logo
NDP asks Tories to co-operate on passage of interprovincial trade bill before next week's summer break

NDP asks Tories to co-operate on passage of interprovincial trade bill before next week's summer break

The NDP government house leader is asking the Tories to co-operate in passing an interprovincial free trade bill before the Manitoba legislature breaks for the summer recess June 2.
'Bill 47 is critical to Manitoba to respond to tariffs introduced by the (U.S. President Donald) Trump administration,' says a letter Nahanni Fontaine sent today to Opposition house leader Derek Johnson.
Bill 47, the Fair Trade in Canada (Internal Trade Mutual Recognition) Act and the Buy Manitoba, Buy Canadian Day Act was introduced Thursday, past the deadline for bills to be guaranteed passage before the house rises on Monday.
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
House leader Nahanni Fontaine urged the Opposition Tories to support the NDP government's interprovincial trade legislation before the legislature breaks for the summer.
'We must act swiftly to protect Manitoba jobs and our economy,' says Fontaine's letter, which was shared with the Free Press.
'Let's demonstrate together this assembly will meet this historic moment and deliver meaningful action on behalf of all Manitobans.'
Johnson and the PC caucus didn't immediately respond when asked if they'd support the speedy passage of the government bill.
The Manitoba legislative assembly has been bitterly divided on most issues with speaker Tom Lindsay repeatedly calling for decorum on both sides of the house.
Tuesdays
A weekly look at politics close to home and around the world.
Trade Minister Jamie Moses told the legislative assembly last week that Bill 47 aims to increase the flow of goods, services and investments between Manitoba and the rest of the country.
It gives Manitoba the power to designate another province or territory that takes similar steps to remove barriers to trade as a 'reciprocating jurisdiction.'
ALEX LUPUL / FREE PRESS FILES
Fontaine sent the letter to Opposition House Leader Derek Johnson on Monday.
Another region's products will be treated as if they have met local certification, testing and quality standards under the proposed legislation, and will not be subject to additional approval requirements and related fees. Out-of-province services will also be exempt from related red tape.
The government wants the bill passed before the house rises next Monday and doesn't return until Oct. 1. Canada's first ministers — including Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew — are to meet in Saskatoon next Monday with Prime Minister Mark Carney. Carney has said he wants an interprovincial free trade deal done in time for Canada Day, July 1.
carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca
Carol SandersLegislature reporter
Carol Sanders is a reporter at the Free Press legislature bureau. The former general assignment reporter and copy editor joined the paper in 1997. Read more about Carol.
Every piece of reporting Carol produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NDP on TMX: We didn't want it. They built it. So let's use its full potential
NDP on TMX: We didn't want it. They built it. So let's use its full potential

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

  • Vancouver Sun

NDP on TMX: We didn't want it. They built it. So let's use its full potential

VICTORIA — The B.C. NDP government responded with mostly discouraging words this week to growing national speculation about a new pipeline to transport the country's oil to the West Coast. Prime Minister Mark Carney explored the idea of 'an oil pipeline to tidewater' with industry executives in Calgary on Sunday and with provincial and territorial leaders in Saskatoon on Monday. Ontario Premier Doug Ford described the pipeline as 'absolutely critical' to weaning Canada off excessive dependence on the U.S. market. Stay on top of the latest real estate news and home design trends. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Westcoast Homes will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Alberta Premier Danielle Smith spoke of a 'grand bargain' to deliver a 'million-barrel-a-day pipeline to the northwest B.C. coast' and '$20 billion a year in revenues' to government coffers. Then there were the comments of B.C. deputy premier Niki Sharma, who represented Premier David Eby at the Saskatchewan meeting. Asked point blank if the New Democrats would be 'OK with fast-tracking' a pipeline to transport Alberta bitumen to Prince Rupert or Kitimat, Sharma replied: 'Well, you know what, at this stage, you've heard the premier say — we have a difference of opinion about whether or not a bitumen pipeline should go in … the northern part of the province.' Besides, said Sharma: 'There's no (pipeline) proponent at this time, there's no project that is really there to look at. Let's focus on those projects that are ready, with strong investment and alignment.' She's right that there is no current proposal for such a pipeline. One may be forthcoming after Carney's meeting with industry executives and Smith's lobbying on carbon capture projects in Alberta. In a followup statement, Sharma added: 'We are focusing on these shovel-ready projects, not theoretical projects with no proponents. There is also an existing, underused pipeline that Canadian taxpayers paid $34 billion for, with capacity to spare. She meant the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion or TMX, which the New Democrats vowed to fight 'with every tool in the tool box' and failed to stop. Eby also made a disparaging reference to TMX at the recent conference of Western premiers. 'That pipeline is not at full capacity right now,' said Eby. 'Why wouldn't we ensure that that public infrastructure was fully used first before dividing ourselves on a project where there is no proponent.' Eby and Sharma exaggerate the degree to which the TMX is 'underused … with capacity to spare' after one year of operation. The Canadian Energy Regulator reports that the line has operated at about 80 per cent of its 890,000 barrel-per-day capacity since coming online in May 2024. Moreover, the performance improved in the first quarter of this year. 'The pipeline ran at about 85 per cent capacity during the three-month period ending in March,' Chris Varcoe reported in the Calgary Herald this week. The Globe and Mail's Emma Garney further reported that the line 'hit a high of 90 per cent' in March. The demand is such that Trans Mountain has already begun test work to boost capacity by up to 10 per cent by the end of 2026. A longer-term project would add pumping stations to boost it to 1.14 million barrels a day, later in the decade. So much for the B.C. NDP notion that the $34 billion pipeline is languishing through insufficient use. But rather than consult the country's energy regulator or the national newspapers, perhaps Eby and Sharma were taking their lead from Steven Guilbeault. Guilbeault served as environment minister in the Justin Trudeau Liberal government, where he flourished as a fan of carbon taxation and an opponent of fossil fuel expansion. Carney reassigned him to the Canadian Heritage Department at about the same time as the PM reduced the carbon tax to zero and began talking up the need to expand resource production. It didn't stop the new heritage minister from wandering outside his lane last month to announce that Canada has no need of more pipelines because TMX was operating at '40 per cent capacity' and the world was approaching 'peak oil production.' In the first instance, Guilbeault clearly didn't know what he was talking about and in the second, there's much room to debate about when peak oil will be reached. Still, there is a capacity issue regarding the TMX terminal in Burnaby, though not one that involves the pipeline. The terminal is already busy with tankers, having loaded some 741 in the first quarter of the year at a rate that fell just short of one a day in March. But tankers are unable to load fully because of the risk of grounding in Burrard Inlet. The New Democrats have recognized the limitation and come out in support of a federal proposal to dredge Burrard Inlet to a depth that full tankers can traverse. Leading the call is Energy Minister Adrian Dix. As NDP leader, Dix's snap decision to oppose TMX in the midst of the 2013 election campaign contributed to his loss to Christy Clark. Now that the line is running, Dix supports maximizing its use. 'We built it. We paid for it. We should use it,' he says, taking a realistic view of a project that cost him much. vpalmer@

Province officially opens involuntary treatment beds on grounds of Alouette correctional facility
Province officially opens involuntary treatment beds on grounds of Alouette correctional facility

Vancouver Sun

timean hour ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Province officially opens involuntary treatment beds on grounds of Alouette correctional facility

The B.C. NDP on Tuesday unveiled new beds that will allow authorities to force people with severe mental health and addictions to undergo treatment with the opening of a new facility at the Alouette Correctional Centre in Maple Ridge. Containing 18 beds across two buildings on the site of the women's jail, the facility will provide specialized care for individuals, both men and women, struggling with extreme mental-health challenges as well as severe brain injury from repeated drug overdoses. 'These two homes are the first of their kind in British Columbia, designed for individuals with incredibly complex mental-health disorders, who have been certified for long-term involuntary care under the Mental Health Act,' B.C. Health Minister Josie Osborne told reporters. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'In many cases, residents may also be living with concurrent disorders such as substance-use brain injuries, which can affect behaviour and safety.' The announcement follows April's opening of 10 beds at the Surrey Pretrial Centre for people held by the jail while awaiting trial. Unlike that location, the beds at Alouette Correctional will not be for individuals in custody but rather those being held at secure health-care facilities under the Mental Health Act by Vancouver Coastal Health. Postmedia News asked for the number of people who have already been admitted to the facility at Surrey Pretrial but didn't hear back before deadline. Dr. Daniel Vigo, B.C.'s chief scientific adviser for psychiatry, toxic drugs and concurrent disorders, said the goal is to allow for specialized treatment to be provided in a secure setting while also freeing up hospital beds for other patients. 'We are currently working on some specific roadblocks with health authorities, with Health Canada, working closely with addiction doctors to desegregate mental health and substance-use care across the system so that people with severe mental illness are never excluded due to their complexity,' said Vigo. Claire Rattée, B.C. Conservative mental health and addictions critic, said any step toward building the care system is welcome but that the NDP approach has been too slow and lacks transparency. She said there is still a large portion of the population that struggles with extreme mental health and addiction challenges that will not be eligible for admission to either of the involuntary care facilities at Surrey Pretrial or Alouette Correctional because they're neither being held by the justice system or admitted under the Mental Health Act. 'It leaves out a large portion of the population that needs compassionate care and intervention,' said Rattée. 'We've seen repeatedly, and this issue is just getting worse and worse and worse in the province, that there are times where intervention needs to be happening for that person's own safety and health, and for the safety and health of others.' Even as the province works to expand the system, however, the federal government is distancing itself from the provision of involuntary care. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa on Tuesday, federal Health Minister Marjorie Michel said there is no evidence that forcing treatment on someone against their will actually helps. She said she is willing to review provincial programs before determining her view on whether the practice should be allowed. 'I will sit down and see results, because I think we need to work closely together, but mostly we need scientific evidence,' said Michel. 'I will not tell you (that) to force them to be treated is a way to solve the problem. I don't think for now we would have any kind of scientific evidence on this practice.' The federal health minister's comments echo concerns from drug-user advocate groups and the Canadian Mental Health Association in B.C. These groups say the province's focus should be on building out harm reduction and the voluntary care system instead of relying on involuntary care. A Charter challenge launched by the Council of Canadians with Disabilities over the Mental Health Act's provision for forced treatment in 2016 is also currently before the courts. 'We hold the position that there are circumstances as a last resort, where the state intervening in someone's care is necessary and important, but the clarity about when that should begin and when that should end, and the consistency with which it is applied does warrant attention in B.C.,' said Jonny Morris, CEO of the Canadian Mental Health Association B.C. 'It's really thinking about all of the conditions that would enable good, strong, high-quality voluntary care, and, if involuntary treatment is required, all of the safeguards and conditions that need to be in place.' With files from The Canadian Press

Home court not so sweet for Sea Bears
Home court not so sweet for Sea Bears

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Home court not so sweet for Sea Bears

Home court hasn't been an advantage for the Winnipeg Sea Bears lately. The past two seasons saw Winnipeg's professional hoops squad go 15-5 inside Canada Life Centre, but this summer, they find themselves on a three-game slide on their own floor. Their latest defeat, which dropped them to 1-4, came on Saturday night in an 88-73 loss against the visiting Ottawa BlackJacks (2-2). The Sea Bears have now lost four straight games, all by double digits, since prevailing 92-89 over the Edmonton Stingers in the season opener. BROOK JONES / FREE PRESS Winnipeg Sea Bears guard Alex Campbell (centre) said Tuesday the team is still optimistic about their season despite dropping their last four contests. BROOK JONES / FREE PRESS Winnipeg Sea Bears guard Alex Campbell (centre) said Tuesday the team is still optimistic about their season despite dropping their last four contests. 'I think we've got a younger group and it's taken a lot to realize how special this fanbase is and I don't think we've come out and played with the sense of urgency that I feel like we could, and I don't know why that is,' said veteran Canadian guard Alex Campbell after Tuesday's practice. 'We're still optimistic… It's about gelling and building this thing back up. We have one ultimate goal at the end of the summer, obviously, and we want to build up towards that.' Campbell and head coach Mike Taylor insist the team isn't on cruise control since they're hosting the CEBL's Championship Weekend (Aug. 22-24). They are guaranteed to play in the league's Western Conference championship game no matter how they finish the regular season. The last three hosts — Montreal Alliance (6-14 in 2024), Vancouver Bandits (8-12 in 2023), and Ottawa (8-12 in 2022) — all went into the final four weekend with losing records and none of them made it to championship Sunday. 'I think we've seen the last few years that (hosting) has not been easy for teams to handle. We're trying to avoid, we'll say, the trap of a challenging season and a difficult time to win games,' said Taylor. 'We've gotten off to a slow start, so I think the most important thing for us is to take ownership and understand where we are and understand where we want to be and work to get there.' MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Winnipeg Sea Bears head coach Mike Taylor said hosting the CEBL Championship Weekend can lead to complacency during the regular season. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Winnipeg Sea Bears head coach Mike Taylor said hosting the CEBL Championship Weekend can lead to complacency during the regular season. 'I do have to say, there can be some complacency and that urgency you normally have when you're playing, it's something that we have to address… (But) we're working hard and going in the right direction.' Inefficient shooting has plagued the Sea Bears. They're dead last in both field goal (36.7) and three-point percentage (25.7). 'I feel like we're getting the right looks, it's just more self confidence because teams are kind of labelling us as non-shooters, so I think that's getting into a lot of players' heads,' said American power forward Jaylin Williams, who had 16 points and five rebounds against Ottawa. 'It's just about boosting confidence and believing in those shots is the main way to improving things. A lot of guys can shoot, I mean, I see it with these guys in practice every day, they all can shoot, it's just about putting it together in games.' The good news is help is on the way as star Canadian centre Simi Shittu is expected to join the team on the road this weekend when they take on the Brampton Honey Badgers (0-5) Friday and then the Scarborough Shooting Stars (3-0) Saturday. The six-foot-10 Shittu, who is arriving late as he was finishing up the Greek Basketball League season with his club Promitheas Patras, is an accomplished name in the summer circuit as he was named to the All-CEBL First Team and All-Canadian Team in 2023 when he was a member of the Calgary Surge. Supplied / CEBL Winnipeg Sea Bears' Simi Shittu is expected to join the team on the road Friday against the Brampton Honey Badgers. Shittu spent the 2023 season with the Calgary Surge. Supplied / CEBL Winnipeg Sea Bears' Simi Shittu is expected to join the team on the road Friday against the Brampton Honey Badgers. Shittu spent the 2023 season with the Calgary Surge. Shittu isn't expected to play this week since he'll need some time to get comfortable with his Winnipeg teammates. 'In the past, we had the star mentality where we built things around Teddy (Allen), we built things around Justin (Wright-Foreman). We made an effort to have more of a team approach this summer, and the early results are not as productive as we have been, but we have Simi coming in,' said Taylor. 'Simi is important because we've never had an athletic rim protector that he can provide. He's also a player that can settle guys down. When other teams go on a run, we can throw the ball into the post to him and play through him. He can play multiple spots on the floor, and is a big, physical body that will help with the physical presence of our team.' The Sea Bears will return to downtown Winnipeg on June 11 to square off against Montreal. Former Sea Bears guard Mason Bourcier officially signed with the Edmonton Stingers on Tuesday. Bourcier requested his release from Winnipeg last week as the 25-year-old from Kelowna, B.C., was frustrated with his role on the team. He played over 20 minutes per game with the Sea Bears in 2024, but saw his playing time slashed in half through the first three games this summer. 'We wish him all the best, we wish his family all the best, but (his tenure here) had run its course,' Taylor told the Free Press. 'At this point, our team is really together, and the roles are set. Hopefully we can replace him with a more productive player, a better player.' Taylor AllenReporter Taylor Allen is a sports reporter for the Winnipeg Free Press. Taylor was the Vince Leah intern in the Free Press newsroom twice while earning his joint communications degree/diploma at the University of Winnipeg and Red River College Polytechnic. He signed on full-time in 2019 and mainly covers the Blue Bombers, curling, and basketball. Read more about Taylor. Every piece of reporting Taylor produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store