tone-deaf to the voices of Manitobans who told them that they were the highest taxed juris­dic­tion west of Quebec, with the lowest thresholds for taxation, the lowest basic personal amount. I always found it interesting that the NDP didn't raise the basic personal amount. But not only that, that they never addressed their rate of taxation for that BPA, which meant that they had a dis­propor­tion­ately high rate of taxation assessed on exactly that component of our popu­la­tion who makes the least money.

      So it seems strange today to receive a lecture from the member, who belongs to a party who made so very little progress on behalf of Manitobans in creating affordability for those families. In 16 years of gov­ern­ment, they raised 15 taxes. My colleague, the member for Portage la Prairie (Mr. Wishart), and I were elected into the Legislature just before the NDP went out and said that they would not raise the PST from 7 to 8 per cent. We were also in the Legislature when that budget came in twenty–2014 probably was the budget in which the PST was raised, but 2013 that PST was widened to apply to a whole other, you know, realm of goods and services.

      The member talks about principles of economics, but surely he would understand that those PST increases, and punitive taxation regimes, would dis­propor­tion­ately affect those of lower income. Where the price of those goods accounts for a higher degree of their household after-tax disposable income.

      I was just looking at the cost and the CPI tracker that is showing the increases in goods for Manitobans. Food costs, you know, accounting for 16 per cent of the CPI basket. Shelter, in Manitoba, that counts for 25.6 per cent. Household furnishings and equip­ment at 2 per cent. Clothing and footwear, trans­por­tation, health and personal care; all of these are impacts right now, these increases, in Manitoba households.

      Now, the member says that he knows best. He knows better than Manitobans. He knows for a fact, he says, that no one over the magical number of $98,000 is feeling the impact of rising prices. But I think that if that member honestly canvassed Manitobans, he would know that households are ex­per­iencing these challenges. They are ex­per­iencing the challenge of filling up their cars for 80 per cent more than it cost two years ago. They are ex­per­iencing the challenge of paying for butter at $7 per pound as opposed to $4 pre-pandemic.

      They are facing the challenges of clothing and footwear for their children; 282,000 children are in families who will receive payments under this affordability package; more than 52,000 seniors under the threshold income of $40,000 will receive these payments. But the member calls this squandering money. It's interesting for me to hear him say so today.

* (16:00)

      We don't think so. We know that Manitobans did not receive that kind of support from the previous gov­ern­ment. We know now that Manitobans need it more than any time before, a 40-year high in terms of the inflationary effect and their ability to buy goods with that income that they had previous to inflation.

      I heard one bank manager tell me just a few weeks ago that he had clients with a $100,000 income who just renewed their mortgage, and it went up by $200 a month. This member would say that that couple is not ex­per­iencing economic challenges. We know that that's not the case. We know that this member has no lessons to give to Manitobans on affordability.

Mr. Wasyliw: Well, the minister, with all due respect, just rambled on for five minutes and never answered the question. And the reason why he didn't answer the question is he can't.

      He can't defend this; this is completely in­defensible. He cannot come to this com­mit­tee and tell this com­mit­tee why they got $170,000, basically a high-income family, why they've been included in this cheque. He knows that so he has to talk about straw man arguments and try to parse words, but he cannot defend his own policy and didn't even try. And I think that's disappointing and very telling to Manitobans.

      But it goes further. Families with no children have been excluded from this. Single people have been ex­cluded with this, if they're not seniors. So, many singles who are low income, many families without children are low income, are also feeling the cost-of-living crisis here.

      So my question to the minister is: Why is he picking winners and losers? Why is he picking high-income families as opposed to low-income singles and low-income families without children? Why do they not get the benefit of help from this gov­ern­ment?

Mr. Friesen: On the contrary to the member, I wel­come the op­por­tun­ity to answer the question and correct the record.

      The member's argument doesn't stand up. The member's argument seems to be the following: that only some people will get the benefit and so, even though this is a broad-based benefit that will go to hundreds of thousands of Manitoba families that identify as groups with children and with seniors with low income and for people on EIA supports, he says that it doesn't do exactly the right thing in exactly the right way and so it doesn't go far enough and it doesn't meet his test.

      The member must have been very angry when  he  read about Saskatchewan's relief mechan­isms, because here are some differences between Saskatchewan and Manitoba. Saskatchewan's me­chan­ism to provide a rebate for their citizens actually didn't deliver any amounts to families with children. So that should make the member for Fort Garry (Mr. Wasyliw) very, very angry. Also, the benefit went to households without an income test. So, there's no income test in Saskatchewan. Make $200,000, make $400,000; everyone gets the cheque. So, that must make the member very angry. And he must be, by comparison, quite encouraged to know that in Manitoba there was an income level set, that there was efforts made to ensure that high-wealth homes in Manitoba would not enjoy the benefit.

      Now let's understand that in the member's con­struct, a school­teacher in a household with a nurse, he calls high wealth. He calls ultra-wealthy. An entrepreneur married to a social worker, he calls ultra wealth. Two entrepreneurs. A daycare worker re­siding with a person with a busi­ness who might make under that threshold, he calls them ultra-wealthy. We're not going to play those games of wealth redistribution along the narrow lines that the member would like to make them.

      Quebec set a threshold for $100,000 for single earners and $210,000 for families. So those measures must make the member very angry, because they're far higher than in Manitoba. What we did is construct a program whereby we tried to identify the broadest number of Manitobans who right now we could provide with a benefit that would help them in their households. And as I indicated to him, with these CPI and the evidence that the cost of gasoline and services and goods and food and energy, clothing and footwear, shelter–all on an increase at a rate not seen in the last 30, 40 years–it's why our gov­ern­ment is responding.

      But also, to punch a few more holes in the mem­ber's argument, he says, but there's nothing for individuals, which is not true. Because he seeks to only hone in on this set of affordability measures, and he does not want to, in this case, talk about the edu­ca­tion property tax rebate that gives these sig­ni­fi­cant savings back to Manitobans regardless of whether they have children: the Resi­den­tial Renters Tax Credit, a $525 benefit regardless of whether there are children in the home or not. But also, the Minister of Families (Ms. Squires) could educate this member, and let them know that it was our gov­ern­ment that enhanced from 75 per cent to 80 per cent of median market rate the benefit for families not enrolled in EIA.

      And even now, this $50 per adult EIA general assisted increase is the first increase of its kind since 2004. We found out earlier this afternoon in debate when the Minister of Families had to school the op­posi­tion parties. So when the member said, but there's nothing for this group or that group, we know that when you look at the benefits that our gov­ern­ment has brought, that they are broad-based, that they address real needs, they do so right now, and they still stand above and beyond those very sig­ni­fi­cant measures that our gov­ern­ment has taken even before today. Even before Budget 2022, which have already been working for a number of years to make life more affordable.

      And as we have op­por­tun­ity this afternoon, I would love to remind the member of what it has meant to reduce the PST, what it has meant to narrow the span of the PST, what that indexation effect has been to actually remove the burden of excess taxation from Manitobans, what it has meant for busi­nesses to be able to invest in their busi­nesses who have seen that edu­ca­tion and post-secondary tax payroll obligation go down.

      We'll continue to make progress for all Manitobans because affordability matters right now.

Mr. Wasyliw: So, we've now just witnessed the minister ramble on for 10 minutes, and still not answer either of the questions about how we got to a $170,000 threshold, what was the evidence used to arrive at that amount.

      The reason why he can't answer: it is a political number; it has nothing to do with any evidence-based or economic arguments by this gov­ern­ment.

      We've now heard for five minutes that he can't answer why he in­ten­tionally excluded–in­ten­tionally excluded–low-income singles. He in­ten­tionally ex­cluded families who are low income. And there is no attempt to justify or to explain why those struggling Manitobans are not worthy of getting a help and a benefit from this gov­ern­ment.

* (16:10)

      But the minister talks about the Resi­den­tial Renters Tax Credit. Many seniors rent. This gov­ern­ment eliminated $175, basically raised their taxes every year, by cutting back on that credit. So they may receive a $200 cheque from this gov­ern­ment, but it's getting clawed back with higher taxes.

      So I'm wondering why the minister clawed back renter's credit at a time of an affordability crisis.

Mr. Friesen: You know it's an odd afternoon when you have an NDP member of the Legis­lative Assembly who is lecturing you on tax affordability.

      I think Manitobans understand too well the record of the previous gov­ern­ment: 15 new taxes in 16 years, a failure to do the basics like index income tax brackets resulting into–in a chasm of almost $8,000 between Saskatchewan's and Manitoba's basic per­sonal amount. That is the most egregious tax on low-income earners that could possibly be demon­strated.

      The–one of the highest marginal tax rates of the lowest tax bracket in all of Canada shows you exactly what you need to understand about how that previous gov­ern­ment viewed income earners. They saw them as their piggy bank, if you go back to the piggy bank every single year and demand more money for bigger gov­ern­ment programs that didn't get results that Manitobans needed.

      So, I understand that our approach stands in sharp contrast to the record that that member has to defend. However, I do want to refer members of this com­mit­tee to the thing that the member doesn't want to talk about. So he takes–he criticizes the $525 credit, this new credit, the Resi­den­tial Renters Tax Credit that is going to every single renter in the province.

      But what he doesn't do is, he doesn't talk about the 45,000 ad­di­tional Manitoba households that his gov­ern­ment said were ineligible to receive that cheque: 45,000 ad­di­tional Manitobans; Manitobans living in non-EIA Rent Assist, or Manitobans living in social housing.

      And before, when they would make the claim, the NDP would say: denied. Those are 45,000 Manitoba households who now receive a $525 payment where the previous gov­ern­ment gave them nothing. So I think it is very im­por­tant to remember that.

      But when the member also talks about, well, what about this parti­cular income category here? Or what about that parti­cular income category there? What did they get? I would remind the member of the other tax rollback guarantee items that we made this year, and followed through on.

      That member knows that our gov­ern­ment has rolled back vehicle registration fees that were raised by the previous gov­ern­ment. And those fees now have been rolled back, resulting in a savings of $45 million a year to Manitobas–to Manitobans. We know that the MPI rebates in 2020 and 2022 have resulted in an almost $700 savings to every Manitoban who has registered a vehicle.

      But in addition to that, as I indicated to the member, there's a helpful chart that could help him on page 45 of the budget. And what it does is it indicates, in a bar form, the amount of benefit to Manitobans in terms of incomes, that is broken down on an in­dividual earner's level by virtue of the area of tax reduction. It indicates sales tax reduction from 8 per cent to 7 per cent, what the savings has been. It indicates what the indexation of basic personal amount has meant in the brackets, what that's meant. It indicates what the elimination of probate fees, tax on probate fees. It indicates what the reduction on edu­ca­tion property taxes is, in the light-blue bar. It indicates what the sales tax exemptions represents, and it indicates what that reduction in vehicle registration fees amounts to.

      And those amounts come out to–we made that pledge of saying $2,020 to Manitoba households in tax rollbacks over the next four years, and we indicated in this budget that we had met that commit­ment one year earlier than we had even targeted for.

      We know that these are the real measures that help Manitobans keep more of their earnings. Low income and medium income. These measures that he takes such exception to are measures that come with  thresholds. Thresholds that are lower than Saskatchewan, thresholds that are lower than Quebec. So those other provinces that he will not speak to this afternoon must anger him a great deal, and he must see how progressive our measures are by comparison.

      The fact of the matter is, if you want to spend an afternoon to hold up the record of the NDP when it comes to household affordability against our own, we welcome that con­ver­sa­tion.

Mr. Wasyliw: So, the minister has now had twenty minutes to answer a very simple, very straight­for­ward question about how they arrived at this $170,000 high-income threshold, and he hasn't. He has serenaded this com­mit­tee with 2015 PC talking points, which are as stale as they are dated. But he cannot explain why high-income families have been included in this benefit, while low-income singles have not; while low-income families without children have not.

      But I want to talk about students. Students don't have children; they're often single, and they will not get a benefit from this gov­ern­ment. Not only that: since 2018, this gov­ern­ment has raised their tuition by 18 per cent. That's a tax on students. They have raised, every year of their gov­ern­ment, student tuition, which is a tax on edu­ca­tion and a tax on low-income stu­dents.

* (16:20)

      So, I'm wondering if the minister can explain why students in Manitoba don't deserve cost-of-living relief as well.

Mr. Friesen: I welcome an op­por­tun­ity to address the member's question.

      So, the member's question is: What has this gov­ern­ment done for seniors? And it allows me the op­por­tun­ity to speak–[interjection]–sorry, for students. Thanks for the correction. What has this gov­ern­ment done for students? And it allows me the op­por­tun­ity to speak about the many ways in which these changes, the im­prove­ment, the modernization of Manitoba's tax environ­ment has benefited students.

      I think I would start by talking again about the indexation, which seems like–it seems like a modest measure at first. But we all understand–in personal finances–we all understand, both in respect of invest­ments and also in respect of debt, how indexation can both work toward and against our advantage.

      And so indexation, in terms of income brackets, benefits every single student. It allows them to keep more of their money. Remember, the NDP gov­ern­ment, by not increasing the basic personal amount, it is those students, let's say an undergrad program, who are taking a lot of those summer jobs to help them pay for their tuition through the year. Those students are often making less than $20,000 a summer time to pay for their tuition. Imagine how much of that money more that the NDP kept by raising the basic personal amount. You are raising the amount of money that an individual income earner can make before they begin to pay the gov­ern­ment.

      As I explained earlier this afternoon, $162 million is the summary of savings already by Manitobans by virtue of the fact of both the basic personal amount increasing and those tax thresholds increasing. And think of students as being an im­por­tant component of those earners.

      Also, though, remember, every­thing from renters' subsidies–so right now a $525 subsidy to any student who is renting a residence in order to attend uni­ver­sity. That member lives in Winnipeg, but I can assure him that outside of Winnipeg, almost without exception, students who go to uni­ver­sity are moving to uni­ver­sity, are moving to Winnipeg, moving to Brandon in order to go to uni­ver­sity, increasing their cost per year by $10,000 by minimum. And those students, where they used to open that envelope and see nothing, see a cheque for $525, which is helping.

      Those students who register a vehicle are seeing hundreds and hundreds of dollars of savings by virtue of the fact that this rebate has been sent by MPI. Those students are, of course, you know, if by any chance they have a household, they are seeing that edu­ca­tion property tax rebate.

      Those students, if they are mature students, if they have children, then even though they are students, they are still realizing the benefit, while they go to school, of that $250 payment for one child and $200 for every child thereafter.

      That member will know that, in this province, we have many, many mature students who are attending school at the same time as they are raising a family. So when the member asks where are those students benefitting, they are benefitting across the landscape of our gov­ern­ment's action on affordability.

      However, to come back to the central premise that the member made, which was somehow that tuition is out of control in Manitoba, I remind him as–of the following from Stats Canada 2022-2023, the most recent data: B.C. undergrad tuition, $6,200; Alberta undergrad tuition, $7,200; Saskatchewan undergrad tuition, $8,800; Manitoba undergrad tuition, $5,200–the lowest tuition by a country mile in all of western Canada.

      And I have, at times past, also reviewed com­parative data from other provinces in Canada, and I believe I could go as far as saying that Manitoba may boast the second lowest, if not the lowest tuition in all of Canada. If the member suggests that–even with indexation–that tuition should never rise, let him put those comments on the record.

      I know that students want a good quality edu­ca­tion and they want certainty over their costs, while they want affordability. We're producing both for Manitobans.

      We're proud of these measures that make a real difference in Manitobans' lives right now: households with children, individuals in EIA, seniors under $40,000 and many other broad benefits for everyone paying taxes in this province.

Mr. Wasyliw: I think we should note for the record that the minister's been banging on for about 25 minutes now and has yet to defend his policy.

      He has yet to provide a rationale about where they got this $170,000 threshold, why students were excluded, why singles were excluded, why families–low-income families without children were excluded, and why high-income earners were not. And he has made absolutely no attempt to justify the gov­ern­ment's policy.

      But there's another side to this. It's not just about rebate cheques. If people have a living wage, then that makes life more affordable as well. Now, we know we're in a cost-of-living crisis in Manitoba. The new living wage in Manitoba is $18.34 per hour in Winnipeg, $16.25 in Thompson and $15.55 in Brandon. And, of course, this gov­ern­ment announced the minimum wage going up during the election next year to $15 an hour.

      And my question for the minister is, once we reach the $15 threshold, are we going back to the statutory cost-of-living increases on a yearly basis, or is this gov­ern­ment prepared to get Manitoba up to the living wage of $18.34?

* (16:30)

Mr. Friesen: I welcome the question on Manitoba's labour market and minimum wage.

      The member knows that Manitoba has one of the lowest un­em­ploy­ment rates in all of the country. I'm citing figures here that show: 3.5 per cent in July of 2022, and that's the general un­em­ploy­ment rate; youth  un­em­ploy­ment rate at 4 per cent, less than half the national average; female un­em­ploy­ment rate, 4 per cent, under the national average.

      We know that labour markets have been tighten­ing across the country and that labour shortage con­cerns among the busi­ness com­mu­nity and employers have spread. We know that, right now, the workforce is being highly sought after by job creators and that they're paying a premium for labour. We see that going on in our com­mu­nities. We see the increase of wages. Right now, that is far outstripping any juris­dic­tion's increases of a minimum wage.

      We see competition happening for workforce. There's data in the first quarter report that indicates that, you know, in the areas like ac­com­moda­tion and food, in health care and social services, trans­por­tation and warehousing, retail, wholesale, manufacturers that's the–that there's a–there's not enough un­employed persons to fill vacancies. And that causes employers to pay more for an in­creasingly small pool of available workers. What it means is that in Manitoba, average weekly earnings have gone up. And I'm citing for the member page 14 of that first-quarter report, which is showing that in all sectors, that year-over-year change has gone up 2.8 per cent.

      In ac­com­moda­tion and food services, it means average weekly earnings have gone up 8.5 per cent. For instance, in trans­por­tation and warehousing, that wage is up 8.5 per cent; in retail trade, 10.4 per cent; and in manufacturing, 9.3 per cent.

      And that is to say that in a time of short labour, economists would indicate to you that in terms of referential tools, that the minimum wage becomes a less sig­ni­fi­cant factor than simply the real, dynamic, competitive labour market.

      So, as costs go up, wages are also going up. But we would make clear that whereas the NDP previous gov­ern­ment did not apply indexation to minimum wage, yes, we feel it is im­por­tant for minimum wage to rise each and every year. That is why our gov­ern­ment brought in changes in legis­lation that would require a reflection in minimum wage every year to account for and to address and to respond to the inflationary costs in the system. And that will continue to be the case.

      This exceptional surge in inflation, our gov­ern­ment has dealt with with a one-time catch-up. And that is why, even now, we've indicated to Manitobans that we have raised the minimum wage one time, and we will raise the minimum wage two times again in order to reach that $15-per-hour calculation. And then after, as I said, we will revert to that schedule by which indexation will help to ensure that the min­imum wage rises each and every year.

Mr. Wasyliw: I just wanted to thank the minister. That was the first, like, straight response, actual answering a question this afternoon, and it was greatly ap­pre­ciated. It was refreshing and invigorating, even. So, hopefully, we can keep this going, and you can answer some more questions.

      So, now, for the past six years, Manitoba under this gov­ern­ment has been at or near the bottom of the minimum wage tables in Canada. And it's clear that that's official gov­ern­ment policy, that this gov­ern­ment wants Manitoba to be a low-wage economy. And even now, after the October 1st increase, we are still second lowest in Canada.

      And I'm just wondering, again, in the spirit of answering questions, if the minister can confirm that that, in fact, is the official gov­ern­ment policy, that the gov­ern­ment wants Manitoba to be at the bottom of the minimum wage tables for Canada, and that this gov­ern­ment will continue to keep Manitoba at the bottom of the rankings.

* (16:40)

Mr. Friesen: Had the op­por­tun­ity to see Darcy Oake one time do a fabulous demon­stra­tion of his magician's talents, and, of course, Manitobans are proud that he, you know, has Manitoba roots, has lived in this province and he's a magician by training. Actually, I think he got to, like, the finals in the Britain's Got Talent competition a few years back. Phenomenal magician.

      And the basis of what he does is sleight of hand. The basis of what he does, as I understand the principle–I'm not a magician myself–but he attempts to draw the attention of the audience away from one thing, so that they focus an inordinate amount of their energy on the thing so he can do some­thing else outside of where their attention is. And then, a big surprise happens.

      A lot of that can describe the NDP's approach to taxes and affordability in juris­dic­tion because what the NDP would do is raise taxes every year. And, indeed, some of those taxes were extra­ordin­ary in years that had inflationary rates that paled into–in comparison of what Manitoba is ex­per­iencing now. But what they would concentrate on was single metrics. They would concentrate on single metrics that they thought would help tell a story. The problem is that eventually Manitobans would realize that they were creating a distraction here in order to draw their attention away from the other place. And that other place was exactly on the area of interjurisdictional tax comparisons.

      Because the question is: Did Manitoba become a lower cost juris­dic­tion for income earners under 16  years of the NDP compared to the rest of Canada? And the answer is a resounding no. On personal income tax, no. On prov­incial sales tax, no. On cor­por­ate income tax, no. On other ancillary payments back to Manitobans, no. So the member is trying to have a con­ver­sa­tion on one metric. He knows our gov­ern­ment's record, that with the changes announced and in the legis­lation that will be tabled that Manitoba will be very much middle of the pack when it comes to minimum wage.

      However, what the member doesn't want you to understand is that we are a lower cost juris­dic­tion than many other places in Canada. So, clearly, if we want an intelligent con­ver­sa­tion on minimum wage, the member should also then be referring to cost of living in juris­dic­tion and then tethering that discussion to minimum wage. We are proud of the ways in which our gov­ern­ment continues to keep Manitoba as a low-cost juris­dic­tion. Certainly, a home here costs less than in Toronto or Vancouver or Montreal or in Edmonton, and we are proud of that competitive advantage. But clearly, a con­ver­sa­tion about min­imum wage must also be tied to cost of living and must also be tied to tax competitiveness.

      I'm looking at data on minimum wages today showing that Manitoba is very much in the middle of the pack. I see here that New Brunswick has a min­imum wage of $13.75; Saskatchewan has a minimum wage of $13; Nova Scotia has a minimum wage that is $13.60, just up today, I believe, and moving up. And of course, Manitoba's minimum wage moving up to $15 on October the 1st of 2023, one day from this past Saturday.

      So I think it is fair to say that our minimum wage is competitive. Now, as to the rest of the con­ver­sa­tion, that's what I'm inviting a con­ver­sa­tion on this after­noon. The member is complaining about the fact that, he says, I don't want to talk about the things he wants to talk about. I share his disappointment that he doesn't want to talk about that broader con­ver­sa­tion on major affordability measures.

      Indeed, he doesn't want to talk about the PST reduction, indexation of wages or personal income tax brackets. He doesn't want to talk about the phase‑out of the edu­ca­tion property tax, MPI rebates, the second least expensive hydro rates in all of North America or a $96-million affordability package to hundreds of thousands of Manitobans.

      And no wonder he doesn't want to talk about it, because it doesn't fit his narrative.

Mr. Wasyliw: Well, it's rather interesting that the minister is saying the quiet part out loud this after­noon. And I think he's revealing that it is official gov­ern­ment policy that they don't believe Manitobans–workers should have a living wage.

      They don't believe that if you work full time that you shouldn't live in poverty, and they're quite com­fortable with building an economy where working full time means that you live in poverty in Manitoba, and they view it as an advantage. And they don't see the dignity of Manitoba workers; they view them as a cost. And it's somehow an advantage to Manitoba's economy that we are impoverishing our workers.

      So I guess the minister is revealing his stripes and ap­pre­ciates that. I don't think Manitobans share that world view or think that that's the economy you build for the future.

      And I want to correct one fact about his stats. Last month, Manitoba lost jobs. We were one of only three provinces that actually lost jobs last month. We are going in the opposite direction than the rest of the country.

      Now, turning–have some questions today about political staff that is appointed by the gov­ern­ment. They received a pay bump, a special wage adjustment of 1 per cent, and I believe executives got a 2.4 per cent pay bump, and this is for less than 1,000 employees, but all government appointees.

      So I'm wondering if the minister can tell us how much that, you know, special pay bump to political staff is going to cost the taxpayers of Manitoba.

* (16:50)

Mr. Friesen: Okay, so the member's previous ques­tion was we were not raising wages enough, and now his most recent question is we are raising wages too much. So it's an interesting afternoon again when the member is flip-flopping and oscillating between his questions in this way.

      But I would point out some basic principles. The first thing I would want to point out to the member is that he should attend the Com­mit­tee of Supply when the minister who has the respon­si­bility for Labour and the minister who has the respon­si­bility for the Civil Service Com­mis­sion is in those proceedings, and ask his colleague–or, he might have the respon­si­bility for that area–and he could ask his colleague for time at the table to ask questions of the minister respon­si­ble. So that's the first thing I would point out to him.

      He could ask the member, you know, who is the Chair of the public sector compensation com­mit­tee for that advice, but I think the member understands as well, because his last question was about competitive wages.

      And so I think he would understand the basic principle that we're talking about a group of people who are out of scope. We call that term out of scope for the purposes of bargaining, and so they only receive the increase in this way.

      However, the member makes a very, very im­por­tant error. He talked about this being an increase for political staff, but that is a gross generalization. He's talking about civil servants, anyone who is out of scope. He's talking about deputy ministers and assist­ant deputy ministers and executive directors who are out of scope. He's talking about support personnel in this building, if he would walk into any of the buildings and see the people who are operating as ATMs and front-line admin­is­tra­tion. He's talking about technical officers. He's also talking about in­de­pen­dent offices of the Legislature, like Elections Manitoba and the Office of the Auditor General and the Ombudsman's office, and I believe the child advocacy office. All of these areas are outside of that scope.

      And so, by attempting to reflect on a very small percentage of those workers, he's painting all with the same brush. The member has just spent the last 15 minutes on his pulpit talking about the importance of wages that keep up, and now he says for Elections Manitoba and the Office of the Auditor General, for senior administrators who were in charge during a global pandemic, that we should not pass along an increase.

      We simply disagree on this point. We simply disagree. I would not support the member's notion that now would be the time to dig in. And for the people with whom I've had the honour to work, both as a minister of Health, the minister of Justice and now as the Minister of Finance, who answered the call, who came to the table, who willingly gave up holiday time and vacation time and time with their families, missed countless milestones, punched the clock, spent long hours, got intimately acquainted with virtual channels like Teams and other ways of having meetings, navigated the challenges of running de­part­ments that had been taken largely offline and worked from home–the member said that's the place to put your foot down and make sure those people don't receive an ap­pro­priate increase.

      I say no; I don't agree with the member. But, more than that, I think the member would understand he's just spent a lot of time talking about the importance of competitive wages, and it is im­por­tant that the pro­vince continues to compete. We are losing workforce if we do not keep up with wages.

      So, these senior leaders have other op­por­tun­ities, both in the public sector and the private sector, and if we don't keep up with our obligations, then that dif­ferential becomes larger, and then we end up spending an inordinate amount of time trying to get that capacity and expertise back.

      So, we believe that, at this point in time, these are ap­pro­priate increases. They are modest; they are helping to keep up with rising costs–rising costs that this member himself has talked about at length this afternoon.

      So, my small lecture for the member would be it becomes difficult for him to have it both ways: to talk out of one side of his mouth about the importance of wages keeping up and then out the other side of his mouth about the importance of not awarding increases in an ap­pro­priate way across a broad sector of the civil service who are out of scope and do not enjoy the same bargaining provisions as other groups have.

Mr. Wasyliw: Well, the minister can run, but he can't hide. This very much is in his min­is­try.

      The question–and I'll repeat, because it may have been lost in all the bluster–was: How much did this increase cost the Treasury?

      He knows that; he has the people at the table to tell him that, and if he can break out how much of that is going to executives versus the rest of the cohort, and out of that 900, almost 1,000 employees, how many are executives that are getting the 2.4 per cent bump as opposed to the number getting the 1 per cent bump. So, that's all within his min­is­try.

      And the issue is one of fairness, because I'll ask a sup­ple­mental question of the minister: Why hasn't this same special bump been given to the remaining regular Manitoba public employees? How come they don't get this con­sid­era­tion? How come the minister isn't concerned about retention and recruitment with that group of people and only seems to be concerned with Conservative Party members that they end up hiring?

Mr. Friesen: The Public Accounts, which were just produced last week on Thursday, on page 116 in schedule 9, reveal that the personnel services expense for the gov­ern­ment of Manitoba in 2022 is approximately $9 billion–9 billion and 43 million dollars–$9.043 billion. Of that amount, $14 million accounts for the 1 per cent increase retroactive to 2019, inclusive of approximately 1,000 workers.

      Now that's where reality stops for that member because these comments that he's repeated become more troubling. I assure the member there are not 1,000 PC staffers secretly in the bowels of the Legislature on the first floor, or maybe hiding under the Chamber in some of those closets. Instead, that narrative simply falls down.

      Now I would remind him that this is all of our technical staff. It is NDP technical staff. It is Liberal technical staff. But that is only one small part of the overall workforce that is represented by these in­creases. The member is sitting across in this com­mit­tee room from senior members of the civil service. There's hundreds of individuals in the civil service.

Mr. Chairperson: Hour being 5 p.m., com­mit­tee rise.

Chamber

Executive Council

Mr. Chairperson (Andrew Micklefield): Will the Com­mit­tee of Supply please come to order. This section of the Com­mit­tee of Supply will now resume con­sid­era­tion of the Estimates of Executive Council.

      At this time, we invite min­is­terial and op­posi­tion staff to enter the Chamber, and we ask the members to please intro­duce their staff in attendance.

* (15:20)

      As previously stated, in accordance with sub­rule 77(16), during the con­sid­era­tion of de­part­mental Estimates, questioning for each de­part­ment shall proceed in a global manner.

      The floor is now open for questions. I think maybe before we do that, we'll allow for some intro­ductions. We'll just let the staff come in, and if either the First Minister or Leader of the Official Op­posi­tion wishes to intro­duce your staff, you may do so now.

Hon. Heather Stefanson (Premier): Just to intro­duce our staff, I have Mr. Don Leitch, who is the clerk of Executive Council, with us today as well as Mr. Phil Houde, who is the chief of staff.

Mr. Wab Kinew (Leader of the Official Opposition): Mark Rosner, the Tories' worst nightmare.

Mr. Chairperson: I see we're off to a good start.

      The floor is now open for questions.

Mr. Kinew: I just want to begin by asking if there's any other matters under ad­vise­ment from our last session, whether any of those could be provided.

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able First Minister.

Mrs. Stefanson: It's my under­standing that–

Mr. Chairperson: Sorry, I have to say it from my microphone. My mic was not on.

      The hon­our­able First Minister.

Mrs. Stefanson: It's my under­standing that all of that infor­ma­tion has been forwarded on to the ap­pro­priate individuals who are respon­si­ble for disseminating that infor­ma­tion.

Mr. Kinew: Can the Premier tell this com­mit­tee if Cabinet will approve a general rate application for Manitoba Hydro this year?

Mrs. Stefanson: No.

Mr. Kinew: Does the Premier intend to direct Manitoba Hydro to file a general rate application this November given that her predecessor, the member for Steinbach (Mr. Goertzen), directed Hydro by order-in-council to file an application last year?

Mrs. Stefanson: No, we will not be directing Manitoba Hydro to file a rate application or anything; that's up to them; that's under their purview, and I will leave it at that.

Mr. Kinew: Can the Premier tell this House if Manitoba Hydro intends to file a general rate application before November 15th of this year?

Mrs. Stefanson: Leader of the Op­posi­tion will have to ask Manitoba Hydro that.

Mr. Kinew: Does the Premier intend to pass Bill 36 past third reading?

Mrs. Stefanson: Yes, we do.

Mr. Kinew: That's a mistake. The PC MLAs are going to hear about the 5 per cent rate increase every time they knock on a door for the next year.

      There was a first-quarter update from the Finance Minister last week. Did that update include any forecasts regarding increased hydro rates?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, first off, Bill 36, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is fear mongering Manitobans once again, and I will say that what this bill does–I've said it before, I'll say it again, and I would suggest that the Leader of the Op­posi­tion reads the bill again. The bill is before the House now. There's an op­por­tun­ity to read it again. It does protect ratepayers from inflation and inflationary pressures out there. So it is the lesser of 5 per cent or inflation, which protects Manitobans. Of course, the Manitoba Hydro is up to–it's up to them as to what rate applications that they apply for, but they have to fall under these guide­lines.

      If the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is deciding not to pass Bill 36, then he's leaving it open for Manitoba Hydro to apply for a rate increase higher than 5 per cent and actually at the rate of inflation. We don't believe that that is in the best interests of Manitobans. That's why this bill protects ratepayers while also protecting Manitoba Hydro. It also gives more power to the Public Utilities Board, and so we believe that this is in the best interest of Manitobans.

Mr. Kinew: Those higher rate increases have only ever been proposed under the PCs.

      Can the Premier confirm whether she or her office or Manitoba Hydro have hired Sandy Riley to advise her gov­ern­ment regarding issues related to Manitoba Hydro?

Mrs. Stefanson: The Leader of the Op­posi­tion is wrong once again. There were, I believe, at least three different occasions back under the previous NDP gov­ern­ment where there were increases to Manitoba Hydro ratepayers of 5 per cent. So, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is just plain wrong.

Mr. Kinew: Can the Premier confirm whether she or her office or Manitoba Hydro have hired Sandy Riley to advise her gov­ern­ment regarding issues related to Manitoba Hydro?

Mrs. Stefanson: Mr. Riley is provi­ding advice to the Minister of Finance (Mr. Friesen) on Manitoba Hydro with no remuneration.

Mr. Kinew: So what's the nature of that en­gage­ment?

Mrs. Stefanson: Not sure I understand the question. If the Leader of the Op­posi­tion could elaborate on what he's trying to get at here.

Mr. Kinew: Is there a contract governing the relationship with Mr. Riley and the gov­ern­ment?

Mrs. Stefanson: There is no contract and there is no compensation.

Mr. Kinew: Yes, so what is the nature of the role, then?

Mrs. Stefanson: Mr. Riley is provi­ding advice on this matter to the Minister of Finance. There are often people that provide advice who have certain expertise, and so that's what Mr. Riley is doing.

Mr. Kinew: And how frequently and under what terms is this advice being provided?

Mrs. Stefanson: I believe those questions would be best asked under the Minister of Finance; that's under his area.

Mr. Kinew: And what is the nature of the advice? Like, what sort of topics are being discussed?

Mrs. Stefanson: I–again, it's advice to the minister. I would refer him to the Minister of Finance's Estimates, which I believe are going on simultaneous to these today.

Mr. Kinew: And who else is provi­ding advice to the gov­ern­ment on Manitoba Hydro in a similar sort of arrangement?

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, I'm not aware of anyone else that's provi­ding advice in a similar arrangement. So, again, that question would be best asked of the Minister of Finance and those Estimates.

Mr. Kinew: And so, what's the back­ground of this arrangement? How did this come about?

* (15:30)

Mrs. Stefanson: The Leader of the Op­posi­tion will know that Mr. Riley has extensive ex­per­ience in capital markets and financing.

      Certainly, Manitoba Hydro is–we do know has had some challenges in the past with respect to the debt on Manitoba Hydro, and that certainly has nothing to do with our gov­ern­ment but the previous NDP gov­ern­ment that came in, and as a result of projects that they put in place, there has been sig­ni­fi­cant cost overruns as a result of that.

      And I would say that Mr. Riley and his ex­per­ience on capital markets and financing is very well suited for an advisory role of this nature.

Mr. Kinew: But what is the back­ground? Like, how did this come about? Who reached out to whom, according to what timeline? How did this advisory relationship get struck?

Mrs. Stefanson: I think he understands what the challenges are and the finances of Manitoba Hydro. He offered to help, and we accepted his advice.

Mr. Kinew: Is Mr. Riley being provided with privileged infor­ma­tion or Cabinet docu­ments as part of this arrangement?

Mrs. Stefanson: No, he is not privy to Cabinet docu­ments and he's signed a letter of con­fi­dentiality.

Mr. Kinew: Can the First Minister kindly explain what the letter of con­fi­dentiality is?

Mrs. Stefanson: Mr. Riley has signed a standard letter of con­fi­dentiality similar to what would be signed in the event that a consultant is brought on board.

Mr. Kinew: This agree­ment sounds like a contract, though perhaps not a contract for remuneration.

      Would the First Minister kindly table the letter of con­fi­dentiality?

Mrs. Stefanson: We don't have it here, but we can get that for the member.

Mr. Kinew: Thanks, and look forward to that under­taking or that matter under ad­vise­ment.

      What's the timeline for this arrangement?

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, this is an advisory role, so it's ongoing. There is no termination date that's specified.

Mr. Kinew: Is it tied to any specific under­taking that the gov­ern­ment has with Hydro, such as, say, the passage of Bill 36 or, perhaps, publicly announcing that Keeyask is fully operational or maybe repairing the relationship with the four Keeyask First Nations or perhaps removing the injunction that's held against Tataskweyak Cree Nation?

      Is there some kind of upcoming milestone that this advice is centred around?

Mrs. Stefanson: All I know–I mean, Mr. Riley is provi­ding advice to the minister on issues related to Manitoba Hydro. Again, those questions would be best asked of the minister.

Mr. Kinew: And when did he start this advisory role?

Mrs. Stefanson: I don't have that exact date here today, but we can endeavour to get that for the member.

Mr. Kinew: Okay, thank you.

      Does the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) support the imple­men­ta­tion of all the recom­men­dations of the Wall com­mis­sion?

Mrs. Stefanson: So, the Wall review was advice that was provided to gov­ern­ment, and obviously we take those, you know, recom­men­dations under con­sid­era­tion. And if the recom­men­dations make sense and we believe are in the best interest of Manitobans, we'll act on those. It doesn't necessarily mean we will act on all, but, again, those are still things that are under review now.

Mr. Kinew: What's the timeline for that review of the Wall com­mis­sion recom­men­dations?

Mrs. Stefanson: I would just say the review is on­going, and again, a question that could be asked of the Minister of Finance (Mr. Friesen) as well.

* (15:40)

Mr. Kinew: Kind of sounds like the gov­ern­ment just sort of forgot about it and moved on.

      Will the Premier publicly report on the imple­men­ta­tion of the Wall com­mis­sion's recom­men­dations?

Mrs. Stefanson: I think any decisions that are made with respect to–from the gov­ern­ment's–under the gov­ern­ment's purview with respect to Manitoba Hydro, those an­nounce­ments will be made in due course by the Minister of Finance.

Mr. Kinew: The gov­ern­ment had previously said that they were accepting all the recom­men­dations, and today the Premier said not necessarily would all the recom­men­dations move forward. So, this is a pretty expensive report that the gov­ern­ment commissioned by somebody who does not have expertise in hydro­electricity, I would add.

      So, it's a pretty expensive thing for the gov­ern­ment to back away from. Though, you know, I guess the best interests of Manitobans probably would have been good not to do the Wall report in the first place, much less pay those millions and then back away from it later because, you know, political calculus changes.

      One of the recom­men­dations that jumped out there would be priva­tizing Centra Gas. So, I wonder if the Premier could speak to that.

      Would the Premier support selling off the divisions of Manitoba Hydro that include Centra Gas?

Mrs. Stefanson: So, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion will know that I came into this role about 11 months ago and there were a number of things that were reviewed. He'll recall that we pulled five bills off the table, one including bill 34, the edu­ca­tion bill, and we're reviewing and looking at ways to change those things and to make it better for consumers and for Manitobans and, you know, certainly, in the way of bill 34, to make it better for the edu­ca­tion of our children.

      When it comes to the recom­men­dations from the rall–Wall review, some of those recom­men­dations helped form Bill 36, which is a positive thing, again, for ratepayers, and it also protects Manitoba Hydro. It gives more power to the Public Utilities Board. We think that those are positive things.

      So, again, those are things that came out of the Wall review. They are not all things, as I said earlier. Circum­stances change, you know, over time, and I know the Wall review came out–I can't recall the specific date of it, but it's certainly well over a year ago–and, you know, we're continuing, as I mentioned earlier, to have a look at those recom­men­dations to the extent that they make sense, as some did in the way of forming Bill 36 that make sense for ratepayers, as well as, you know, the financial aspect of Manitoba Hydro to the role of the Public Utilities Board. Then, of course, you know, that's where we go.

      And, yes, my staff just reminds me I said the edu­ca­tion bill was bill 64, sorry, not 34, so I correct the record on that. It was bill 64.

Mr. Kinew: The other mistake, in addition to misnumbering the bill, would be stating that Bill 35 of this session is a good thing. It's, in fact, a very bad thing. Five per cent rake height–rake hike on the people of Manitoba at this time will be a problem, you know.

      People are struggling right now. They're struggling to pay the bills. The gov­ern­ment made a bunch of an­nounce­ments this summer, but none of them were on making life more affordable. None of them were on health care and improving health care.

      So, you know, there's a lot of frantic movement but not a lot of deliberate action, and that's what the folks in Manitoba need: concrete steps to make life more affordable. A 5 per cent rate increase from the hydroelectric utility that the people of Manitoba own is not good. It's bad.

      When we look at the process following up from the public pre­sen­ta­tion of the Wall report, the gov­ern­ment committed on June 18th, 2021, to a formal pro­cess to implement all recom­men­dations. There was a bunch of, I guess, details around that formal process and what that would look like, but I just wanted to confirm that that formal process announced last year to implement this suite of recom­men­dations from the com­mis­sion, that that formal process is no longer ongoing.

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, I know the Leader of the Opposi­tion, sort of, mentioned that I had misspoken, in terms of the bill number, bill 64, and I know that he just misspoke, not mentioning Bill 36, but mentioned 35. I don't want to get into this kind of a petty debate back and forth, but I just thought I would point out that he, in fact, as well had the wrong bill number. So I will just point that out to him.

      When it comes to the recom­men­dations and some­­thing that happened in June of 2021, I believe the member is talking about, you know, there is a lot of–that has changed since that period of time. We will continue to, again, have the lens of looking at listening to Manitobans–obviously, you know, taking action on their behalf when it makes sense for those Manitobans.

      And we will not hesitate to get things done on behalf of Manitobans. And that is the–what I have brought, I believe, to this role and what our team has been doing on this side of the House, and all of our minsters have been laser-focused on ensuring that they are listening and taking action and getting things done on behalf of Manitobans.

      The Leader of the Op­posi­tion, again, wanted to go back–he referred to Bill 35, it's actually Bill 36. But again, this is about Bill 36, which is before the House right now. He is absolutely wrong.

      First of all, the–Manitoba Hydro decides them­selves whether or not they go to Public Utilities Board for an increase, or whatever, to any–anything to do with rates, and the Public Utilities Board makes those decisions. And I've already stated that today.

      But what I find disturbing is that we're in a time right now with extreme inflationary pressures out there. We're looking at inflationary pressures–CPI–of 8 per cent. It's been fluctuating, but it's significantly higher than 5 per cent. And when this bill was put together, it was put together under the auspices of wanting to protect ratepayers from those inflationary pressures.

      And that's what this bill does, is it protects rate­payers from those inflationary pressures while also taking into con­sid­era­tion the mass amount of debt that was added to Manitoba Hydro during the days of the previous NDP gov­ern­ment; massive cost overruns to Manitoba Hydro, causing sig­ni­fi­cant challenges to Manitoba Hydro itself.

* (15:50)

      And so, we believe that Bill 36–and Manitobans deserve to know this: that Bill 36 protects them from Manitoba Hydro asking for a rate increase of, you know, beyond 5 per cent. It's the lesser of 5 per cent or the consumer price index. Right now, with in­flationary pressures, they're significantly higher than 5 per cent.

      So, again, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and others across the way, they want to sweep, you know, this under the carpet. Maybe that there's inflationary pressures out there that aren't–nothing that's unique to Manitoba. It's some­thing that's being faced right across our country, around the world. Those are things, most of which are beyond our control.

      We don't control inflation. That's way beyond our borders but we are taking action to make life more affordable for Manitobans. And one of those things is Bill 36, which helps make life more affordable for Manitobans. It protects them in the event that there is a request from Manitoba Hydro to go beyond that 5 per cent or the, you know, consumer price index; again, whichever is the lesser there.

      So, this is some­thing: it's good for ratepayers; it's good for Manitoba Hydro. And again, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and other members opposite want to put false infor­ma­tion on the record about, you know, Cabinet decisions and all this sort of stuff.

      The fact of the matter is that this bill gives more power to the Public Utilities Board and the Public Utilities Board sets the rates for Manitoba Hydro.

Mr. Kinew: A 5 per cent rate increase on people's Manitoba Hydro bills is not good. Beyond making life more difficult for Manitobans, it will also stoke inflationary pressures; 8 per cent inflation is taking place in Manitoba right now.

      When you add another 5 per cent in input costs for those upstream price determinants that use Manitoba Hydro, that's going to increase costs further. So not only will Manitobans be paying another 5 per cent on their hydro bill, not only will those Manitobans get a reminder each month in the form of a hydro bill, that the PC gov­ern­ment is bringing in these higher rates, they'll also have to go and buy goods and services that have more expensive hydro costs baked into them.

      So this is an argument that, you know, I don't think the PCs are going to win if they continue to insist on Bill 36, which is the much the same as Mr. Pallister's bill 35 the year prior. You know, I think Manitobans are going to be quite upset with the higher costs that are being pushed on them.

      Beyond that, we know that this bill significantly weakens the Public Utilities Board. The Public Utilities Board is the only thing that prevented this PC gov­ern­ment from imple­men­ting an 8 per cent rake–rate hike. The Public Utilities Board said that was unreasonable and sent back a much lower number.

      Of course, we know that this Premier (Mrs. Stefanson), the last premier, all the Cabinet and, you know, the caucus, cheerleaded that 8 per cent rate hike and that was a mistake also. So, we see that the decision making, when it comes to Hydro, with the PCs, is not on the side of Manitobans. I think we can say fairly.

      The Public Utilities Board is an im­por­tant pro­tector of the ratepayers out there, but Bill 36 will reduce its ability to make decisions with the necessary freedom and latitude to protect low rates for Manitobans. It will also make it more difficult for interveners to appear before the Public Utilities Board, and certainly, that gets in the way of free demo­cratic partici­pation in this im­por­tant public body, but it also reduces the ability of folks, such as, you know, the voice of consumers and the voice of industry from being able to make their case before the Public Utilities Board as to why a 5 per cent rate hike this year or next is a mistake.

      So, we've been very con­sistent and pointed out the flaws of Bill 36 insofar as it also mirrors the mistakes in bill 35. Very proud of the fact we support a free and public Manitoba Hydro and a Public Utilities Board that is free to weigh all of these various factors in the name of protecting Manitobans.

      And we've seen time and time again the PCs kind of bring forward these arguments trying to attack the PUB, and they tend to fall flat because, at the end of the day, the argument the PCs are bringing forward is they want to increase rates by 5 per cent. Manitobans are going to get a reminder of that each and every month on their hydro bills.

      When we talk about some of the bad decision making the PCs have made with Hydro, you know, the Wall report is one of them, com­mis­sioning it in the first place and then spending all that money on it.

      But beyond hiring somebody without an expertise in hydroelectricity and paying them millions of dollars to conduct a report that is not going to be used by the gov­ern­ment, I would also question some of the public statements that current ministers of the Crown have made on the imple­men­ta­tion of those recom­men­dations.

      On this January 18th press release in which the gov­ern­ment committed to a formal process to respond to the Wall report, just going to quote this line here. It says a public formal response docu­ment will be tabled in the House in the fall of 2022.

      Do I have it right, then, that we are not to expect this public formal response docu­ment this fall of 2022 in the House?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, I think it's important to note for Manitobans that the only individual and the only party that is calling for a 5 per cent rate hike is the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and the NDP. Nowhere have I said–or anyone on this side of the House said–that they want a 5 per cent rate increase.

      What we want is to protect Manitobans from inflationary pressures out there that are very sig­ni­fi­cant and not unique to Manitoba. They are across the country, they are around the world, these are not things that are decided by and, you know, reflected just solely in Manitoba.

      These are a result of things that are going on around the world. Supply chain challenges, the war in Ukraine–the unjust war in Ukraine and the horrific things that have gone on as a result of that. These are all situations that have caused inflationary pressures across our country, around the world.

      And here in Manitoba we recog­nize that, of course, and that's why we put a cap on that in Bill 36. If there was no cap there, then it could be anything. So what we're doing is protecting ratepayers by putting a cap there.

      But it seems that the Leader of the Op­posi­tion seems to be the only one who's talking about a 5 per cent rate increase. I guess the Leader of the Opposi­tion wants a 5 per cent rate increase and he's just going to approve that himself, not go through through the Public Utilities Board; he's just decided that it's going to be a 5 per cent rate increase for Manitobans.

      Well, we disagree with that. We want to put a cap on it to protect the ratepayers in our province, and that's exactly what Bill 36 does. The Leader of the Opposi­tion knows it, and he knows that when mem­bers opposite vote against this, which they did just they other day, that they are voting against the pro­tec­tion of ratepayers in Manitoba.

* (16:00)

      And to me, that's very unfor­tunate–to us, on this side of the House, that's very unfor­tunate. Because we want to do whatever we can to ensure that the absolute maximum is either–is the lesser of 5 per cent or the rate of inflation, or less than 5 per cent–again, that's a cap. And the only person that's talking about a 5 per cent increase, for the record, is the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and members opposite. We want to see that less than that.

      But, of course, we look at Manitoba Hydro as the one that puts forward their rate applications through the in­de­pen­dent Public Utilities Board. They make the decisions based on taking into con­sid­era­tion all dif­ferent factors. What we've done in Bill 36 is just ensure that there's a cap on that to make sure that we protect ratepayers in the province of Manitoba–the Hydro ratepayers.

      So, again, it's unfor­tunate where the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and the NDP want to make life less afford­able for Manitobans. And we do know that, in the past, they raised the PST in the past to make life less affordable for Manitobans. They've jacked up taxes–there hasn't been a tax out there–I think it was 13 or 14 years in a row that they increased taxes when they were in power, making life less affordable for Manitobans. So we know exactly what would happen if the NDP were to get back in–into power in this province. They would make life less affordable, because that's their track record. That's what they do. And so they're doing that with Manitoba Hydro now. They're doing that with every­thing.

      In fact, they don't even really have a plan on affordability. We've been out with a plan, a very good plan, to help those in need in Manitoba who are suffering as a result of inflationary pressures out there. We have been making life more affordable for Manitobans.

      I think what's unfor­tunate–and I know the Leader of the Op­posi­tion wants to laugh in his seat, and others across the way–it's not a laughing matter. It's a very serious issue. Manitobans are having trouble making ends meet, and we are making sure that we're bringing forth policies that will make life more affordable for them.

      Like the minimum wage increase, which we have gone forward with. Like back to school support for families with net annual income of under $175,000 and kids under 18 years old as they get back to school, $250 for the first child, $200 for each child thereafter, Mr. Deputy Speaker–Mr. Chair. I can go on and on about how we are making life more affordable for Manitobans, and I will continue to do so, because we will protect Manitobans while the NDP just want to increase–

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able First Minister's time has expired.

Mr. Ian Bushie (Keewatinook): In regards to the First Nations agree­ments with Keeyask generating station, does the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) believe the current agree­ment between different First Nations and the–and Manitoba Hydro with respect to the Keeyask generating station is fair?

Mrs. Stefanson: I thank the member for the question.

      It's certainly my under­standing that Manitoba Hydro and Keeyask Cree nations are meaningful en­gaged on this specific matter that the member brought up. Manitoba Hydro has committed, as I understand, to under­take further review of the Keeyask Cree nations' request, with both parties working together to gain a better under­standing of the interests and priorities of each party and to examine potential options moving forward.

      So, as a gov­ern­ment, we'll continue to follow this issue closely and look forward to hearing the out­comes as further discussions unfold.

Mr. Bushie: Just wondering if the First Minister can say if it's Hydro's in­ten­tion into–to remove the injunction against the Tataskweyak Cree Nation.

Mrs. Stefanson: I've never talked about injunctions at all. I–what I talked about is meaningful en­gage­­ment that is taking place, as I understand, between Manitoba Hydro and Keeyask Cree nations, and as we look forward to what transpires as a result of those deliberations.

Mr. Kinew: Yes, there's an injunction in place between–or from Hydro towards the chief and the com­mu­nity of TCN. Gov­ern­ment has the power under The Crown Cor­por­ations Gov­ern­ance and Account­ability Act to direct Hydro to ditch the injunction. So will the gov­ern­ment do so?

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, once again, I mean, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion, on one hand is telling us not to get involved in Manitoba Hydro, not to inter­fere in Manitoba Hydro, and now they're telling us that we should be interfering. You know, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion can't have it both ways, okay? These are issues that are being dealt with with Manitoba Hydro, and that's where they remain. But, again, the Leader of the Op­posi­tion can't have it both ways.

Mr. Kinew: Seems to be selective involvement on the part of the PCs. Manitoba Hydro tells us that they require a directive under the CCGA to get rid of this injunction. Will the PCs issue a directive like that?

Mrs. Stefanson: Speaking of being selected, Mr. Chair–selective on whether or not we should be interfering. One day they're saying we should be interfering in Manitoba Hydro, then they're saying we shouldn't be interfering in Manitoba. You know, which is it? Again, speaking of being selective, the member opposite is obviously being selective. We believe that we're not going to inter­fere in Manitoba Hydro. Again, with those deliberations that are taking place between Manitoba Hydro and the Keeyask Cree nations, we want to ensure that there is meaningful en­gage­ment there. As we understand, there is, and we look forward to the out­comes of that.

Mr. Kinew: So the press release from June 18th, 2021, in which the gov­ern­ment committed to a formal process to implement the recom­men­dations of the Wall report, which includes–the recom­men­dations include priva­tizing sub­sid­iaries of Manitoba Hydro, for the record–the gov­ern­ment committed to a public, formal response docu­ment being tabled in the House in the fall of 2022. Is that public formal response docu­ment going to be tabled in the House this fall of 2022?

* (16:10)

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, I already mentioned to the Leader of the Op­posi­tion that, again, there–the Wall report acts as a–as some recom­men­dations and advice to the gov­ern­ment. And we'll continue to review the report and, again, where things make sense, to move forward in the best interests of Manitobans. We'll take action, as we have, with respect to Bill 36 and to–and we'll continue to ensure that we're listening to Manitobans, we're taking action on their behalf and we're getting things done.

      But, certainly, when it comes to this review, it–again, it's advice to gov­ern­ment and we'll continue to look at it as advice and implement things moving forward where they make sense and they're in the best interests of Manitobans. It's common sense.

Mr. Kinew: The same June 18th, 2021, press release says that the minister provided a directive to Manitoba Hydro under The Crown Cor­por­ations Gov­ernance and Account­ability Act to implement the 51 recom­men­dations outlined in the Wall report. This directive has not been rescinded.

      Does the gov­ern­ment plan to rescind this directive, or are they going to continue with the imple­men­ta­tion of all the Wall report recom­men­dations?

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, the Wall report acts as a–advice to our gov­ern­ment and, again, I ap­pre­ciate Mr. Wall's work and effort that he put into putting this report together. And I think, again, there are some very good things in there that have–that has–that have put in place–that help form Bill 36 for us, and I think those are positive things with respect to, you know, for ratepayers of Manitoba Hydro. And we'll continue to look at the docu­ment as advice to gov­ern­ment and take action where it makes sense.

Mr. Kinew: So, there's a directive from this gov­ern­ment to Hydro to implement the Wall report recom­men­dations. What's going to happen with that directive? Is that going to be left in place to implement all the recom­men­dations, or are you going to rescind it?

Mrs. Stefanson: Yes, again, I would defer that over to the Minister of Finance (Mr. Friesen) and his Estimates to answer that. I'm not sure where they're at with the recom­men­dations.

Mr. Kinew: Just want to point out to the First Minister, so this directive has not been rescinded and it says that yes, the 51 recom­men­dations from the report should have an action plan for each: en­gage­ment, evaluation process, reporting mechanism, imple­men­ta­tion, activities, et cetera.

      So, does the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) plan to leave this directive on the books or is this going to be rescinded?

Mrs. Stefanson: I mean, again, I–I'll defer that over to the Minister of Finance (Mr. Friesen).

      But I will note that one of the things that the Leader of the Op­posi­tion is refusing to admit here is that report was, you know–it really outlines some of the tragic decisions that were made back in the previous–during the time of the previous NDP gov­ern­ment.

      And, you know–so I would just suggest that, you know, obviously we–moving forward, we want to ensure that we are protecting ratepayers; we are protecting Manitobans, parti­cularly in these in­fla­tionary times. We've had those discussions. Part of the Wall report had to do with helping inform Bill 36 the way it is today. Those are positive things to help protect ratepayers.

      Again, the report was written many–like, over a year ago and completed over a year ago. There has been sig­ni­fi­cant changes in terms of inflationary pressures and other things since then.

      I know the De­part­ment of Finance is looking at this and will look at those recom­men­dations and will indicate where they're at in terms of the, you know, where they're at with those recom­men­dations. So those are questions, again, that I think are better asked of the Minister of Finance with his staff.

Mr. Dougald Lamont (St. Boniface): Yes, I wanted to ask some questions. This goes back a little to the begin­ning of the year, but I'll start with some ques­tions about the occupation protest of the Legislature.

      There was a letter that I wrote on February 9th. It was clear to us that there were some real issues with safety and security. There had been a number of threats and so on that had been made. The protest itself had set up outside the Legislature, called them­selves an occupation protest. They said that, you know, counter-protesters would be asked to leave, and they said their plan was to peacefully protest and occupy the area.

      Now one of the big concerns for us was–which really surprised me, and I asked for some clari­fi­ca­tion and I hope I can get it today–at one point the City of Winnipeg and the Winnipeg Police Service tweeted that the Charter of Rights protects every citizen's rights to peacefully gather. This supersedes the traffic act and city bylaws–and I believe also that the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) said that the prov­incial gov­ern­ment doesn't have juris­dic­tion in civic protests.

* (16:20)

      And I checked with a couple of lawyers just to see whether that's the–actually the case, and it's not. That there–it's esta­blished precedent under R v. Lecompte, you know, section 2(c) guarantees the right to peace­ful assembly; it does not protect riots and gatherings that seriously disturb the peace.

      And another ruling said that the right for freedom of assembly, along with freedom of expression, does not include the right to physic­ally impede or blockade lawful activities.

      And, in fact, a police super­in­ten­dent from Winnipeg actually posted–or made a reference to the–kind of, the guide–the docu­ments that are used, and they make it absolutely clear that it is actually a criminal offense under the Criminal Code to block a highway.

      So, I'm just trying to understand how it is that we reached a point when–that people on the one hand were saying that the Charter of Rights supersedes people's right to protest, when trucks are not human beings, and that this was clearly a situation where, you know, traffic was being blocked, there were hazards at borders and hazards at–because there was a slow roll on a highway where an individual–a senior couple were delayed in getting to an ER.

      So, I'm just trying to figure out who–where did–the legal advice came from. Who gave that legal advice saying that the Charter of Rights is superseded by the Highway Traffic Act to the Premier?

Mrs. Stefanson: You know, I–that was, you know, some time ago now, and you know, we were receiving updates on what was happening, not just, you know, here in Manitoba, but across the country.

      And so, if the member has some infor­ma­tion to share with us in the Chamber with respect to this alleged advice that we apparently received, I'd be happy to accept that.

An Honourable Member: Yes, I mean, it's just–

Mr. Chairperson: Oh, hang on a second.

      The hon­our­able member for St. Boniface.

Mr. Lamont: Yes, it's just that, you know, there were–the other thing–and I'll resend the letter if I need to. The other thing about it was just, you know, there had been a number of warnings in the lead up to it.

      One of the major organizers of the protest, who's now been charged, is an individual named Pat King, who was known to be making violent threats against the Prime Minister and others on social media. At one point, he was–he'd made a video from–which is available still, online–saying that somebody was going to make the Prime Minister catch a bullet. And he was a very outspoken individual who was working with–so–and, even before the convoy was allowed to set up outside the Legislature, there'd been a member of the–an NDP MLA had had somebody walk into their office. I was receiving threats online.

      So, I'm just trying to understand, where did the–where was the decision made to close off–or, who was respon­si­ble for making the decision to allow this occupation to set up and block the front entrance of the Legislature. Because at–prior to that, we've had here–in security, we've had­–the building's been closed down more and more, we've been–and we've been closing off part of it due to construction, but also due to security concerns, sort of getting in and out of the property. So, the one–there's only one place for members as well as for emergency vehicles to get in, it was completely blocked.

      So I'm just–was there any involvement on the part of the Legislature or legis­lative security in making that decision to allow these protesters to completely 'brock'–block the–and occupy the front of the Legislature and block the front entrance?

Mrs. Stefanson: I thank the member for the question. I think, you know, I'd ap­pre­ciate having a look at the letter that the member is referring to, and I'd be happy to take that back to and refer that over to the Department of Justice to get a response to that, spe­cific­ally to those details.

Mr. Lamont: I know we've been talking a lot about Brad Wall and his–in the context of Manitoba Hydro, but I understand he was also working with some of the individuals from the convoy. He was recommending that Pat King be removed or be distanced from the front.

      But were there any–ever any–did any dis­cussions–did Mr. Wall ever have any discussions with anybody from the gov­ern­ment, from the Premier's (Mrs. Stefanson) office or anyone else who was involved in the convoy or handling the convoy?

Mrs. Stefanson: To the best of my knowledge, we've had no discussions with the former premier, Wall, with respect to a convoy.

Mr. Lamont: Now, just a couple of questions relating more to, sort of, decisions around–because of this–around the same month, in around January that there was a point when it was–we were sort of in the middle of a–the wave in January, and there was an–sort of, an an­nounce­ment that we were going in a different direction in terms of the pandemic.

      And I'm just wondering, it wasn't–it was sort of suggested we weren't necessarily going completely with public health, but I'm just wondering what–and as the Premier said at the time, look, you have your policy makers, you have–ultimately, the decisions may rest with the Premier or the Health Minister. But what were the–I'm just trying to understand, what was the policy basis for making those decisions and saying, well, we're going to take–we're going to go in a different direction when it comes to the pandemic.

      In part, I'm trying to understand it because there were–actually, you know, in a couple–I think I understand that both in Ontario and Quebec, they'd hired McKinsey as consultants to discuss, you know, pandemic. Where there any consultants who were–like McKinsey or others–who were involved in making those recom­men­dations about how to emerge from the pandemic? Or were there papers?

      I mean, I'm just trying to get an under­standing of what the shift was because there were, you know, debates back and forth, both in terms of public health policy but also in terms of economic recovery at the time. And I'm just trying to get an under­standing of what the research was that was the basis of that decision.

* (16:30)

Mrs. Stefanson: I'm just–sorry, I'm just trying to wrap my brain on this. We're back to January, and I just don't recall a time where Dr. Roussin and I, you know, were not out publicly on the same page when it came to the recom­men­dations. So, you know, I'm–I don't recall that discussion at all. We were always sort of on the same page.

Mr. Lamont: Yes, it's just it–sometimes it wasn't always clear what the basis of those decisions were. There'd be an an­nounce­ment, but there wasn't necessarily–there was, you know, say, a research paper or it wasn't always clear what the evidence might be. But I'll move on from that.

      And I just have a couple–one–two quick questions.

      So one relates to the Public Accounts. So page–annual report in Public Accounts, page 39. It mentions that, overall, Manitoba ex­per­ienced a decline in federal transfers as a share of total revenue between 2012-13 to 2015-16. However, transfers to Manitoba, including those for targeted program delivery have steadily increased, and it's above the 15-year average of 28.4 per cent.

      The ratio indicates the Province is relying less on its own source reve­nues to fund core programs and services, demon­strating Manitoba's gradually in­creasing vul­ner­ability based on changes in federal transfer support.

      And I do have a–so one of the things that I wanted to ask–I also wrote a letter recently about the–on the issue of health equity, that I know that you and other premiers have spoken about the need to raise the overall level of the Canada Health Transfer. But one of the things that we're interested in, wondering whether you'd be interested in as well, is whether the Canada Health Transfer could be restored to having an equity aspect to its formula because in 2014, nine out of 10 provinces lost health–faced health-care cuts where Alberta faced all the increases, and that if we were to return to a formula, Manitoba and nine out of 10 provinces would improve the situation, and it's also the same–is also true for the Canadian social transfer.

      So, after that long preamble, I mean, I guess the two things are–I know that there are concerns about Manitoba's future fiscal capacity, that our–based on our own source revenue, but I'm also concerned about the fact that in the long run we're not getting the federal funding we could be getting if it were based on an equitable formula.

      So I'm just wondering whether there was any interest or openness to accepting the possi­bility of Manitoba endorsing an equity in health care in federal funding formulas because that would actually–the result would be a net–even if there were no net increases in spending, nine out of 10 provinces would be better off. So I'm just wondering if that's some­thing that the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) might consider.

Mrs. Stefanson: So I thank the member for the question. I think if we go back in history some 60‑some-odd years ago when an agree­ment was entered into between the federal gov­ern­ment and the provinces, it was a 50-50 split at that time, and we do know ever since that time until today it's now the federal con­tri­bu­tion of 22 per cent.

      And so, you know, we obviously see and, you know, I–I've only–I've been in this role for 11 months now, but this has been a sig­ni­fi­cant issue ever since I–and well before I got to the council of federation table.

      So these are discussions that have been taking place for the last number of years, and really every province is on side to ensure that we get back to–I mean, we wanted to take it from 22 to 35 per cent. I mean, not necessarily back to the 50 per cent, which I think will be difficult to do, but certainly that is some­thing that the council of federation–a position the council of federation has taken right across the country.

      I will say that, you know, since I've been in this role, I've found that, you know, by taking, you know, listening to Manitobans, taking more of a col­lab­o­rative approach to things, we've been able to get things done, and that includes working with the federal gov­ern­ment as well as, you know, the City of Winnipeg and munici­palities on a number of different areas. And, you know, I want to continue along that line of taking that col­lab­o­rative approach.

      And I've had, you know, several meetings–I mean, a few meetings with the Prime Minister himself about this, with Minister LeBlanc about this and others, and we'll continue to have those discussions as to what that might look like.

      I think we need to–I think there's a willingness on all parts to advance this, the under­standing that health care has become such an important issue right across this country, and the funding of health care has become such an im­por­tant issue that I think that there's a willingness on, I think, all parts to want to move forward. It's just a question of, you know, what does that look like? And I think those discussions will hopefully take place if we can get to, you know, a table to have those deliberations with the federal gov­ern­ment, you know, to see what that would look like.

      But for right now, that's the stance of the council of federation. I am taking over as–and have just taken over as the chair of that body. I–you know that I like to take a col­lab­o­rative approach to things. I'd like to find a way that we might be able to move forward, and I'll certainly work with my counterparts across the country as well as the federal gov­ern­ment to see, you know, how we can move that forward, because obviously what we all want to do and achieve is better health-care out­comes for all Canadians.

* (16:40)

      So, I thank the member for that question.

Mr. Kinew: Could the Premier tell the House whether the gov­ern­ment has signed a deal with the federal gov­ern­ment to access monies to build the channels project for Lake St. Martin and Lake Manitoba?

Mrs. Stefanson: The Leader of the Op­posi­tion will know that for many years now we have been putting this in our budget, hoping that the federal gov­ern­ment will come forward and move forward on it, and to date, I believe it's still held up in the environ­mental process stages with the federal gov­ern­ment.

      So, that's where that stands, but we are certainly wanting to move forward with that project. I know the minister has met with surrounding First Nation com­mu­nities and there is a willingness to want to work together and move forward on this; and I want to thank him for his work on this.

      And we look forward to moving forward as soon as the federal gov­ern­ment gives the go ahead.

Mr. Kinew: According to docu­ments obtained through the freedom of infor­ma­tion process, the Manitoba gov­ern­ment has not signed an agree­ment with the federal gov­ern­ment to access monies from the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, initialized as DMAF, which is meant to fund the channels project.

      So, how come that hasn't happened yet? Why hasn't this taken place?

Mrs. Stefanson: I think those are, you know, details getting into the de­part­ments of infra­structure and trans­por­tation, and those questions would be best asked at–in those Estimates during that process.

Mr. Kinew: It's a very im­por­tant project for people across Manitoba, including in the Interlake and on the west side of Lake Manitoba.

      Many folks in the region compare the high water levels this year to previous years, which were followed up by large-scale flood events and they feel a lot of urgency in order to get this project done.

      So, as the leader of the gov­ern­ment, why has–I would have to pose a question to the First Minister–why hasn't her gov­ern­ment signed on to this Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, which would provide resources to the Lake Manitoba-Lake St. Martin outlet channels project?

Mrs. Stefanson: I think, regardless of where the funding comes from, we need to wait for that process to take place–the environ­mental process to take place by the federal gov­ern­ment. So, nothing can move forward until that takes place.

Mr. Kinew: We're just looking at this docu­ment, which is con­fi­dential to the minister of Central Services but obtained through freedom of infor­ma­tion. It's a different de­part­ment than the one the First Minister cited.

      But, again there's a draft agree­ment referred to here for the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund. This note says that negotiations have been ongoing and this occurs concurrently to the various approval processes. So, there's nothing really in the way of the approvals cited by the First Minister which would preclude this financing piece from being arranged.

      And so, on behalf of the good folks in the Interlake and on the west side of Lake Manitoba, who would want to see this channels project built, why hasn't this Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund been executed–or, the agree­ment for it been executed by this gov­ern­ment?

Mrs. Stefanson: It's just due process that ongoing discussions will continue to take place between officials, but there's no funding arrangement or anything that the federal gov­ern­ment will agree to until they go through the environ­mental process.

Mr. Kinew: Does the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) have a timeline for when this agree­ment with the federal gov­ern­ment will be entered into–an agree­ment to ­ cost-share the channels project?

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, I mean, it's hard to say from our standpoint because that rests in the hands of the federal gov­ern­ment when that environ­mental process takes place. So we don't know or have any control over that process. So we are in the hands of the federal gov­ern­ment and we will await that process to take place and hope to move forward as quickly as we can.

Mr. Kinew: So what has prevented the province from signing an agree­ment with the feds to fund the channels project?

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able leader of–[interjection]–the hon­our­able First Minister.

Mrs. Stefanson: Thank you, Mr. Chair. I ap­pre­ciate that.

      So the federal gov­ern­ment won't sign on to an agree­ment, again, until they go through their environ­mental process. So that process needs to take place before an agree­ment can be signed.

Mr. Kinew: So we learned over the summer that there's been a number of delays caused by the prov­incial gov­ern­ment in applying for licences or in carry­ing out con­sul­ta­tion. And I take it, then, that these delays created by the prov­incial gov­ern­ment are what is standing in the way of moving ahead with the cost-sharing agree­ment.

      Is that accurate?

Mrs. Stefanson: What the Leader of the Op­posi­tion has outlined is not our under­standing at all. Our under­standing is that the process is in the hands of the federal gov­ern­ment. This is going through the en­viron­mental process. Until that process takes place, an agree­ment cannot be signed.

Mr. Kinew: So if we go ask the federal gov­ern­ment, they will say that they're not willing to execute the agree­ment until that other approvals process takes place. Is that correct?

Mrs. Stefanson: I've just been advised that we have agreed to it–[interjection]–yes, but it can't be signed by, again, the federal gov­ern­ment until that process takes place–the environ­mental process takes place. So we have already agreed to it. Again, it's in their hands.

Mr. Kinew: So what are the terms of this Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund agree­ment that the Province has agreed to?

* (16:50)

Mrs. Stefanson: So it's my 'understunding'–under­standing that the agree­ment has been signed by the  De­part­ment of 'lamour'–Labour–sorry–Consumer Protec­tion and Gov­ern­ment Services. So, again, any questions around the details of what's in that docu­ment would be best referred to the Estimates within that de­part­ment.

Mr. Kinew: Okay, so the–like, numbers in this note say that the esti­mated cost of the project was $540 million, of which the MAF, aka Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund's con­tri­bu­tion would be $247.5 million. So we heard previously that the esti­mated cost of the project has gone up. So I was wondering by how much has the con­tri­bu­tion from the DMAF agree­ment increased in response.

Mrs. Stefanson: Again, I would just refer those questions to the de­part­mental Estimates of Labour, Consumer Pro­tec­tion and Gov­ern­ment Services. They will have the details on that.

Mr. Kinew: Is there a timeline when construction will start on the channels project?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, again, it goes back to we're waiting on the federal gov­ern­ment to go through the environ­mental process. So that will be dependent on the timing of the federal gov­ern­ment and that process taking place.

Mr. Kinew: But certainly the gov­ern­ment isn't just sitting in a dark room completely unaware of when the approval process is going to be concluded. So what is the timeline? What's the esti­mated timeline by which the approvals will be obtained and construction can begin?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, again, if the Leader of the Opposi­tion has a crystal ball and can decide, you know, and can see in that crystal ball when that will happen I would love to see that, but the fact of the matter is that crystal ball does not exist. There are processes that take place. There is an environ­mental process that needs to take place at the federal level. That's under the purview of the federal gov­ern­ment, so it has nothing to do with us. We have no say on the timing of that what­so­ever. Again, that falls under the federal gov­ern­ment in that environ­mental process.

Mr. Kinew: Well, the Province is the applicant, so they do have some­thing to do with the process, and, presumably, like, if you ask there's going to be some indication of the timeline. So has the Province asked for an esti­mate of when the approval may be obtained?

Mrs. Stefanson: Well, again, I indicated to the Leader of the Op­posi­tion earlier that the De­part­ment of Labour, Consumer Pro­tec­tion and Gov­ern­ment Services has signed off on that. So–but again, it's waiting on the federal gov­ern­ment to go through the environ­mental process that is out of our hands. We have done every­thing we can do on our side of it.

      I think, also, con­sul­ta­tions have been taking place. I know the minister has been out there having discussions with First Nations in the surrounding areas in the interim as well, but, again, this falls in the hands of the federal gov­ern­ment under their environ­mental review process.

Mr. Kinew: Has the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) taken any steps to try and expedite the process, raising it with the Prime Minister, making any calls? What sort of efforts have been made there?

Mrs. Stefanson: There have been ongoing discussions about this for years now, and I know, you know, even more recently there continue to be dis­cussions between officials and ministers and they keep on top of these issues. Our Intergovernmental Affairs was involved in that too. You know, we keep on top of it.

      But again, we have no say over the timing. That falls entirely under the purview of the environ­mental process that is under the federal gov­ern­ment.

Mr. Kinew: You know, this is an im­por­tant project for many people across Manitoba, folks who live upstream, folks who live in the Interlake, folks who live on the west side of Lake Manitoba. You know, there's impacted com­mu­nities who are all along both sides of Lake Manitoba, downstream on the other side of the Fairford Dam, at Lake Pineimuta and Lake St. Martin. You have First Nations com­mu­nities in the area, you have ranchers and other property owners, many of whom are raising the alarm, and they see high water levels this year that call to mind, in their opinion, previous high water events.

      And the question, when we speak to these folks, that they ask over and over again is, well, what's taking so long and why can't the government move things along more quickly?

      And, again, you know, I would put my plug in here that this project is im­por­tant enough and urgent enough, giving the flooding situation in Manitoba and the high water levels we're seeing and have seen this year, that the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson) should get personally involved and directly involved.

      And, you know, to quote discussions with officials, end quote, being the level of en­gage­ment up to date is probably not what the moment calls for. It calls for a more substantive inter­ven­tion to expedite the approvals process.

      Certainly, we've seen a lack of en­gage­ment from the PC gov­ern­ment to speed along the work that they need to do to get this channels project constructed. We've heard many examples of–whether it's on the environ­mental side or engaging with com­mu­nities or engaging with property owners, that there doesn't seem to be co‑ordination or a commit­ment to seeing this project through in a timely manner.

      You got folks there who recall 2011, 2014 and other years, and they wonder whether their ranch, whether their com­mu­nity, is going to be able to bounce back from another high water event.

      Now, we would all hope that such a high water event doesn't come to pass, but again, you know, that's some­thing that we need to prepare for. Channels project is an important piece of flood mitigation which could help us in this instance to protect those folks who live in the area, who live downstream. It would help assuage concerns from people who live upstream as well.

      And so, the gov­ern­ment, I think, ought to ask what they can do to expedite the federal approval process. The gov­ern­ment ought to ask for a timeline for what that federal approval process is going to be. The gov­ern­ment ought to show a higher level of en­gage­ment with this topic than they have shown to the public to date.

      Up to now, we've seen the gov­ern­ment continue to cause un­neces­sary delays. And as we lose out on another window to begin construction of this im­por­tant project, you know, people grow in­creasingly frustrated.

      And, you know, the attempt to point the finger at the federal gov­ern­ment, you know, is a tried and true strategy or talking point, but having engaged in some of those con­ver­sa­tions with folks who live in the area, whose cattle operations or whose homes are threatened by high water, you know, they don't really pass muster. You know, folks–

Mr. Chairperson: The hour being 5 p.m., com­mit­tee rise.

      Call in the Speaker.

IN SESSION

Mr. Deputy Speaker (Andrew Micklefield): The hour being 5 o'clock, this House is adjourned and stands adjourned until 10 a.m. tomorrow.


 


LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

Monday, October 3, 2022

CONTENTS


Vol. 67

ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS

Ministerial Statements

Women's History Month

Squires 2823

Marcelino  2824

Lamoureux  2824

Islamic History Month

A. Smith  2825

Brar 2825

Gerrard  2825

Members' Statements

Daniel Alexander Stokes

Clarke  2826

International Walk to School Month

Naylor 2826

Makenna Stratton

A. Smith  2827

All Abilities Soccer Program

Moses 2827

Norma Wood & Joe Wiwchar

Friesen  2828

Oral Questions

St. Boniface Hospital Foundation

Kinew   2829

Stefanson  2829

Winnipeg Health Region

Kinew   2830

Stefanson  2830

Private Agency Nursing

Asagwara  2831

Gordon  2831

Surgical and Wait Times

Fontaine  2832

Gordon  2832

Peguis First Nation

Lathlin  2833

Piwniuk  2833

Education System Funding

Altomare  2834

Ewasko  2834

Disabled EIA Recipients in Long-Term Care

Lamont 2835

Squires 2835

Increase in Crime

Lamoureux  2836

Goertzen  2836

Knife-Related Violent Crime

Teitsma  2836

Goertzen  2836

Agricultural Crown Land Leasing

Brar 2837

Johnson  2837

Petitions

Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library

Altomare  2837

Foot-Care Services

Brar 2838

Drug Overdose Reporting

Asagwara  2838

Hearing Aids

Gerrard  2839

Louise Bridge

Maloway  2840

Provincial Road 224

Lathlin  2840

Bibliothèque Régionale Jolys Regional Library

Marcelino  2841

Moses 2842

Foot-Care Services

Redhead  2842

B. Smith  2843

ORDERS OF THE DAY

GOVERNMENT business

Committee of Supply

(Concurrent Sections)

Room 254

Health

Asagwara  2844

Gordon  2844

Room 255

Finance

Wasyliw   2852

Friesen  2852

Chamber

Executive Council

Stefanson  2865

Kinew   2865

Bushie  2870

Lamont 2872