LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

 

Thursday, April 14, 2005

 


The House met at 1:30 p.m.

 

 

ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS

 

PETITIONS

 

Provincial Road 355

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition:

 

      The unsafe conditions of PR No. 355 from the western edge of Minto municipality to PR No. 270 (including the hill out of the Minnedosa valley), poses an undue risk to Manitobans who must travel on this roadway.

 

      The steady stream of traffic on this stretch of PR No. 355, which includes automobiles such as "B" train semi-trailer tractors, mail delivery vehicles and school buses, make the roadway in its current state dangerously impassable.

 

      Continued expansion of the regional economy in livestock development, grain storage and transporta­tion and the proposed Mohawk Plant, puts additional strain on PR No. 355 and creates further safety concerns for motorists.

 

      PR No. 355 experiences an increased risk in traffic flow during the spring season when there are weight restrictions on surrounding provincial trunk highways.

 

      For several years, representatives of six municipal corporations, as well as an ad hoc citizens' group have been actively lobbying the provincial government to upgrade and reconstruct the stretch of PR  No. 355 at issue.

 

      Manitobans and visitors to the province deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

      To request the Minister of Transportation and Government Services (Mr. Lemieux) to consider upgrading PR  No. 355 from the western edge of the R.M. of Minto to PR  No. 270 (including the hill out of the Minnedosa valley).

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba (Mr. Doer) to consider supporting the said initiative to ensure the safety of our Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      Signed by Gail Birch, Richard English, Harvey English and others.

 

Mr. Speaker: In accordance with our Rule 132(6), when petitions are read they are deemed to be received by the House.

 

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

 

Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      The background to this petition is as follows:

 

      Manitoba's provincial auditor has stated that Manitoba's 2003-2004 budget deficit was the second highest on record at $604 million.

 

      The provincial government is misleading the public by saying they had a surplus of $13 million in the 2003-2004 budget.

 

      The provincial auditor has indicated that the $13-million surplus the government says it had cannot be justified.

 

      The provincial auditor has also indicated that the Province is using its own made up accounting rules in order to show a surplus instead of using generally accepted accounting principles.

 

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the provincial government to consider adopting generally accepted accounting principles in reporting Manitoba's budgetary numbers.

      Signed by A. Jing Asperin, R. Bantugan and A. Gacutan.

 

* (13:35)

 

Pembina Trails School Division–New

High School

 

Mr. John Loewen (Fort Whyte): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition:

 

      Overcrowded schools throughout Whyte Ridge, Lindenwoods, Linden Ridge and Richmond West subdivisions are forcing Pembina Trails School Division to bus students outside of these areas to attend classes in the public school system.

 

      Elementary schools in Pembina Trails School Division have run out of space to accommodate     the growing population of students in the afore­mentioned areas.

 

      Five-year projections for enrolment in the elementary schools in these areas indicate significant continued growth.

 

      Existing high schools that receive students from Whyte Ridge, Lindenwoods and Linden Ridge are at capacity and cannot accommodate the growing number of students that will continue to branch out of these subdivisions.

 

      Bussing to outlying areas is not a viable long-term solution to meeting the student population growth in the southwest portion of Winnipeg.

 

      The development of Waverley West will increase the need for a high school in the southwest sector of Winnipeg.

 

      The government is demonstrating a lack of respect for the students and families in Whyte Ridge, Lindenwoods, Linden Ridge and Richmond West by refusing to provide adequate access to education within the community.

 

      The Fort Whyte constituency is the only constituency in the province that does not have a public high school.

 

      NDP constituencies in Winnipeg continue to receive capital funding for various school projects while critical overcrowding exists in schools in Lindenwoods, Whyte Ridge and Richmond West.

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the provincial government recognize the need for a public high school in the southwest region of Winnipeg.

 

      To request the provincial government, in conjunction with the Public Schools Finance Board, to consider adequate funding to establish a high school in the southwest sector of Winnipeg.

 

      Signed by Erin Beaudry, Lindsay Beaudry, Jae Beaudry and many others.

 

Coverage of Insulin Pumps

 

Mr. Kelvin Goertzen (Steinbach): Mr. Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

These are the reasons for this petition:

 

      Insulin pumps cost over $6,500.

 

      The cost of diabetes to the Manitoba government in 2005 will be approximately $214.4 million. Each day 16 Manitobans are diagnosed with this disease compared to the national average of 11 new cases daily.

 

      Good blood sugar control reduces or eliminates kidney failure by 50 percent, blindness by 76 percent, nerve damage by 60 percent, cardiac disease by 35 percent and even amputations.

 

Diabetes is an epidemic in our province and will become an unprecedented drain on our struggling health care system if we do not take action now.

 

      The benefit of having an insulin pump is it allows the person living with this life-altering disease to obtain good sugar control and become a much healthier, complication-free individual.

 

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the Premier (Mr. Doer) of Manitoba to consider covering the cost of insulin pumps that are prescribed by an endocrinologist or medical doctor under the Manitoba Health Insurance Plan.

 

      This is signed by Dora Sobering, Carol Wall, Annette Giesbrecht and many, many others.

 

* (13:40)

Highway 227

 

Mr. Ralph Eichler (Lakeside): Mr. Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition.

 

      It is unacceptable for the residents of Manitoba to travel the unsafe gravel roads of Highway 227 in the constituencies of Lakeside and Portage la Prairie.

 

      Inclement weather can make Highway 227 treacherous to all drivers.

 

      Allowing better access to Highway 227 would ease the flow of traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway.

 

      Residences along Highway 227 are not as accessible to emergency services due to the nature of the current condition of the roadway.

 

      The condition of these gravel roads can       cause serious damage to all vehicles, which is unacceptable.

 

      Residents of Manitoba deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

 

      To request the Minister of Transportation and Government Services (Mr. Lemieux) to consider having Highway 227 paved from the junction of highways 248 and 227 all the way to Highway 16, the Yellowhead route.

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba (Mr. Doer) to consider supporting said initiatives to ensure for the safety of all Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      Submitted on behalf of Joseph Hofer, David Hofer, Jerry Hofer and many, many more.

 

Mr. David Faurschou (Portage la Prairie): Mr. Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition.

 

      It is unacceptable for the residents of Manitoba to travel the unsafe gravel road of Highway 227 in the constituencies of Lakeside and Portage la Prairie.

      Inclement weather can make Highway 227 treacherous to all drivers.

 

      Allowing for better access to Highway 227 would ease the flow of traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway.

 

      Residences along Highway 227 are not as accessible to emergency services due to the nature of the current condition of the roadway.

 

      The condition of these gravel roads can         cause serious damage to all vehicles, which is unacceptable.

 

      Residents of Manitoba deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

 

      To request that the Minister of Transportation and Government Services (Mr. Lemieux) to consider having Highway 227 paved from the junction of highways 248 and 227 all the way to Highway 16, the Yellowhead route.

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba (Mr. Doer) to consider supporting said initiatives to ensure for the safety of our Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      This petition is presented by Peter Bradley, Ross McRae, Armin Friese and many, many others.

 

* (13:45)

 

Mr. Larry Maguire (Arthur-Virden): Mr. Speaker, I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition.

 

      It is unacceptable for the residents of Manitoba to travel the unsafe gravel road of Highway 227 in the constituencies of Lakeside and Portage la Prairie.

 

      Inclement weather can make Highway 227 treacherous to all drivers.

 

      Allowing for better access to Highway 227 would ease the flow of traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway.

 

      Residences along Highway 227 are not as accessible to emergency services due to the nature of the current condition of the roadway.

      The condition of these gravel roads can       cause serious damage to all vehicles, which is unacceptable.

 

      Residents of Manitoba deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

 

      To request that the Minister of Transportation and Government Services (Mr. Lemieux) allow having Highway 227 paved from the junction of highways 248 all the way to Highway 16, the Yellowhead route.

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba to consider supporting said initiatives to ensure for the safety of all Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      Signed by Craig Finnie, Grant Bullock, Bonnie Boon, Bev MacMillan and many others.

 

Ambulance Service

 

Mr. Ron Schuler (Springfield): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for the petition:

 

      In May 2004, 46-year-old Peter Krahn suffered a heart attack while exercising in East St. Paul and was pronounced dead just under an hour later after being transported to the Concordia Hospital in Winnipeg. Reports show that it took nearly 18 minutes for an ambulance to arrive for Mr. Krahn.

 

      The Interlake Regional Health Authority claims that 21 minutes is an acceptable emergency response time, whereas the City of Winnipeg uses a benchmark of 4 minutes.

 

      Ambulance coverage for East St. Paul is provided from Selkirk, which is almost 25 kilometres away.

 

      The municipalities of East St. Paul and West St. Paul combined have over 12 000 residents.

 

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the provincial government to consider providing East St. Paul with local ambulance service which would service both East and West St. Paul.

 

      To request the provincial government to consider improving the way that ambulance service is supplied to all Manitobans by utilizing tech­nologies such as GPS in conjunction with a Medical Transportation Co-ordination Centre (MTCC) which will ensure that patients receive the nearest ambulance in the least amount of time.

 

      To request the provincial government to consider ensuring that appropriate funding is provided to maintain superior response times and sustainable services.

 

      Signed by Catherine Wilde, Sheila Wolfe, Bernie Wolfe and many others.

 

* (13:50)

Highway 227

 

Mr. Gerald Hawranik (Lac du Bonnet): I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition.

 

      It is unacceptable for the residents of Manitoba to travel the unsafe gravel roads of Highway 227 in the constituencies of Lakeside and Portage la Prairie.

 

      Inclement weather can make Highway 227 treacherous to all drivers.

 

      Allowing better access to Highway 227 would ease the flow of traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway.

 

      Residences along Highway 227 are not as accessible to emergency services due to the nature of the current condition of the roadway.

 

      The condition of these gravel roads can cause serious damage to all vehicles, which is unacceptable.

 

      Residents of Manitoba deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

 

      To request that the Minister of Transportation and Government Services consider having Highway 227 paved from the junction of highways 248 and 227 all the way to Highway 16, the Yellowhead route.

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba to consider supporting said initiatives to ensure for the safety of all Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      Signed by Jerald Wollmann, Mark Fleury, Bruce Matthews and others.

 

Mrs. Mavis Taillieu (Morris):  I wish to present the following petition to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.

 

      These are the reasons for this petition.

 

      It is unacceptable for the residents of Manitoba to travel the unsafe gravel roads of Highway 227 in the constituencies of Lakeside and Portage la Prairie.

 

      Inclement weather can make Highway 227 treacherous to all drivers.

 

      Allowing better access to Highway 227 would ease the flow of traffic on the Trans-Canada Highway.

 

      Residences along Highway 227 are not as accessible to emergency services due to the nature of the current condition of the roadway.

 

      The condition of these gravel roads can       cause serious damage to all vehicles, which is unacceptable.

 

      Residents of Manitoba deserve a better rural highway infrastructure.

 

      We petition the Manitoba Legislative Assembly as follows:

 

      To request that the Minister of Transportation and Government Services to consider having Highway 227 paved from the junction of highways 248 and 227 all the way to Highway 16, the Yellowhead route.

 

      To request the Premier of Manitoba to consider supporting said initiatives to ensure for the safety of all Manitobans and all Canadians who travel along Manitoba highways.

 

      Signed by Archie McRae, Al Jones, Peter Hofer and others.

INTRODUCTION OF BILLS

 

Bill 29–The Municipal Councils and

School Boards Elections Act

 

Hon. Scott Smith (Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and Trade): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the Minister of Conservation (Mr. Struthers), that Bill 29, The Municipal Councils and School Boards Elections Act, now be read a first time.

 

Motion presented.

 

* (13:55)

 

Mr. Smith: Mr. Speaker, this bill replaces a Local Authorities Election Act. The bill streamlines and modernizes the procedures for electing members of municipal councils and school boards in the province of Manitoba.

 

Mr. Speaker: Is it the pleasure of the House to adopt the motion? [Agreed]

 

Introduction of Guests

 

Mr. Speaker: Prior to Oral Questions, I would like to draw the attention of all honourable members to the loge to my right where we have with us Mr. Binx Remnant who is a former Clerk of the Manitoba Legislative Assembly.

 

      Also in the public gallery we have with us from F.W. Gilbert School 21 Grade 5 students under the direction of Mr. Devon Turner. This school is located in the constituency of the honourable Member for Lac du Bonnet (Mr. Hawranik).

 

      On behalf of all honourable members, I welcome you here today.

 

ORAL QUESTIONS

 

Crocus Fund

Public Inquiry

 

Mr. Stuart Murray (Leader of the Official Opposition): Mr. Speaker, before putting my question forward, on behalf of all of us, I wish to offer condolences to the Clerk. I understand that she lost her loving grandmother who was at the wonderful age of 103. I just want to offer our condolences.

      Mr. Speaker, the Crocus Fund is an issue for more than 33 000 Manitobans and all taxpayers of Manitoba. They deserve to have full disclosure, the truth to come forward as to what happened with this mess. We understand the Auditor General is going to be bringing his report forward, and we understand that there is a May 6 Securities Commission meeting scheduled which we hope will go forward as well. Regardless of the Auditor General's report or the May 6 meeting, it is very important that an independent public inquiry be called so all Manitoba taxpayers and shareholders of the Crocus Fund find out the truth of what has happened with this Crocus mess.

 

      Mr. Speaker, this Premier has the opportunity to do the right thing. He can either sweep this under the carpet as if it did not happen, or he can do the right thing and today call for an independent public inquiry so all Manitoba taxpayers, the shareholders of Crocus and the future of venture capital in Manitoba, that there is confidence restored.

 

      I am going to ask the Premier today will he do the right thing and call for an independent public inquiry to clean up the mess with Crocus.

 

Hon. Gary Doer (Premier): Mr. Speaker, the member opposite says, quote, "regardless of the work of the provincial Auditor General and regardless of the work of the Manitoba Securities Commission." We do regard, with a great deal of respect, the work that has been delegated to the two bodies. The Manitoba provincial auditor was given the authority by members opposite in 1992 for oversight provisions on the Crocus Fund. The Auditor reported to this Legislature in 1998.

 

      I would point out yesterday that the member opposite was asking me to intervene in a quasi-judicial body which, I think, would break the law here of Manitoba, asking me to break the law. Section 22(4) of The Securities Commission Act, for the purposes of an investigation, the commission and any person appointed to make the investigation has the same power to summon and enforce the attendance of witnesses and compel them to give evidence on oath or otherwise and to produce documents, records and things as is vested in the Court of Queen's Bench for the trial of civil actions. Mr. Speaker, that is tremendous quasi-judicial power. Tomorrow he is going to ask me to interfere with the Court of Queen's Bench. I will not politically interfere.

Mr. Murray: Mr. Speaker, the political rhetoric coming from the Premier is unbelievable. What I have been asking this Premier, if he has been listening, is to ensure that his political appointee does not ensure that somehow there is a cover-up and that at least the May 6 meeting goes ahead. That I have been telling him.

 

Mr. Speaker, we all know that Manitoba Securities has done an investigation and has asked for a meeting to take place on May 6. We want that meeting to go ahead. We know the Auditor General's report is coming down. It is going to be a very, very important report for the Manitoba taxpayers and those in Crocus. But again, this Premier should understand that the best way to ensure there is full, honest disclosure on behalf of all the taxpayers of Manitoba, on behalf of those shareholders in Crocus, is to have an independent public inquiry. That is the right thing to do. This Premier has an opportunity to stand and give confidence to the Manitoba taxpayers and the Crocus ratepayers that he believes in that.

 

      Will he today say he is going to have an independent public inquiry and get to the bottom of this Crocus mess?

 

* (14:00)

 

Mr. Doer: The member opposite again, this first question talks about regardless of the provincial auditor and now he is talking about a full investigation.

 

      Mr. Speaker, the Auditor General in agreements made before he was even an Auditor General, back in 1992, was given authority to deal with the oversight of the fund by the former Filmon government. The Auditor General reported out in 1998 and basically stated that this fund is a retail fund similar to other mutual funds in Manitoba. We have furthered that power. He had an administrative power under a memorandum of agreement. We have enhanced that power under legislation we have passed.

 

The member opposite talks, and he has not corrected the record yet when he talks about full facts. The members opposite, in 1993, approved a loan loss provision of 2 million. They wrote it off in a Treasury Board decision in January 1994. The prospectus in 1999, before we were in office, clearly says this matter was written off in terms of an asset in the Crocus Fund, in terms of the provincial government obligation. So he should start putting the facts on the table himself, Mr. Speaker.

 

Mr. Murray: Mr. Speaker, of course, the Premier should understand that the Government of Manitoba is a shareholder. They have 2 million shares. Those are the facts.

 

      Mr. Speaker, everybody knows–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Murray: Well, thank you, Mr. Speaker. Everybody knows that under this Doer government the Crocus Fund has become a mess. The taxpayers of Manitoba know. The shareholders of Crocus Fund know. We on this side of the House know. It is this Premier that seems to be putting his head in the sand.

 

      Clearly, the right thing to do if the Premier believes in strengthening venture capital for the future of Manitoba, the right thing to do on behalf of all Manitoba taxpayers, on behalf of those shareholders in the Crocus Fund, on behalf of the future for venture capital in Manitoba that creates jobs, would be for this Premier to give his assurance that he will stand and ask for an independent public inquiry to get to the bottom of this mess.

 

      I will ask him today: Will he do the right thing, stand in his place and call for an independent public inquiry to clear up this Crocus mess?

 

Mr. Doer: Well, I am surprised the member opposite would treat the two independent bodies as a regardless body, Mr. Speaker. I am quite shocked.

 

      Mr. Speaker, under this government, the member opposite stated that under the Filmon government, the provincial government invested in three major Crocus co-investment activities–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Doer: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. They invested in 1996 and '97, $29 million in Isobord; Crocus invested, in 1997, $7 million in Isobord. Crocus lost $7 million. The provincial government, with four members of Cabinet sitting in the front bench, lost $29 million.

      Mr. Speaker, a second Crocus investment,  which was articulated by Martin Cash, Westsun;    the provincial government had a feasibility study of $4 million before Crocus invested $21 million. Winnport Logistics; the provincial government  wrote off $5.6 million, another activity that had investments from Crocus. We do not have MIOP loans that we have written off with that kind of loss of taxpayers' money. They had a chance to protect taxpayers' money and they failed at Isobord. They failed at Winnport and they failed at Westsun.

 

Crocus Fund

Settlement Agreement Details

 

Mr. Gerald Hawranik (Lac du Bonnet): Mr. Speaker, the 33 000 shareholders of Crocus deserve­–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The 33 000 shareholders of Crocus deserve all the facts about the Crocus fiasco. The underlying value of their shares has been reduced by more than $60 million and on top of this are forced to pay the legal fees of the directors. The CEO of Crocus, Alfred Black, has stated that a settlement of the lawsuit is likely.

 

      Will the Minister of Industry guarantee the Crocus shareholders that all the facts regarding the Crocus fiasco will be made public and that he will not muzzle any person, including the NDP appointee to the board of directors?

 

Hon. Jim Rondeau (Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to let the opposition know that, not only did we not muzzle the members who are quasi-judicial and have the power and authority to go in, actually, when we got a request from the Auditor one day, we responded that day and gave him the authority. Under my authority as the Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines, the Minister of Finance (Mr. Selinger) agreed to make sure he had the power to go in and investigate the Crocus Fund on behalf of government and on behalf of the shareholders.

 

      The MSC has been conducting an investigation on behalf of the government, on behalf of the share­holders. Mr. Filmon, the former Premier, said that it would be inappropriate and illegal for us as a government, or at the time, the Tories as a govern­ment, to interfere with the Manitoba Securities council or any other quasi-judicial board. We believe it is important to follow the law and the proper procedures.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Mr. Speaker, on April 28, 2000, the Premier (Mr. Doer), who was the subject of a lawsuit in 1998 when he was the Minister of Urban Affairs, settled a lawsuit for $100,000. As part of that release, he bought the plaintiffs' silence by forcing them to sign a release to keep the terms confidential and that the terms not be disclosed, revealed, confirmed or otherwise communicated to any person, corporation or entity.

 

      Will the minister guarantee to the 33 000 Crocus shareholders and all Manitobans that he will not follow the lead of this Premier and not muzzle all those involved in the lawsuit against Crocus?

 

Mr. Rondeau: Mr. Speaker, I would like to read      a quote. "I am sure the member opposite would     not want me to intervene or interfere with the    quasi-judicial tribunal such as the Manitoba Securities Commission." That is done in the Hansard, November 1, 1996, and the speaker was Gary Filmon.

 

      I think it is very, very essential that we give authority to the people who are the experts, to give the people who are quasi-judicial and are not doing the political. What they are doing is their job as professionals on behalf of all Manitobans and on behalf of all shareholders. That is our job.

 

Public Inquiry

 

Mr. Gerald Hawranik (Lac du Bonnet): Mr. Speaker, the 33 000 Crocus shareholders and the taxpayers of Manitoba need to know what went wrong at Crocus and who was responsible. They need to know this so it will not happen again with a settlement. The only way to guarantee this would happen would be to call a public inquiry so we can get to the bottom of the Crocus fiasco.

 

      Will the minister, and I ask the minister again, will he do the right thing and advise the Premier (Mr. Doer) to call a public inquiry?

 

Hon. Jim Rondeau (Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines): Once again, Mr. Speaker, another quote. On October 17, the year 2000, the Securities Commission announced a settlement agreement with Wellington West, a company the members opposite do know about, on allegations that it acted inappropriately on the privatization of MTS. The commission stated, "the commission has reviewed the settlement agreement and is of the opinion that it is in the public interest to make this order."

 

* (14:10)

 

      This is an order for settlement of the issue. It was not something the government at the time tried to politically interfere with. We believe that we should let quasi-judicial organizations do their job. In fact, the Minister of Finance (Mr. Selinger) and myself made sure that the Auditor General had the power to act on behalf of both of us in all respects to investigation and looking at this whole thing. His job was to work on behalf of all shareholders.

 

Crocus Fund

Public Inquiry

 

Mr. John Loewen (Fort Whyte): Mr. Speaker, it is unfortunate for those unit holders and the taxpayers of Manitoba that anybody in government or anybody in authority at the Crocus Fund who has the ability to share with them exactly what happened and when it happened is treating them over and over with complete disregard, and in fact, has been treating them with contempt, particularly this government and this minister. They have the ability to get to the bottom of this mess. They have the ability to call a public inquiry to ensure that unit holders and taxpayers know what has gone on here. They have the ability to clear up all of the deceit that we have seen, telling the board that there was going to be further declines and the board not telling the shareholders anything.

 

      Mr. Speaker, this government has acted in a contemptuous manner. I would ask this minister to have the courage today to stand up and indicate that his government will get to the bottom of this by calling a public inquiry today.

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, in 2001, we passed The Auditor General's Act which had not been reviewed for 20 years. In that act, we expanded the scope of that act to give the Auditor General greater powers. The powers we gave them specifically were the power to investigate a business entity or organization that has issued a share debt obligation or other security if a person is eligible for a tax credit under a Manitoba law, in respect of that acquisition or ownership of the security. We gave the provincial auditor the ability to investigate exactly these kinds of situations.

 

      The Auditor's office is a completely independent office reporting to the Legislature. There is no encumbrance, no barrier, nothing in the way for them to get to the bottom of any situation they wish to examine. We put those powers in legislation. The members opposite did nothing for 11 years.

 

Mr. Loewen: Mr. Speaker, once again a contemptuous answer from a minister who refuses to stand up and be accountable and refuses to act on behalf of the shareholders. If the minister felt so strongly about it, why did he not send the Auditor in two years ago? Why did he not send the Auditor in September when it was devalued by 15 million? Why did he not ask the Auditor to go in? Instead, he sends a letter February 9. February 9, he sent a letter to the Auditor General asking.

 

      Why did he wait so long? Why is he waiting so long now? Why does he not have the decency to stand up for the unit holders to assure them today that his government will see all the facts are out in the open and that they get to the bottom of? Why does he not assure us today that we will have a public inquiry so we can find out everything that has gone on in this sordid mess and why 33 000 Manitobans have been fleeced?

 

Mr. Selinger: I have just put on the record the legislative authority that we have given the independent Auditor to investigate this matter. The Auditor requested we confirm that authority and I did that the day it was requested on February 9, with a letter which said, "I am requesting that you carry out a special audit of the Crocus Fund, as per section 16(1) of The Auditor General's Act."

 

      The Auditor General wrote back thanking us for confirming the power we conferred to them under the legislation. They have more power than they have ever had in the history of the province to investigate exactly these kinds of situations. If those powers would have been there when you were in government, you would have been gone a long time ago.

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. I want to remind all honourable members that if the Speaker is standing all members should be seated and the Speaker should be heard in silence. I would like to remind all honourable members and I ask the co-operation of all honourable members, please.

 

Mr. Loewen: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I am astonished this minister has the arrogance and the contempt that he has shown to the unit holders of   the Crocus Fund. I would remind him these are individuals who, in the last seven months, have seen $60 million of their retirement income wiped off the books, $60 million.

 

      His government said in 2001 that it was their responsibility to monitor. Where were you in 2001? Where have you been since, sir? You have been nowhere.

 

      Mr. Speaker, they can correct that. They can correct that today by saying we are interested in having full, plain and true disclosure. They can correct that by standing up today and saying regardless of what happens at the Securities Commission, regardless of what happens from the Auditor General, we will insist that all information comes to the public's eye through an independent public inquiry. It is as simple as that.

 

      There is a simple answer to all of this. Have a public inquiry. Announce today that you will have it. Tell everybody involved to keep all of their notes and make sure the public and the unit holders find out why they have been screwed.

 

Mr. Selinger: We acted in 2001 when we gave these special powers.We acted in 2001 when we took an old piece of legislation which was 20 years out of date. We updated that legislation in 2001 to give these special powers to the Auditor General of Manitoba, who is an officer of this Legislature.

 

      They have all the powers they need to investigate to the depths they wish to, to the breadth they wish to. There is nothing in the way for them to go as far as they wish to investigate and to receive any information they have. That report will be tabled in the Legislature through you. It will be a report available to anybody in Manitoba that wishes to read it. Those powers were only brought into place under this government. They are unique powers that we put in place.

 

Workers Compensation

Expansion of Coverage

 

Mr. Cliff Cullen (Turtle Mountain): Mr. Speaker, it has become clear with some of the proposed amendments to The Workers Compensation Act that this NDP government has formulated their own agenda. The Legislative Review Report, containing 100 unanimous recommendations put forward by both business and labour, recommends that coverage be extended gradually after a full opportunity for consultation and discussion. Contrary to this recommendation, under Bill 25 there would be universal coverage of all industries unless excluded by the Premier (Mr. Doer) and Cabinet. Why would this NDP government ignore this important recommendation?

 

Hon. Nancy Allan (Minister charged with the administration of The Workers Compensation Act): Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the member opposite for the question because it provides me an opportunity to clarify the misinformation the member put on the record. The day that Bill 25 is passed in this Legislature, the coverage for Workers Compensation, the industries will look absolutely no different than they look today. I can guarantee the member that. It will be the status quo.

 

      I want to also inform the member that the Review Committee's recommendation on page 17 of the report says that we should expand coverage in consultation with stakeholders. That will be our approach. We will consult with stakeholders on any coverage that occurs in Manitoba.

 

Mr. Cullen: Mr. Speaker, if the minister's intent was to consult, why would she not add the word "consultation" in the new legislation?

 

      Mr. Speaker, at the same time this NDP government is running from the Crocus scandal,  they are trying to interfere with the Workers Compensation Board. Until now, the Workers Compensation Board, a quasi-independent body made up of equal representation from business and labour, plays an important role in determining which industries were to be covered. Under Bill 25, this Premier (Mr. Doer) and Cabinet would be making those decisions.

      Why is this NDP government taking the decision-making authority away from Workers Compensation? Why do they not trust the Workers Compensation Board?

 

Ms. Allan: The coverage model in Bill 25 will reflect the modern and mainstream approach to WCB coverage in Canada. We will be the eleventh jurisdiction when we implement our coverage model in Canada. We will be the eleventh jurisdiction to introduce this kind of legislation. The first jurisdiction in Canada, Mr. Speaker, was Alberta in 1974. If it is good enough for Alberta, I think it is good enough for us.

 

Mr. Cullen: Mr. Speaker, I ask which way the minister wants it. Clearly the minister is doing some serious damage control. She has verbally indicated that coverage will remain status quo. However, her legislation says the opposite. Which way is it?

 

      This NDP government has misled Manitobans time and time again. What are businesses, workers and Manitobans to believe? Do they believe the legislation tabled in the House? Do they believe these verbal comments from the minister?

 

Ms. Allan: Mr. Speaker, the current schedule in the WCB legislation is cumbersome and antiquated. It was brought in in 1917. It refers to planing cheese boxes, manufacturing buttons, manufacturing gun cotton and manufacturing shoe blacking or polish. We are going to update the act. We are going           to modernize the act. We are not the mothball        party. We are going to modernize the Workers Compensation system in this province.

 

Waverley West Subdivision

Approval Process

 

Mr. Larry Maguire (Arthur-Virden): On April 1 past, Mr. Speaker, the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs approved the Waverley West development without first sending the proposal to the Municipal Board for review. Considering the fact that the Province is the majority landowner in this develop­ment and the incredible scope of the project, will the minister explain why he felt the Province could play both roles, that of developer and that of the review body.

 

* (14:20)

Hon. Scott Smith (Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and Trade): Mr. Speaker, this question is a good question. It gives me an opportunity to clarify for the member opposite the process. Certainly, the City of Winnipeg Charter and The Planning Act outline the process for development plans and amendment proposals in the province of Manitoba. Obviously, the member opposite knows that after first reading, there are public consultations on the process. After those public consultations are completed, it goes back to the City and the jurisdiction, in this case, the City of Winnipeg. After that, second reading is given and it is forwarded to the minister's department for consideration. The process was followed, consideration was given. It is now back with the City of Winnipeg.

 

Mr. Maguire: Well, Mr. Speaker, this minister's own predecessor, Mary Ann Mihychuk, when she was Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, indicated to the Provincial Council of Women that she would send the development plan to the Municipal Board if any objections came forward.

 

      Will the current Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs explain the flip-flop in this NDP govern­ment's policy?

 

Mr. Smith: Certainly, Mr. Speaker, this procedure is followed by the office that I am in. It was followed to the letter. Previous things were said by the former government, as I recall, the Leader of the Opposition saying he would not sell MTS and many other things.

 

      Mr. Speaker, they went back on their word. In the case on this side of the House, process was followed, procedures are followed to the letter. That has been done. It is back with a responsible level of government that we have here with the City of Winnipeg. I am not sure if the member opposite is inferring that the City of Winnipeg is not a responsible level of government to make their decisions.

 

Mr. Maguire: Mr. Speaker, any time the government owns the majority of the land in a project like this, the citizens of Manitoba are entitled to a review, an independent review. Can this Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, if he thinks this is normal procedure, the procedures in establishing Wellington West, Waverley West subdivision at this point–I ask the minister a simple question.

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Maguire: Mr. Speaker, is the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, as it relates to Waverley West, is he saying that the Premier (Mr. Doer) directed him to bypass the Municipal Board review? Can he tell us when the Premier asked for this Municipal Board review process to be changed?

 

Mr. Smith: Mr. Speaker, it seems to be a state of mind as opposed to a slip of the tongue on Wellington West and Waverley West.

 

      In a case that certainly, through the office, it is my role to review and assess cases that are put forward by the City of Winnipeg through the Winnipeg city charter. The city of Winnipeg is growing, Mr. Speaker. It is done with pertinent information and details that are supplied to my office based on factual information supplied by the City of Winnipeg to our office.

 

      Historically, going back 20 years to 1985, very rarely is anything sent to the city Municipal Board that is referred from the City of Winnipeg unless it is a procedural issue. Mr. Speaker, there is no procedural issue. This has been followed to the letter and it is back with the City of Winnipeg as it should be.

 

Hydra House

Government Funding

 

Mrs. Mavis Taillieu (Morris): Mr. Speaker, last September the minister indicated she was disengaging from Hydra House and would ensure the least disruption possible to the residents and families of Hydra House. Has this minister disengaged from Hydra House? Is Hydra House still receiving government funding?

 

Hon. Christine Melnick (Minister of Family Services and Housing): Mr. Speaker, when we learned of the situation on July 6, 2004, from the AG's investigation, we began to discuss what were the needs of the very vulnerable people who were residing in the Hydra House homes. I committed to the residents, families, caretakers, front-line workers and to the people of Manitoba that I would work in a way that would see disengagement from Hydra House, but would put the care of these vulnerable people first.

      We are continuing to work through the disengagement that took 10 years to develop. The mess took 10 years to develop because of the actions of members opposite. We will continue to work through the disengagement. Yes, that will take time, but we will not do it at the expense of the care of the vulnerable people.

 

Quality of Care

 

Mrs. Mavis Taillieu (Morris): I will remind the minister of her commitment last September. It has been six months now. Yes, the minister indicated she would provide the least disruption possible for people receiving services from Hydra House. How will the minister ensure residents receive quality and consistent care during this transition? Can she guarantee that no one will be moved from their present home?

 

Hon. Christine Melnick (Minister of Family Services and Housing): Mr. Speaker, there is a very complex set of negotiations under way. These negotiations include St. Amant Centre, which is an organization of high repute, which is an organization of long-standing in the care of individuals such as the Hydra House residents within a home setting. We have been assured and we believe that as we move forward, St. Amant Centre will ensure the level of care that these individuals need will, in fact, be provided.

 

Purchase of Homes

 

Mrs. Mavis Taillieu (Morris): Mr. Speaker, Manitobans want to know what plans there are to provide the long-term care for their most vulnerable citizens. The minister has indicated that she is in negotiations with St. Amant Centre. Will St. Amant Centre take over the Hydra House homes? Is the NDP government going to buy these Hydra House homes?

 

Hon. Christine Melnick (Minister of Family Services and Housing): Again, Mr. Speaker, I can assure the people of Manitoba that the care of the residents is at the top of the list. A personal care plan has been done for each and every resident in Hydra House. Again, as I had mentioned, there is a complex set of negotiations under way. We are dealing with the care of the residents in terms of talking to St. Amant. We are sure they will provide the care that will be best for the individuals. We have also consulted with the family members, the caretakers and the residents themselves to assure them that we will work in a way that is least disruptive to their loved ones.

 

Prairie Production Centre

Purchase Price

 

Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): Mr. Speaker, I would like to call into question the motives of this government in purchasing and buying a movie set. No one wanted it, yet this government reached into the public tax purse and pulled out $3 million in order to get a movie set that no one wanted.

 

      Mr. Speaker, the only direct real connection is with the Crocus Fund. The Crocus Fund had an investment in this production set and because the government moves in to purchase something that no one else wanted, with an exorbitant amount of public tax dollars, that set is still alive today. That movie set–

 

An Honourable Member: That is quite a set.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: The production set, whatever you want to call it, it is corruption from my point of view. Mr. Speaker, the Prairie Production Centre, if that makes the government feel a little bit more at ease, is being acquired in order to cover up Crocus.

 

      My question is this: Besides bailing out one of the Crocus Fund's investments, why did this government pay millions of tax dollars in a failed movie set?

 

Hon. Eric Robinson (Minister of Culture, Heritage and Tourism): Mr. Speaker, again allow me to repeat what I said yesterday in response to the member from Southdale. We believe that we see some long-term benefits to Manitoba's economic future if we proactively are in a position to turn around the former government's example of fiscal accountability or lack of. The decisions made prior to 1999, our government was left with an option of having to write off $1.3 million in unsecured loans and losing a sound stage.

 

* (14:30)

 

Mr. Lamoureux:  Mr. Speaker, using this minister's logic from yesterday, one would argue then, why not go and spend a billion dollars on movie sets and create an industry because the private sector will not do it. The simple answer, it is because this government was trying to cover up an issue which is embarrassing and that is their incompetence in dealing with the Crocus Fund. That is the bottom line.

 

      My question to the minister responsible for Culture and Heritage is this: Has he had any communication with his Cabinet or, in particular, the Minister of Industry (Mr. Rondeau) in regard to bailing out this particular movie set? Was there any communication between these two ministers?

 

Mr. Robinson: Allow me to repeat, Mr. Speaker. Our government was left with the option of having to write off $1.3 million in unsecured loans and losing a sound stage, an asset that is important to the overall strategy in remaining competitive and continuing with the process of ensuring success of a movie industry that is thriving in the province of Manitoba.

 

      Now we choose to pay $1.8 million to secure a very important part of the film and video production industry's infrastructure. This industry, we know, has virtually doubled in the last five years with film production budgets topping $100 million last year.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, what we are asking is if there was any coercion between the different Cabinet ministers. Did the ministers actually talk about bailing out, and the importance of bailing out this particular Prairie Production Centre in order to cover them up on the Crocus Fund? That was the question.

 

      Has this minister not sat around the Cabinet table where surely this issue would have come up? Did this minister share his intent to purchase    Prairie Production Centre in order to cover up and protect this government's political interests in the Crocus Fund? They know, Mr. Speaker, that they  are losing. They shafted over 34 000 Manitobans that have invested in the Crocus Fund. Shame on them. Come clean and tell us whether or not there was communication between your Cabinet members.

 

Hon. Gary Doer (Premier): Yes, there is communication between Cabinet ministers. There is communication, hopefully, between members in this Chamber. There was a $1.3-million unsecured loan agreed to and announced, and I can show the press release to members opposite, in 1998–

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Doer: That arrangement included money, like the Isoboard investment made by a former Cabinet minister in the former government. That included co-investments from Crocus. That issue, Mr. Speaker, has been described by the minister yesterday in Question Period.

 

      Secondly, Mr. Speaker, the $1.8-million invest­ment that we are making and we are responsible for is a secured loan. It is a secured loan against an asset of $1.8 million, the production studio. It is a secured loan against movie productions such as Shall We Dance? and other movie productions. Liberal governments all across Canada–

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. Time for Oral Questions has expired.

 

Introduction of Guests

 

Mr. Speaker: Could I just have the attention of members. I would like to introduce a school that arrived while we were in Question Period. I would like to welcome the Grades 4, 5 and 6 classes of Ms. Bissoon. This school is the Luxton School and is located in the constituency of the honourable Justice Minister.

 

      On behalf of all honourable members, I welcome you here today.

 

MEMBERS' STATEMENTS

 

Fort Garry Seniors' Programs

 

Ms. Kerri Irvin-Ross (Fort Garry): Mr. Speaker, on Friday, April 18, seniors from Fort Garry were invited to an important meeting that occurred at the Victoria Community Centre in my constituency of Fort Garry.

 

      The focus of this meeting was to discuss with seniors how to improve programs and services for them in Fort Garry and to discuss the formation of the Seniors' Advisory Council. The purpose of this advisory council is to help seniors maintain their independence by providing them information on current services and programs as well as enhancing and improving existing services.

      Mr. Speaker, the format of this meeting was unique. Small focus groups of seniors worked through a number of questions related to current programs and on the potential for new programs. This format allowed each resident to take an active role in voicing their concerns and sharing their ideas. Representatives from the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, City of Winnipeg and Victoria Lifeline also attended this event. Free transportation was provided as well as a free pancake breakfast for all participants.

 

      Mr. Speaker, public consultations with Fort Garry seniors are integral to ensuring that our seniors enjoy an enhanced and independent quality of life. Seniors also discussed the Fort Garry shuttle bus initiative that we have undertaken since 2004. The response to this program has been very positive. I am happy to report that approximately 50 seniors attended this consultation. As the MLA for Fort Garry, I will continue to host similar consultations.

 

      In conclusion, I would like to thank Deborah Lorteau, the Age and Opportunity seniors' resource co-ordinator for Fort Garry, Joe Egan from the City of Winnipeg, Tonya Beveridge from the WRHA and Karen Velthuys from Victoria Lifeline for helping me with this event. I especially want to thank all the seniors for attending. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

 

* (14:30)

 

Portage Terriers

 

Mr. David Faurschou (Portage la Prairie): I am absolutely delighted to rise today and to share with all honourable members that on Tuesday, April 12, the Portage Terriers captured the Manitoba Junior Hockey League championship. I have been a season ticket holder for more than 20 years, and it is extremely exciting for all of us that follow the Terriers to see this deserving young team win the Turnbull Memorial Trophy. The Terriers earned victory under the leadership of head coach and general manager, Don MacGillvray, and team captain, Colin Slobodian, who, I might add, was attending kindergarten class when the Terriers last won the Manitoba championship.

 

      All of us in Portage la Prairie and area are very pleased to see the Terriers win the provincial championship this year, especially when the title was won through a 4-2 series triumph over last year's Manitoba champions, the Selkirk Steelers, the very team that swept the Terriers to the sidelines in last year's finals.

 

      I trust that all my colleagues, including the honourable members from The Pas, from Ste. Rose and from Selkirk, whose home teams faced the Terriers in this year's playoffs, will join with me in congratulating the Portage Terriers, their coaching staff, and to wish them the very best of luck          and success when they represent Manitoba in         the upcoming ANAVET Cup Junior Hockey Championship.

 

      Indeed, all Manitobans can be proud of the Portage Terriers, their coaches, staff and organiza­tion for not only their success on the ice but also for their community spirit and dedication. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

 

Angela Sherwood

 

Mr. Gerard Jennissen (Flin Flon):  Mr. Speaker, I rise today to bring to the attention of this House the accomplishments of Angela Sherwood, a teacher and resident of Cranberry Portage. Angela is a remarkable woman and recent recipient of the Frontier School Division Achievement Award. I was privileged to participate in that award ceremony. This award, established in 1989, honours the achievements of former Frontier School Division and home placement students who have been successful in their careers or made a significant contribution to their past or present communities.

 

      Angela grew up in Grand Rapids and graduated from Frontier Collegiate Institute in Cranberry Portage. She obtained a one-year teaching certificate and returned to Grand Rapids to teach. She completed the Brandon University of the North teachers' education four-year program while continuing as a teacher in Grand Rapids.

 

      Angela spent 14 years teaching in Grand Rapids followed by 19 years at Frontier Collegiate Institute in Cranberry Portage. As a former colleague, I can attest to the caring and positive outlook Angela brought to her work. Despite periods of personal adversity and serious illness, Angela was a friendly and outgoing teacher who recognized the needs of her students and of the communities where she lived.

 

      Angela started the toy library and parent and child resource centre in Grand Rapids. Brownies and Guides and 4-H clubs, Teens Against Drunk Drivers groups, school yearbook committees, safe grad committees and student councils have flourished under Angela's guidance.

 

      In conferring on Angela the Award for Outstanding Contribution by an Employee, Frontier School Division has recognized more than an employee. They have recognized a successful former graduate, an outstanding teacher, a community leader, and above all, a fine human being whose contribution to her students and to her communities has made many lives better.

 

      Angela continues in her civic roles as magistrate for Cranberry Portage, as a marriage commissioner and as an active member of the Flin Flon Chapter 29 of the Eastern Star.

 

      I invite the members of this House to join me in congratulating Angela on her award and in appreciating the contributions she has made to her communities, her profession and to the many lives she has touched in her career.

 

      We wish her, her husband, Wayne, and her family all the best.

 

Darryl Jackson

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): It gives me  great pleasure to rise today and pay tribute to a generous and distinguished man, Mr. Darryl Jackson. Mr. Jackson is a pharmacist from Souris whose    love and dedication towards community service has been recognized by the Manitoba Pharmaceutical Association. Mr. Jackson was awarded the Whitehall Robins' Bowl of Hygeia Award in recognition of the time and personal sacrifice he has devoted to the welfare of his community.

 

      Darryl Jackson grew up on a farm near Margaret, Manitoba, and graduated from Boissevain High School. Following graduation, he attended the University of Manitoba where he studied to become a pharmacist and arrived in Souris in 1980.

 

      Mr. Jackson has volunteered on many town projects and committees. He served on town council for six years, chaired the local Souris and Glenwood Community Development Corporation for several years, served as chamber president on two occasions and has been a member of the BPO Elks for 15 years. He is currently the Manitoba Chamber of Commerce Southwest director.

 

      This is not the first time that Mr. Jackson's commitment to community service has been recognized. He was the recipient of this same award in 1979 and in 2001, he was presented with the Lieutenant-Governor's Make a Difference in Your Community Award.

 

      I would like to take this opportunity to thank Mr. Jackson for his unending dedication towards the town of Souris, and I invite all honourable members to join me in wishing Mr. Jackson and his family continued success. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

 

Music Education Programs

 

Ms. Bonnie Korzeniowski (St. James): Mr. Speaker, I rise today to remind members of the House that the Minister of Education, Citizenship and Youth (Mr. Bjornson) has announced April as Music Education in Manitoba Schools Month.

 

      Along with the Juno awards, many celebrations of music take place in our province this month. Our government has provided 23 schools across the province with special grants to enrich their music program by performing in special music events     and workshops. Students will participate in a     range of activities, including public performances and learning new instruments.

 

      I encourage all members to take in some of the wonderful noon hour musical performances taking place right here at the Legislature over the month.

 

      In my constituency of St. James, all the schools have thriving music programs. From the elementary to the high schools, students in St. James are members of everything from bands and choirs to musical theatre groups. Why, in St. James even the preschools are making music.

 

      Music programs make a valuable contribution to Manitoba schools. They create an enjoyable atmosphere within schools so the students look forward to returning each day. They provide students the opportunity to prove to themselves that through hard work they can develop their talents and excel.

 

      Mr. Speaker, I would like to thank teachers and school administrators who help make school music programs possible. Especially thank you to all the parents and the parent councils who lend their tireless support. Also, thank you to the Minister of Education, Citizenship and Youth for fostering an atmosphere where school music programs flourish. For enriching the character of Manitoba's schools and for dedicating so much time and effort to an activity they feel passionate about, I commend and congratulate students who participate in school music programs. Thank you.

 

ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

GOVERNMENT BUSINESS

 

House Business

 

Hon. Gord Mackintosh (Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, would you–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. We are going through Orders of the Day and I need to be able to hear exactly what business we will be dealing with.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Mr. Speaker, would you please canvass the House to see if there is agreement to change the Estimates sequence such that the Department of Finance will now be placed ahead of Agriculture in the Chamber, with this change to apply permanently?

 

      Would you also see if there is agreement for only two sections of Supply to sit tomorrow morning with those sections, that is from 10 to 12:30 as I recall, with those sections being the Estimates for Finance, and Family Services and Housing?

 

Mr. Speaker: Is there agreement to change the Estimates sequence such that the Department of Finance will now be placed ahead of the Department of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives in the Chamber, with this change to apply permanently? Also is there agreement for only two sections of Supply to sit tomorrow morning from 10 till 12:30, with those sections being the Estimates for the Department of Finance and Estimates for the Department of Family Services and Housing? [Agreed]

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Please call Supply, Mr. Speaker.

 

Mr. Speaker: The House will now resolve into Committee of Supply.

COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY

(Concurrent Sections)

 

JUSTICE

 

* (14:50)

 

Mr. Chairperson (Harry Schellenberg): Will the Committee of Supply please come to order.

 

      This section of the Committee of Supply meeting in Room 254 will now resume consideration of the Estimates for the Department of Justice.

 

      As had been previously agreed, questions for the department will follow in a global manner. The floor is now open for discussion.

 

Mr. Kelvin Goertzen (Steinbach): Mr. Chairperson, we have had a couple of days, not off as the Member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux) might suggest, but away from this committee for a little while.

 

      I want to start off with just an issue that the minister brought forward today in the form of a news release. Three new provincial court judges were appointed. Can the minister indicate how many names came forward from the advisory committee to fill the three positions that he put forward today?

 

Hon. Gord Mackintosh (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I was just thinking, is this confidential or not? I am trying to think of my legislative scheme here. The legislative scheme requires that there be a minimum of three names    for every vacancy. I would be a little more comfortable checking the legislation to see what my confidentiality obligations may be and there may be none in there aside from the names that are sent, but it is certainly within the range that the legislation contemplated.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Mr. Chairperson, could the minister indicate whether or not any of the judges who were appointed today had been previous government appointees to any boards or commissions?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I believe my recollection is that Judge Harapiak was appointed to the Municipal Board and I think there was another board, it might have been, actually, I think it was a Workers Compensation appointment, yes.

Mr. Goertzen: Now, Justice Harapiak, the minister points to her specifically, can the minister indicate if he had any previous dealing in law with Ms. Harapiak, if you have ever served with her as a colleague, or if he had any other kind of professional relationship?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I met her when she was an employee of Manitoba Justice in the Family Law branch. She was employed there for sometime. The period of time is not in the press release which I have with me, but I know she was employed with the Family Law branch for some time and I remember her on a consultation, or on a briefing regarding auto orders, actually, in maintenance enforcement, but that was where I was aware of her. I think I might have met her once before, too. So that was my extent of my knowledge, first-hand, of her, but she certainly rated highly, obviously, with the nominating committee in being nominated.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Could the minister indicate if, I am only incidentally aware of some of the Harapiaks and the family, but could the minister indicate if there is any relationship with the new provincial judge with any members of his caucus?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It is my understanding that Judge Harapiak is the daughter of Harry Harapiak. Her family would include the Minister of Agriculture (Ms. Wowchuk).

 

Mr. Goertzen: The minister obviously was aware of a relationship, whatever it might be. I do not know what the relationship is, if it is a cousin. Prior to the appointment, did he consider perhaps an alternative form of recusing himself from the decision in terms of her appointment because of a connection with a colleague on Cabinet?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, first of all, is the member alleging some conflict of interest? He should be aware of the conflict of interest law. I do not see how that would apply in the circumstance.

 

* (15:00)

 

Mr. Goertzen: I am aware of the conflict of interest law. I just wondered if the minister himself might have thought of it as a conflict. I certainly know the minister has made statements in the past in his previous functions and role in the Legislature about the importance of judicial independence, perceived or real. I just wonder, given the statements that the minister has made in the past, whether he himself considered an alternative method.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Alternative?

 

Mr. Goertzen: Alternative method, or whether or not you thought it was appropriate that you are making the appointment.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I will go through the process.   The Cabinet appoints a nominating committee. It is headed by the Chief Judge, another judge of the Provincial Court, a representative of the Law Society, a representative of the Bar Association    and three lay representatives appointed by the government.

 

      In this case, three lay representatives, I think, represented different communities and interests       in the community that would be most directly affected by the Provincial Court appointment. My understanding is the process then is to go through some advertisements, receive applications. This nominating committee then short-lists it, does the interviews, not unlike other kinds of hiring processes, and then provides a list to the minister of no less than three names per vacancy.

 

      That nominating committee, comprised of former RCMP head for Dauphin, Ron Marlin, and Gisèle Funk who, I know, is active in the Aboriginal community, the Métis community in that area, and I believe it is a business person, Reid Minish, from Swan River.

 

      So the Swan River area, Dauphin area were represented and areas in between. I thought it was an excellent nominating committee. The person I knew myself there was Ron Marlin, who was a highly, highly respected RCMP officer in the city of Dauphin and retired a year or two ago, so I was very pleased that he took on this appointment.

 

      Then the names come into the minister, and the minister will make a recommendation to the Cabinet. So, in fact, the appointment is not by a minister, it is by the Cabinet. This was an appointment made by the Cabinet. It was made yesterday morning.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Is the minister aware of any recommendations that have been made by the current or previous Justice ministers that have not been accepted by Cabinet?

Mr. Mackintosh: The ministers are restricted to making appointments from the list that is provided to the minister. I know there was a controversy a few years ago with my predecessor–

 

Mr. Goertzen: Your controversy.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Huh?

 

Mr. Goertzen: Your controversy. There was no controversy.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: There was a controversy that was made public by the Bar Association and the Law Society, actually the president of the Law Society of Manitoba and the president of the Manitoba Bar Association.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Got Francophone representation.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: There were allegations about sending the lists back, or acceptability. That was an example there of allegations, at least, and I think there may have been some admissions that took place. I cannot recall if there were admissions or not at the end of the day, but it certainly was a serious allegation by very prominent members of the Manitoba Bar as to the conduct of my predecessor. That was the only circumstance I am aware of where a minister may have attempted to have a name from other than on the list or at least trying to interfere with the process that is, I think, very highly independent and, I think, too, with the eyes of the Chief Judge and the Bar Association, all the members of the nominating committee on this process.

 

      It is arguably the best nominating process for bench appointments in the country, but in terms of my own recommendations to Cabinet, I can tell you that there are always robust discussions about appointments. The Cabinet does take it seriously and wants to ensure that the candidates that are being considered will serve justice well.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate whether the new provincial judge being discussed at this point–is there a relation to John Harapiak, who, I understand, ran for the NDP in St. John's in the last election? Sorry, in Ste. Rose.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I do not know that relationship, actually, other than the name association. I think there might be assumptions that there is a relationship there, but I do not know the fact.

 

Mr. Goertzen: When the name came forward, there was part of a list of six, or as few as three, and the name the minister obviously knew at the point was a relation to a colleague in Cabinet. He put that forward of his own volition. The other name may or may not have come forward in terms of a New Democratic candidate in the last election.

 

      Did the minister have cause for pause in terms of whether or not he may, himself, have at the very least perceived conflict in the appointment?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The names are not put together by myself or the Cabinet. The names come from a nominating committee that, I would suggest, is beyond reproach through a very vigorous process. I know the calibre of names that come forward from that process from repeated nominating committees. I know how difficult many of the decisions are because of the calibre of the people that come forward. This particular candidate has an excellent background as a lawyer with a varied practice in the city of Dauphin in family law, in Manitoba Justice and, more recently, with Justice Canada in the Aboriginal law area.

 

      My understanding is that she is, in every way, an excellent appointment, and I have no reason to think otherwise. That there is some association by family with a Cabinet minister I do not think should bias the consideration of her or disqualify her in any way. I think that she should be considered on her own merits, and I am sure if the nominating committee thought she was not worthy, there would not be her name put forward. I know that in every way she is worthy from what I understand is her reputation and, indeed, her experience.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I do not think that, in this committee, any accusations have come forward regarding the provincial judge's qualifications, or that of the nominating committee. It was about whether or not there would be a perceived conflict with the recommendation coming from a minister who sits around the table with someone who is now related.

 

      Certainly, I know there are many people within the Law Society in the province who would be qualified, I think, to have their names come forward as well, and there might very well be questions that they would be asked. I think the perception of a conflict is as real as an actual conflict in this case and in many others.

 

      I wonder if the minister would indicate if he would see more of a concern if, in fact, he had to select the individual off a list of more than three?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: First, I think we have to be clear that I do not think that relations should disqualify anyone. If there are issues of conflict of interest, there are procedures in place to govern that so that there is not a loose application of what should or should not constitute conflict of interest. There is an independent committee that does its work.

 

      The process in Manitoba has integrity, and I would say great integrity. In fact, I have urged this on the federal government for their Queen's Bench appointments. I would urge them on anyone who would listen to the Manitoba process. I believe that process began, I think, under Jim McCrae, if I recall. I think it was in the early nineties. So the process speaks volumes about Manitoba's approach, in a principled way, to appointments to the bench, and I think that it served us well and will continue to serve us well.

 

* (15:10)

 

      Out of the candidates that was considered, the nominating committee gave us a list. I do not think it is fair that someone be disqualified because of some relations. They have to choose from the list, and I would urge the member to consider support for the nominating process in Manitoba. It goes way beyond what I have seen from other jurisdictions and way beyond what I see even with the Queen's Bench appointment in Manitoba.

 

      I just had a discussion in my office, actually, in the last couple of days, comparing our process to the Queen's Bench appointment process. I know how hard some people work on this Queen's Bench appointment process here in Manitoba. They come up with a short list of excellent candidates, and then, lo and behold, I get a call from Ottawa, or I read a news release from somewhere saying they appointed so-and-so and the person was never on the list. It turns out it was some personal relationship or party relationship to the federal government. I am sick and tired of that kind of thing.

 

      It is because it is done without a nominating process, without the application process, and the transparency that we have in Manitoba. So I think it is worthy of support. Now, I can say as well if the member wants to go this way, and this is maybe where he is going, but this decision was made yesterday morning in Cabinet and I can tell you that the Minister of Agriculture (Ms. Wowchuk) was not even there. She was on a plane somewhere, actually, to Sacramento.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Well, I am not surprised that ministers in the government are on a plane somewhere, because most of them often are at various times. I think that the minister should be careful because the only one who has raised any kinds of allegations about how the individual is appointed or the appropriateness of the Manitoba system has been the Minister of Justice at this point. Sometimes the protest that he puts forward speaks volume to the issue.

 

      He did raise though and he might want to look back on his own comments in Hansard about the federal system, how he has great concern about how there are sometimes personal relationships, and that is the genesis of people being appointed. That is specifically what I am speaking about here, so I am glad that the minister raises that point for me. He did not answer the question that I posed, so I will pose it again although perhaps in a different way so it might be more meaningful to the minister.

 

      Given the fact that the individual had been appointed to two boards by the government, the Municipal Board and, I understand now, the Workers Compensation Board Appeal Commission, and given the fact that it is related to one of his colleagues in Cabinet and possibly related to a candidate in the most recent provincial election, I just simply raise the fact again. Does the minister not feel that this has come to mind when the name came forward that it might be perceived as a conflict? There is no suggestion that the person should be disqualified, but I certainly want to ensure that there is not a perception that an individual is helped by their affiliation, either possibly with the party or with somebody who represents that party.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, I just think it is unfair to suggest that this new judge would be tainted by criticism that she was appointed because of some connections. She made the short list and she was appointed from the list that was provided under the law, the best law of its kind, the best process of its kind, I think. She is going to be an excellent judge, I know that, for the Dauphin area.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I do not think that anybody, except the minister again, has called into any kind of question about her qualifications for the position at this point. I am just simply asking the minister that because of his past statements, and I can dig them out if he wants for him about the perception of a conflict of interest when it comes to the law, whether or not it struck him, given many of his past comments, that this might itself seem to be a conflict and whether or not there was a way that he might recuse himself or other members on this issue, whether to seek any other kind of advice on the issue of how it could be handled.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Is the member suggesting that the Minister of Justice not have a role? I do not see the logic. There is no conflict there. There is no conflict with my role whatsoever. I cannot answer the question any different way. She was short-listed; she was put forward for consideration, and the Cabinet made a decision based on qualifications.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I would ask the Minister of Justice   a question regarding the amendments to the stalking, commonly referred to as The Stalking Act in Manitoba. Certainly, we are well aware of diffi­culties and troubling circumstances on the weekend, not to discuss specifics, obviously, of that particular situation, which I suspect all of us were troubled by. It did come to light again, and it was not the first time that it has come to light that the amendments that the minister put forward have been delayed significantly. In fact, it has been two years, the minister can correct me if I am wrong, it might even be two years to the day, that the act was introduced into the Legislature, and it still has not come forward.

 

      Can the minister indicate the difficulties that he is having in bringing forward legislation that, I believe, when he brought it forward, said it was a significant and urgent piece of legislation, why it has been two years that legislation has not come forward?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, the member is wrong. The bill passed in June.

 

An Honourable Member: Proclaimed.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It was passed in June.

Mr. Goertzen: The minister might want to split hairs on this issue. He knows full well what the issue is and I ask him why the law has not been proclaimed in two years.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The member is wrong. The act passed in June and will be proclaimed October 31, so the member has his dates wrong. The important date, of course, is when the bill passes. It was a money bill. The member knows that. Given that it is a money bill, it required financial commitment in     the budget and the budget contained amounts in order to facilitate a sure-footed proclamation of the legislation.

 

Mrs. Bonnie Mitchelson (River East): I just want to pursue along my colleagues line of questioning. The minister is saying that the bill passed in June of 2003–

 

An Honourable Member: No, it passed last June. Just passed in June.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: But the act, in my understanding from the newspaper article, so are you saying that the newspaper article is wrong when it says that it was introduced in April 29 of 2003? Was it April 29 of 2004 that it was introduced and passed in June of 2004? I have some difficulty understanding if it was introduced in April of 2003, that it did not pass till June of 2004. So I am just asking for some clarification.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The Domestic Violence and Stalking Act Amendments passed at the end of the last session, which was in June 2004.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I thank the minister for that clarification. I guess the bill died on the Order Paper during the election campaign and was brought back in after, so thanks for the clarification. Can the minister indicate what money is in his budget this year for the training and the resources and the hiring of new staff in his department in order to have this law proclaimed?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes. There is a quarter of a million dollars in this year's budget that was sought, and I just want to explain this. When the former government brought in this kind of legislation, it took them, by the way, a similar time frame to proclaim it. The reason given at that time was that there had to be developed regulations and training. As it all turned out, there have been shortcomings with the regulations and the training which, by indications that I have received, fell short of what was required for an even application and the knowledge by those that can get these orders used across Manitoba.

 

* (15:20)

 

      When this legislation was introduced, the department and stakeholders clearly told me that we had to first of all look at the regulations again in a consultative way and fix them up. In fact, that was required. As well, we had to put in place resources which were never in place when the legislation was brought in. It was really unfortunate there were no resources that went along with the introduction of this legislative scheme in Manitoba, I am advised. They felt they had to have some further resources.

 

      As well, they had to develop training materials, and that is under way, and engage in stakeholder education and public education. The most intensive part of that will take place in late summer. What is critical here is that the shelter workers in particular who now will be empowered to assist victims and survivors make application have to be given full knowledge of what the remedies are under the act.

 

      I do not think the act is quite as straightforward as any of us might like in terms of the difference between protection orders and prevention orders, for example. If there is a buzz that has been going around about what the act provides for, that will change significantly because there are some changes that I think are of significance in the bill, particularly with regard to dating violence, with regard to a test available for the hearing officers, with regard to the publication bans, compensation for children, orders for treatment and other situations like elders, where there have not been people living together in a family. There are some big changes. As well, there has been a concern about the uneven application and uneven granting of orders under the legislation across the province.

 

      You know, this is good legislation. It was good legislation when it was brought in by and large. I had criticisms of aspects of it and some of that has been dealt with in the bill. But let us face it, this is a good idea. There are a number of provinces, five or six of them now, that have this kind of legislation. There are records going back about my contributions and so on, but this option, I think, is very positive to   deal with the scourge of domestic violence. These improvements are very significant.

 

      This is not my own conclusion, but I am advised this makes the strongest domestic violence protection legislation in the country, and I would say that is where we should be. I hope that is the case, but we want to do it right. We want to do it in a sure-footed way and that is why the department and stakeholders have so clearly given me that opinion. I am obliged to take that because it is such a serious issue of protection.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Mr. Chair, I listened closely to  the minister's answer and I think we all would    agree to have strong legislation in this area, especially looking at what happened last weekend and issues of domestic violence that continue to take place. I think it is important that we all recognize that laws needs to be strengthened, and resources and tougher regulations and better dealing of these issues is very important.

 

      It is interesting to hear the minister admit that, unfortunately, there were no resources in place when the government brought this piece of legislation–[interjection] I guess the minister, in his hurry to get something like this introduced into the House and put out a new press release and introduce legislation, did not think about the detail that was involved in bringing this kind of legislation in and did not do any planning or any thinking about what resources might need to be put in place.

 

      I know we went into an election in 2003 and the government was re-elected, and we had a very long hiatus before we came back into the House. I would think that if this was as much a priority for the minister as he talks about it being, some work would have been done. It was the same minister and the same portfolio, and that some work would have been done in preparation for introduction of this legislation. Some of the issues and some of the complications that he talks about might have been looked at by him if he was truly serious about moving this legislation forward and ensuring that a plan of action was in place when the legislation passed.

 

      The minister has all kinds of reasons for why this is not in place yet, and I would ask him some very specific questions because I see that there is significant hiring. Can the minister indicate what the new sheriff, what the new magistrate and how many and what other Justice staff need to be put in place before the law is proclaimed?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: In addition to staffing, dollars are required to do the educational materials. This will have to be disseminated to not only those who can now help get protection orders, but in the shelters and there may be housing people, but the police, the magistrates and the general public, as well, will have to have new information. There will have to be the construction of some public information that has not been available before.

 

      As well, I can say the regulations have been developing under the act and there was a consulta­tion process put together to do that. It was not just done unilaterally by the government, but the consultation process was constructed. The views were obtained and considered in the development of the regulations. The Queen's Bench rules have to be changed, so this is all the process that is part of making a change, an important change, in an important law.

 

      The dollars allow for hearing officers, judicial support staff, a sheriff position, training, trans­criptions, women's advocacy and legal counsel expenditures. No, I take that back. Those are the changes in terms of the staff.

 

      I will just go back. The member had paraphrased me saying that there were no resources for domestic violence. I did not say that, of course. She will see that from the record, but I want to just make it clear to her right now that I said there were no new resources provided along with that legislation introduced by the former administration. There were a lot of pressures that were put on the system, I understand. We want to make sure, though, that this is a robust application of the legislation.

 

      As I say, the former government, when they looked at this legislation, had a similar time frame for the introduction and yet, there was no hiring. There were no new budget allocations and the training was skeletal. So we are doing it differently, and yet, within a very similar time frame. I think it is a difference of 30 days actually. I think the former administration had their legislation passed in June and it was proclaimed in late September or something. It is a very similar time frame.

      We have to do this in a way that makes sure the bill is put to good use. If people are not aware of what is in the bill, particularly those in the law enforcement community, the shelter community and others that deal on the front lines with victims and survivors of domestic violence, we are not going to get what the Legislature expected when it passed the legislation. So, if that is what we want to do, we want to do it right.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Mr. Chair, could the minister indicate to me whether any new staff have been hired in order to move forward on this piece of legislation? I will ask a couple of questions, and then, hopefully, we will get some answers to them. You talked about training materials, education materials. Who is in charge of developing those and where are we at in that process?

 

* (15:30)

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Of course, the hiring will take place once the expenditures are approved by the budget process, as the former minister knows. The department has already begun its preparation for   that hiring in anticipation of a positive outcome  from budget approvals. The Family Law branch is working on the materials and the regulation change. I can tell you the regulation change has been a substantive piece of work, and that will be dealt with on a timely basis, of course, in concert with the other aspects of a proclamation.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: How many people will be hired? What will their positions be?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: There are 2.5 hearing officers and 1.5 sheriff positions.

 

An Honourable Member: Mr. Chair, 2.5 what? I am sorry.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Hearing officers, and 1.5 sheriffs. But the amount also goes toward the training which is operating and transfers for the hearings.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: We are looking at page 41 in the detailed Estimates, and page 57 in the detailed Estimates, both Victim Services and Family Law, and it does not appear that there is any new staff resources or any new salaries.

 

      Can the minister tell me where those positions are located, and where we should see an increase in staff resources?

Mr. Mackintosh: The new amount is in Courts, and the amounts are reflected at pages 83 and 85. The amount was $250,000.

 

      I am advised that, just to help us over the breakdown there, page 83, under Judicial Services, the hearing officers are there for 184.4, and there is Operating of 4.2 on that page. They are not separated out in separate lines. Oh, 7.2.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Under Other Expenditures or under what?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: For example, under Other Expenditures, the 7.2 is included there, I understand; 2.5 for Training, 4.7 for Transcription, and the hearing officers of 184.4 are on the Salaries line. They are not broken out separately. They are in the total. And then, as I say, on the other page, under Sheriff Services, there is 58.4 that is included on the Salaries line.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I am having a little bit of difficulty following the minister, so maybe we could go at it just a little slowly and I will go back and see whether I understand or not.

 

      Under Other Expenditures on page 83, there is 2.5.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: There is a total of 7.2 for new Operating related to this initiative.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Okay, 7.2 for Training and Transcription. And under Salaries, then, there is 184.4 thousand. That is for how many staff, and what would there job descriptions be?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Mr. Chair, 2.5 hearing officers are included in that 184.4, I am advised.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Then that begs the question, given that there are 2.5 new hearing officers and it is only showing one additional staff in this line, are the reductions elsewhere? Is there a 1.5 staff reduction?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am advised that the money is there. They have not designated an FTE yet, but it is the dollar figure that goes towards the hiring of those positions, so the FTE has to be established by way of the HR process.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: What kinds of services might be reduced in the minister's department in order to enhance this function?

Mr. Mackintosh: No, those are new dollars that        I have just described. We had to go and get, as a  new initiative, the amount of $250,000 for the proclamation of The Domestic Violence and Stalking Act.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: But if there is no staff here in this line in the Estimates, if we are short 1.5 staff years, where will those staff years come from? Is, in fact then, the detailed Estimates misleading, because we have not created the new staff years yet for these positions, or will there be reductions elsewhere within the department to accommodate the new 2.5 hearing officers?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, my understanding is that the positions will be terms until they are converted into FTEs at such time as that can be accommodated. But there is no difference. They are new people; there are new positions, new money.

 

* (15:40)

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I guess, you know we are only, I mean the budget was introduced how many weeks ago? If, in fact, there are going to be two-and-a-half new FTEs under Judicial Services to accommodate the hearing officers, why do we not have an increase in the Estimates of 2.5 FTEs?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: My understanding is that the department HR, Administration and Finance, will look for other FTEs, but what is important here is that the initiative get going, and so the money–

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: At what cost? What are you going to cut?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, there is no cut. There is new money. There is a quarter of a million dollars of new money–

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Well, you are taking the FTE from somewhere else. You are taking it–

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The former minister should know how this is done. The amount is budgeted for, and there are new positions, and there will be term positions.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I am having a little difficulty following the minister's logic, I guess. He is indicating that they will be term positions, so there will not be permanent positions–[interjection]

      Well, Mr. Chair, he said a second ago they would be term positions, and now he is saying they will be permanent positions. If they will be permanent positions, why do his Estimates not reflect permanent positions for a new initiative that we all support? Why on earth would the minister not have it reflected in this line in the Estimates if that is where the money is?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: You know, as a former minister    I am surprised. That is reflected in the line. I say there is $250,000 in new money to hire 2.5 hearing officers, and it is in the line. That is what matters. That is the difference. That was the money that       we were able to obtain as a result of the passage      of the legislation and the decision of the government leading up to the conclusion of the budget considerations.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Well, thanks again, Mr. Chair, but, again, yes, the money is here and we found out and that is fine. I have no problem with the money. I guess the problem that I have, again, is misleading through the detailed Estimates. It says here there is 184,000 new dollars and that is fine. That is great.

 

      The question is we are not seeing 2.5 new positions reflected. We are seeing one new position reflected in the detailed Estimates. So the money may be there, but the reality is that the positions are not here in this book. So this is not correct reporting of the information and the decisions that were made and printed in the detailed Estimates.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I know the former minister must know this process. These people will be permanent. These are new positions with job descriptions. They are hired to deal with this legislation, and the money is there.

 

      The FTEs will be attracted to these lines as a result of the HR process over the next year or so, I understand, but in the meantime they are going to be there and from the 2000 and some positions in Justice the department will look for the FTEs, but that does not make a difference to the money or the position. That is to marry the FTE with the hiring, and that is a usual procedure. So that is what the department is required to do and will do. It makes no difference to the provision of the service. The service is in here and indeed, like I say, it was a new initiative in what we call, in the budget process.

Mrs. Mitchelson: Well, thanks, Mr. Chair, but I guess I might ask then how many other new positions are there going to be within the Department of Justice and new staff years that are not reflected in these detailed Estimates.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, I think that the rationale here of the $250,000 in the block funding assigned to these lines is to allow the department to break down the different job descriptions, the different personnel that are required for the legislation.

 

Mr. Gerard Jennissen, Acting Chairperson, in the Chair

 

      So now it is incumbent on the department then to reallocate the FT, which is an exercise. It does not make any difference to the person in the position or the function. It is a matter of marrying that. I am sure the former minister knows all that, but that is how it was done here. It allowed for some flexibility in responding to what we saw as the best way to staff the legislation.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Can the minister show us in the detailed Estimates where it would reflect the hiring of a new sheriff that will be needed to proclaim this legislation?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: So, on the Sheriff Services page, I am advised that the amount for sheriffs relating to the legislation totals 58.4 which is for 1.5 sheriff positions.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Where is that under Sheriff Services? Is that under Other Expenditures under Salaries and Employee Benefits?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It is on the line Salaries and Employment Benefits, I understand.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: It was the first time I had been looking at the detailed Estimates, but I see that there was a reduction in 12 sheriffs as a result of, I guess, the gang trial, which is understandable. But then, again, I do not see reflected in here the additional 1.5 staff years for the sheriffs that the minister has just indicated will be hired for this initiative. Could I also have the dollar figure for the 1.5 sheriffs?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The dollar figure is 58.4. I am advised that the sheriffs are casuals, that the issue of FTs is not relevant to that.

Mrs. Mitchelson: Could the minister indicate to me where we would find the resources for the magistrate that will be hired?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes, that was the 184.4 on the earlier page.

 

* (15:50)

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: So, then, the hearing officers, is that magistrates, the 2.5? Okay, thanks. I appreciate that clarification.

 

      Then it also indicates that the government is in the process of hiring other justice staff. Could the minister indicate to me how many other justice staff that will be hired, and in which areas within the department? Where would they be reflected?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am just wondering if the member can clarify again that question, where she is quoting from.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I believe it was a spokesman for the Minister of Justice that indicated that we will be hiring a new sheriff, magistrate and other justice staff that will be in place to enforce the law, he said, so that was the minister's spokesperson that said that. I guess I am asking what other justice staff, what will their responsibilities be and where are they located in the Supplementary Estimates?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The hirings, they are called magistrates or hearing officers, I think. Technically, they are called hearing officers, so the hirings, as I said earlier, 2.5 hearing officers, and 1.5 sheriffs. That is the hirings that comprise the $250,000 plus the operating amounts that we talked about.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: So that is all of the staff, then, that is being hired to deal with the new initiative? We have got four new staff and that is $250,000?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: That should comprise the $250,000. I have not done the quick math here, but I think that should be it. Again, though, but including the transcription and training costs.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: There is a reference made in the same article to $40,000 being given to A Woman's Place, a downtown clinic that supports victims of domestic violence. Could the minister just elaborate a bit for me on exactly what A Woman's Place is doing to support the new initiatives?

Mr. Mackintosh: The former minister would remember this kind of discussions as between Justice and Family Services probably, but I have a sense I should defer to my colleague in Family Services. They are the lead on that funding. I am more than happy to talk about it, and if the member wants me to do that, I can, but I think that Minister of Family Services (Ms. Melnick), because she has made the funding decisions in her area, is better qualified. I just got a letter the other day and 98 women have been helped in circumstances who might not have received help.

 

      I would urge the member to pursue that line of questioning. It think it is a good initiative that was community driven. We are part of that. Legal Aid did have a role, mind you. They are independent from my office, but the executive director at Legal Aid, prosecutions, and women's advocacy people, the people in Victim Services, have played a very strong role. In that way the department does have a tie-in so I can speak about that.

 

       I can say that it is an initiative that is led by Nor'West, and it is in the Dayton Building on Portage Avenue. Instead of survivors going from one door to another door, it is to provide one door to provide legal assistance, not only on the criminal side, but on the civil side, to provide even help like, maybe going with a woman to court or even help with some chores, to provide housing assistance and advice. I think very importantly, though, it is that    the victims' assistance that can be rallied. My understanding is that this is very unique so I hope it continues to serve and grow, but I think the other minister may have more to add.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Mr. Chair, so the $40,000 that is in the newspaper article, that would be funded through Family Services as the lead. Is there money from Justice in the project?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, it is my understanding that the actual dollars come from Family Services, but I could quantify if the member asked what are the contributions in kind from both Legal Aid and from Manitoba Justice because they are significant. I remember at the opening I had a list of the services in kind and the staff contributions on a weekly basis to A Woman's Place, but I could obtain that for the member if she wants that. Otherwise, I will leave that for the other department.

Mrs. Mitchelson: Mr. Chair, just one or two more questions. It says also in this article that the government is in the process of training front-line workers. Could the minister indicate to me what front-line workers are being trained or have been trained to date?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: That may relate to the domestic violence and stalking act training agenda. I suspect that is what she is quoting about. Aside from the development of the regulations in consultation, I see the training as a key development in making sure this legislation is going to work as well as it can. The development of the training initiative is under way. As I say, the family law group in Manitoba Justice hopes it can be delivered starting in late summer and into the fall when people are back from vacations and in time for proclamation on October 31. They will be conducting information sessions for justices of the peace, Court of Queen's Bench justices, family law lawyers through the Manitoba Bar Association, and community service providers.

 

      I will also add that they have to develop new and revised court forms. They have to change the court orders. They will then, have to look at how this is going to be conducted across the province, how it can be most effectively delivered and they are developing that agenda now.

 

* (16:00)

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Just one more question. It was a horrible situation on the weekend in Lockport with the murder-suicide, and I just want to be sure that we know for sure that there was no contact with the RCMP or with the judicial system, by way of requesting protection orders or restraining orders.

 

      Can the minister assure us that there was no contact in request for support?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am a bit cautious here because this is second-hand. That information is best provided by law enforcement agencies, but our contact, our liaison with law enforcement, Mr. Horn, advises that to the best of his understanding on advice from the RCMP that there were no requests for restraining orders, I am advised.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: There are restraining orders and there are also protection orders. Would that be both–

Mr. Mackintosh: I am advised of the same, that there were no requests for protection or restraining orders or prevention orders, for that matter.

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): On the weekend, a mother of three children was taken away from her family. A father was taken away from the children as well. The family lost a brother, a sister and the mother lost her children, as well as a parent of the woman that was killed.

 

      We are seeing more and more that women are taking it upon themselves to uproot their families and move out of an abusive situation.

 

      This woman did everything right. She removed herself from the situation. She found the supports within her family to protect her the best that you can, and obviously it failed, tragically.

 

      We did not need to motivate this woman to seek out a protection order. We did not need to motivate this woman to look for a restraining order. She had that option. I guess the question that I have, and I know that a lot of other women, husbands, families, would like to know whether, for some reason, there was an obstacle in her need to find protection.

 

      My question to the minister is how many of these restraining orders are granted on a yearly basis. How many of them have been granted this year, and how many of these orders have been refused in this past year?

 

      I am asking for both protection orders, and I am also asking for prevention or restraining orders.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The department advises that there were 527 applications. Of those applications, 305 were granted and 223 were dismissed.

 

Mr. Chairperson in the Chair

 

      We do not have the exact number of prevention orders, I am advised by the department, but we do have a number of prevention orders that were filed with CPIC from QB, and that is 255. So that may help in breaking down the type of order there, but that will not be an exact number because that will not be the total number. There will be a larger number than that.

Mrs. Rowat: I would like clarification on why those numbers are not available. He is indicating there are 255 granted. I would like to know how many were applied for, and also the reasons why these numbers are not available.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The information I had was just what was at hand. I can undertake to look further to see if there is further information available in more detail. I understand and maybe the member will want put on the record, the breakdown of the information. I think she was saying the difference between protection orders and prevention orders. If that is right, maybe she could clarify that and we can pursue that information.

 

Mrs. Rowat: Mr. Chair, what I am looking for are the number of orders granted, the number of orders that have been refused and then total number of orders that have been applied for. I would like them both for protection orders, and I would also like them for the restraining or prevention orders broken down individually and specifically.

 

      I would also like to know the rationale for the ones being refused and my understanding is 222. I am not sure if those were protection orders or restraining orders, but there are 222 of them that have been denied. I would like to know the rationale and the reasoning behind those denials. Thank you.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: We can get some advice on different kinds of reasons. Of course, they may differ in each and every case based on the evidence. I can say one thing. We have had concern about the threshold test for obtaining the orders. With the new legislation, there is a different threshold in that there need not be violence current. If there is–I will just get the language–I will just paraphrase, but if there is a reasonable likelihood that violence will start up again in the future, an order will be obtained under the new legislation. So I think it is a good progression based on the experience under the act.

 

Mrs. Rowat: Mr. Chair, I am a bit concerned and a bit confused on why, if there is a concern about the threshold, this is not being considered immediate, especially in light of circumstances that have been occurring unfortunately and tragically on a more common basis. I think this government has to take this very seriously. Obviously, measures currently in place are not working. We need a stop-gap measure in place now and not wait until October because I think the situations speak for themselves. We need some action from this government today.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: What I am going to say is the very reason why there has to be a robust training and education program around the changes. If people do not know, not only the magistrates but the applicants, because that is where, I think, there have been so many conflicting pieces of advice, I understand, right across this province in terms of what this legislation can do for people. When victims go to court and do not get an order because they have been told it is there for other thresholds or for other reasons, it reduces confidence in the system and I think that can have a chilling effect.

 

      What has to happen in this province is a clear understanding of how the legislation can work for victims. That is why there has to be the development of training and its delivery for those who can make a difference. So that is exactly why the department has urged on these. I will tell you in no uncertain terms that this has got to be done right by way of a robust training system. I can tell you that as an elected member, I would love to just turn on the light switch and have a new act come in. It is not going to work if people do not know what it is going to do for them and do not know the circumstances in which it can be applied.

 

      The magistrates, the hearing officers have to know in a comprehensive and consistent way what the legislation is about and how it can be applied because I think there are different interpretations that have developed from one hearing officer to another. I am hearing that from people and I have to listen to it. I have to respond to the advice of professionals who say, "There has to be a good training program. You have to let people know what this legislation is about."

 

* (16:10)

 

Mrs. Rowat: I guess I am a little concerned that we are waiting for legislation when we obviously know that there are some issues with the measures that are currently in place. They are not addressing the issues at hand. Individuals are losing their lives because of this government's inability to act on issues and measures that need to be in place now. Legislation, we are seeing, obviously, has not addressed issues, and, yes, people have indicated, crisis intervention workers have indicated, police have indicated that the system is failing families, failing individuals who are looking at us as legislators to help. I think families such as this have a lot of questions and I think that waiting for a piece of legislation without addressing the measures that are obviously not working, you are failing families.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The way to ensure that we have  an effective justice system response to domestic violence is to ensure that people know the tools available in the justice system to counter the violence. So that is why professionals have said to me to pursue the course of action we are pursuing. I have to listen to that advice, and I think what we are doing here is making sure that this legislation is going to be one that is a valuable tool, that is understood, that makes a difference.

 

      This has to happen right across the province, from Souris to Shamattawa, and that is what we     are going to do. But I can say that when you look at the initiatives that we have introduced as a government dealing with domestic violence, there can be no doubt that we are committed, as Manitobans, to a very, very strong system in this province, and we have committed, not only resources, but new initiatives, new partnerships. I think this legislation is a good part of what has to be a multi-part response recognizing, of course, that everyone has an obligation.

 

      I think the letter that went around from the North End Women's Centre on Monday to all MLAs, I understand, and to others really hit the nail on the head, is that all of us have an obligation, and when we feel that a person is in need, a neighbour, a friend, in need of protection, that we take steps, we provide advice but, at the same time, there has to be in place, obviously, systems that are responsive. So I think in Manitoba over the years we have learned from some tragedies; systems have improved, both under the former administration, and it is ongoing. I think that, as a province, we are continuing to make advancements. We will continue to do that, but it has to be done in a sure-footed way.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I have been listening very carefully to the minister, and he has indicated, obviously, with restraining orders if there were 527 applied for, and 220-some denied, that means that almost half of those that applied for restraining orders were denied. Now, I heard the minister say that there is different application of the present-day law, we do not have to wait for a new law to      come into place, but he is saying that there are inconsistencies in the law that exists today. It is incumbent, he has been the minister now for six years, and if half of the women, or almost half of the women that are applying for restraining orders are being denied that kind of protection because the law today is being applied inconsistently across the province, why has he not done something to fix it now? You do not have to wait for a new law and new training. What kind of training has been going on to date under this minister's watch that will see some consistency throughout the system?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It is the former administration's law and we are fixing it. The Legislature went to work. People that have watched the law unfold in terms of its application have learned lessons. So new legislation is coming in, and it is legislation that will be accompanied by training, by resources and by better regulations.

 

      One of the concerns is the requirement that there be a fear of immediate harm. I think that by addressing that, we should have a different result, but there will be no different result if the process of implementation is not followed; by the way, a process of implementation, a period that is in the same time frame as the former administration's.

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: I am sure that women that are feeling vulnerable today in society will take great comfort from those comments from a minister that has been sitting in this role as the Minister of Justice. For six years, he has seen inconsistencies in the way the present-day law is being applied and he is saying that we have to wait until next October-November in order to have things changed.

 

      It is under his watch, he is in charge, he is in the driver's seat, and it is time that he took some responsibility for his inaction to try to ensure that people were trained consistently across the province under the present-day law so that women would be protected. I hope that between now and November while the minister uses a new law for justification for any changes nothing dramatic happens to a woman as a result of his inaction.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The member seems to misunderstand that her government brought in a legislation with no new resources–

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: Give me a break.

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, the very rude member should perhaps reflect on the silly way that they brought in their legislation. They not only took a period of time to proclaim this legislation, but they added no new resources. Can you imagine that? Their training has been criticized and ridiculed ever since they did that–

 

Mrs. Mitchelson: You have been training for six years.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Is the member rude?

 

Mr. Chairperson: Order, please.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It is because of the application of this law and the experience under this law that        we have learned lessons as to how to improve it. One of the lessons is that there has to be a better understanding of what it can do. There has to be training, there has to be some additional resources. There were shortcomings and they are going to be addressed. They are being addressed.

 

      So, Mr. Chair, the member actually is making the point as to why we are doing exactly what we are doing. We are going to do it right; they did not. We are going to do this right, recognizing that this kind of law can only go so far. It is only one part of what has to be a multi-faceted response to domestic violence. So I am going to listen to those who have advised me, who say that there has to be a province-wide training initiative. The lawyers have to know how this works, the hearing officers have to have the training. So that is what we are embarked on.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I am obviously disappointed by the comments that the Minister of Justice brought forward on a very serious issue raised by my colleagues. I think he is quickly understanding why he is gaining the reputation that he has, maybe within his department, but certainly within the media. I suspect some within his department would echo the concerns as well that the minister is quick to make numerous statements but really is not able to bring forward action, particularly after six years.

 

      I think it brings disrepute onto all of us as legislators, unfortunately, because people in the public take a look at the inaction of the government and simply get angry and get frustrated with all of us and each of us that are here trying to serve the best interests of Manitoba.

      To say that after six years there was an inability to bring forward changes or resources for a govern­ment that has had more resources than any previous government in the history of this government simply, I think, is not only unfair, but it is a poor statement and a poor reflection on the minister, not one that we have to bring forward further because it is evident in the comments that the minister has put on the record. We will ensure that those comments are seen by those who are concerned and by Manitobans who wonder what is happening with this very serious issue of domestic violence.

 

* (16:20)

 

      I want to ask the minister a few questions on the issue of conditional sentencing and, in particular, if he could advise the committee how many people in Manitoba today are serving conditional sentences as opposed to incarceration or jail or time in an institution.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am advised that there are 960 offenders on conditional sentences.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate how that compares with the two previous years?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No. We would have to obtain that. That is the current number.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Could the minister undertake to provide those numbers from the two previous years?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I understand they may well be available, and we will get that to the member, yes.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for that undertaking. Can he indicate, in terms of compliance on conditional sentences and the various restraints that are placed upon individuals on conditional sentences, whether it is work restrictions or general travel restrictions, how many people there are within the department to monitor these 960 offenders who are currently serving conditional sentences in Manitoba?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The member may want to just clarify that, but conditional sentences, of course, are managed as part of the probation officer system in Manitoba. Maybe the member could ask any specific questions related to that or restate his question.

Mr. Goertzen: Well, I think the minister, some of his answers go down the road to an answer on that question. It is the probation officers in Manitoba who are monitoring the conditional sentences. Is that correct?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate how many probation officers are currently in the province of Manitoba?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am advised that the total number of probation officers is 211.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for that response. I understand probation officers will have a number of different duties beyond, obviously, conditional sentence offenders. Does the minister have statistics in terms of the average caseload for probation officers in the province currently?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: We do not have that here but we can get that information.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for that undertaking. I realize that the minister, it was not recently I guess, but he was in Ottawa earlier this year and, together with other Attorney Generals from across the provinces, brought forward issues on conditional sentencing. I understand from the minister's comments that he has some undertaking that would happen in terms of a review by the federal government. Could he indicate whether or not that review has taken shape or whether or not the committee that was intended to review that issue has been formed, or maybe even in what nature if it was going to be the standing committee on justice that performs that review?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Finally, a federal minister said      it was time to take a look at, I think the words    were, to make a change, or to address the situation of conditional sentences for the high-end violent offences. My understanding is there is to be an interim report to the deputies in June of the work that was to be triggered by the federal minister. As well, it is my understanding the matter had been referred to the federal justice committee. It was my understanding from the federal minister that they never reported out on that issue so he, as well, had undertaken to do some prodding of the committee to try and prioritize that issue because that would be very helpful.

Mr. Goertzen: I suspect that if the minister would confer as well with members of the standing committee, he might find that, in fact, it has been referred to the committee not once but a number of times, and the delay typically comes from the government on that side. We hope it is not just another ruse and another off ramp because we also want to see changes on the federal side of conditional sentencing.

 

      Can the minister indicate on the issue of police officers in schools, as it relates to gang education, what program there is in the department on that issue?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Just to follow up on that last point of the federal committee. As I recall, I heard this, I think, from Anita Neville, but the majority on that committee were opposition members that the government did not have control so I hope this is going to be re-prioritized if it has not. [interjection] You are jumping ahead.

 

      In terms of school resources, indeed, in Winnipeg School Division No. 1, there is a pilot program with three police officers serving several schools. By all indications, this is a very successful initiative on a number of counts. There is an evaluation process that has unfolded. The program, I am confident, will continue with either current partners or more. They are certainly looking at options there. I understand there are discussions with the City, the federal government, even the school division, Winnipeg Police Services and the Province on that. I think there are even a number of functions served by that. I do not know if the member wants to talk about that.

 

      In terms of other educational initiatives relating to organized crime or to gangs, the department helped Winnipeg Police Services to put together an initiative called Take Action in Schools a number of years ago and it had a number of components. I saw that initiative, and that is driven by Winnipeg Police Services. The RCMP have the DARE program. I think they have been expanding that. I think one of the main objectives of the DARE program is with regard to drug education, but I think there are other components to it as well. There may be some other programs specific in schools that Justice has a relationship to. I can let the member know about those.

 

* (16:30)

Mr. Goertzen: I am aware of some the RCMP initiatives and, certainly, even within my own area, RCMP have indicated to me that where they used to have an individual RCMP officer assigned to each school, they no longer do that because of the lack of resources and lack of officers.

 

      But specific to the provincial pilot program, could the minister indicate when the pilot program began with the three officers that are currently in the one division.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It is my recollection that the program got off the ground three years ago this coming September.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Three years ago, were there only three officers in the program at that time as well?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The program is designed just for three officers assigned to certain specific schools and three high schools and, I think, about 12 elementary schools, something in that range.

 

Mr. Goertzen: On the specifics of the program, how much time would an officer spend in a particular school in a week, for example?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Those officers, unlike an earlier deployment of Winnipeg Police Service officers and liaison with schools, these officers are full-time assigned to their schools. In terms of their workaday, we can make inquiries. I think that this has been explained to me some time ago, but, as well, I know they are flexible. If there is a reason that they have to be one place more than another that they can do that. But I think they have some objectives in terms of the distribution of their time among the schools.

 

Mr. Goertzen: What is the determination in terms of which schools officers are assigned to?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The initiative, as I recall, came from the–actually, there is one principal in particular who was very keen on this, going back a number of years, who now is a principal at the St. John's High School, but he was in a school where there had been some experiment like this on a one-off basis, and he took a lot of good lessons from that. I think at the time he was at Isaac Newton School in the North End, and as a result of dialogue with North End Community Renewal Corporation, parent councils and the school division, a proposal was developed that was presented to the Province, Winnipeg Police Services, The Winnipeg Foundation. I may be missing a partner. In any event, over the course of some time, the initiative was fine-tuned and eventually rolled out and in these schools.

 

      I think now the question is what would the continued program look like. Should there be any changes to it? Should there be any different schools? I think that depends on the nature of the partnerships that are attracted to it.

 

Mr. Chairperson: The Member for River–Steinbach.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Not River East yet, although there are lots of good Mennonites in River East.

 

      Could the minister indicate how many, or if there is a plan to expand the pilot project that currently has three officers?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am not privy to those discussions. I think it may well be preferable to expand it, but I think the funding partners will have to look at the evaluations and make a decision as to whether there is a basis to expand it or not.

 

Mr. Goertzen: The minister indicates he is not privy to the decisions. Is it an arm's-length organization that is funding it, assuming that there are provincial funds involved and they still have some direction in terms of funds that go forward from the department?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, the funding comes through Neighbourhoods Alive!

 

Mr. Goertzen: Is the minister indicating that he would like to see an expansion of the program from three officers and resources might be available for that?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, I have indicated, I think publicly, that I would like to see no less than maintenance of the current deployment in schools, but again, there has to be collegial decision-making on that and I understand the discussions are ongoing. My understanding is that there are discussions ongoing around the potential of the Winnipeg Partnership Agreement.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate what other type of resources are provided to the officers, whether there are videos or guide books on issues of gangs provided to the officers?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes, I can find out for the member and let him know.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I know that in 1999 the member put out a Gang Action Plan, calling for a police officer program, although not as arm's length as seems to be described now, and certainly was stated with more urgency in, I am sorry, this is 1996. It also called for things like guide books and videos.

 

      It does not seem that the minister is as aware of it or it seems strange to me that for almost 10 years now, this plan, which the minister referred to as kind of revolutionary at the time, has three officers and he is not aware if there are any kind of resources available to them. Can he indicate what has changed in the last nine years from when he issued the press release on the gang plan?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: That Gang Action Plan included police in schools, so I am pleased that developed      in partnership. That is exactly what we got. Well,  the member laughs; he thinks that is funny. [interjection] The Take Action in Schools program   I described earlier.

 

      I want to say that there are more police in schools than the North End initiative throughout    the province and indeed, it depends on what community it is we are talking about, but there       are some very strong relationships with police and school communities. I am aware there are initiatives for it to expand the deployment of police in schools, so I think we will have to stay tuned to see how  those discussions unfold.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Well, we have been staying tuned, I guess, for 10 years since the initial release came from the now-minister and, certainly, six years since he has become the Justice Minister. I was not laughing at the initiative. I agree with the idea of having police officers or other law enforcement in school, but I do think it is somewhat sadly humorous that in six years there would be three officers and no resources as the minister argued back in 1996 for them. So that is kind of the genesis of my laughter as it were.

 

      I will not go through a point-by-point plan of the minister's Gang Action Plan because that would probably not serve a purpose other than to embarrass the minister, but probably would not give a lot of other action.

 

      I want to indicate or ask the minister, in the late 1990s he referenced the fact that we had 800 gang members active and inactive in the province of Manitoba. He called it a crisis at the time. Could he indicate how he feels and what superlative he would use to describe the 3000 active and inactive gang members in the province?

 

* (16:40)

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I think it was very unfortunate that in the course of the nineties, the former government did nothing to counter the street gang number, the growth in street gang activity. There was this huge increase in membership over the course of just a few short years.

 

      Actually, I remember raising this in the House and a member from the government benches and the Treasury benches started laughing and started saying, "Whoo, whoo, gangs. Scary." I thought that kind    of pathetic response was so out of touch with the concern that Winnipeggers were developing, and, sure enough, it developed into the subculture in this city, and really, nothing was done. I think that was most unfortunate. It became entrenched, and now we have seen at least a halt in the growth in those numbers that we saw over the course of the nineties and, indeed, according to Winnipeg Police Services and their record keeping, there is a significant decline in the number of active and inactive gang members. Having said that, this remains a serious concern, and the inaction of the past is the price that we are paying today.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for his 1990s response again. It has certainly worn thin with the media, and I am surprised he has not tried a different tactic, realizing that it is certainly not helping him, but I guess he–oh, we have woken up the former Minister of Education, a few former ministers, the member from Brandon East.

 

      I think that I would like to ask the minister a question. We were speaking about police per offences, I think when we broke last week. I just want to finish off on that and ask if the minister's department keeps statistics on the number of offences per officers in the city of Winnipeg, those that they are responsible for in the province, if he keeps those kind of statistics, and if he would make them available?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I recall when this issue arose in the media a few months ago, there were some numbers that we had, so I will look to rediscover where those are and provide them to the member.

 

Mr. Goertzen: At that time, the minister, I think it was his spokesperson again, said that we were not the seventh-worst in the country, we are the sixth-worst, and if he could confirm that as well. I wonder if the minister could indicate whether he believes that police per offences statistics are a meaningful way to track the appropriate number of police officers that we have, or whether we have an appropriate number of police officers in the province.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I think people would agree that there is no exact science to determining the exact amount of police officers required. It depends from community to community what their needs are, and, indeed, even offences themselves can vary greatly from month to month, year to year, and in terms of the amount of time it takes to investigate and deal with them. I do not think there is any statistic that any observer would conclude is the right one to use. I think there are a number of measures and of course, we have the second-highest number of officers per capita. Our numbers will change as we go ahead because of our budget commitment over the next two years.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for confirming that he does not believe that officers-per-offence ratio is an important measure of the appropriate level of policing. Well, you want to dispute that? Go ahead.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The member is putting words in my mouth. I did not say that. I said that there are serious concerns about using that measure, actually, and I gave reasons for that.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I am sorry, I misunderstood the member, and I suppose the Free Press misunder­stood the member in January of 1998 when the then-Opposition critic argued the need for more officers, citing caseloads in the United States, and using that comparison. I wonder if the minister could indicate what has changed between 1998 and now, other than the obvious.

Mr. Mackintosh: I think you really have to look at the different measures that are available for policing deployment, and make decisions based on what can be funded and how recruiting can take place, how we can move ahead with the policing resources in the province, and that is exactly what we have done with the budget commitment, the largest single increase to investments in policing in the province's history, to my knowledge.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for indicating his duplicity on positions between the 1990s and now, when he is the minister. I appreciate having that confirmed, on the record.

 

      The minister indicated that he attended a methamphetamine conference earlier this year with Western Attorneys General from the United States, I believe. Can he indicate who went with him to that conference, or did he go, I do not imagine he went on his own, but who went with him to the conference?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Does the member mean in terms of staff or–

 

Mr. Goertzen: Anybody who went: political staff, government department staff, other MLAs, anyone who went with you.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Is this the Western AGs, you said? No, no staff.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So can the Minister indicate that he went alone?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I went with my wife, but, yes, I went alone in terms of the Justice Department.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So, no political staff, no other MLAs?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Three nos. I will take that as a no. Can the minister indicate how long the conference was, or how long he was at the conference?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The conference began in the late afternoon, and then the day before we ran, I think, from eight o'clock to, actually, a little tense moments as 25 jurisdictions, including, I think, 10 or 11 AGs attempted to hammer out a joint press release, which was really something to see, and it happened. So I think we went to about six o'clock or so and then there were further discussions, informal, in addition to that.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So it was a two-day conference, as the minister has indicated?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes, the conference itself was a full day of the meetings, and the night before there was a gathering of the AGs on a voluntary basis.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So it was a one-day conference. Can the minister indicate how long he was at the conference? Was it just for the two nights or two days?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, I also had the opportunity to meet with several justice officials in Phoenix on prosecution policies and a number of other initiatives that were happening with regard to public safety in that part of the world.

 

Mr. Goertzen: That part of the world being Mesa, Arizona. Can the member indicate then for us how many nights he was in Mesa on this business?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, I did not go to Mesa, Arizona.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Perhaps it was Tempe or Phoenix, Arizona. I do not get to go to Arizona on these trips. Can the minister indicate how long he was in Arizona on this business?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Well, I know my wife and I took a Saturday on our own expense, so we stayed the extra day.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So it was three nights.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: It was either three or four. I will have to look it up.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Could the minister also provide us with the cost of the conference for the duration that he was there, excluding what he might have paid for personally?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes, we will obtain that information.

 

* (16:50)

 

Mr. Goertzen: I thank the minister for that undertaking.

 

      Before I turn it over to the Member for Inkster (Mr. Lamoureux), who I know has been waiting patiently with a number of questions, I do want to ask the minister a few questions on the issue of auto theft. Can the minister indicate what the status of the bait car program is in Manitoba? Perhaps he could provide some indication in the last year how may individuals have been captured or charged as a result of the bait car program in Manitoba.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: That is a WPS initiative. I would urge the member to canvass that with the WPS unless he wants us to make inquiries on his behalf.

 

Mr. Goertzen: So the minister has not made any inquiries in the recent past regarding the bait car program. He is uninterested in that initiative.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Actually, we may have that information from MPI as well. I can let the member know.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I would be particularly interested when the minister is getting the information about the number of bait cars that are provided by MPI, how often the cars are out, how often they need to be repaired, and particularly its most recent usage.

 

      Can the minister indicate as well another program, the Combat Auto Theft program, the CAT program, which is used, I believe, to allow vehicles to be pulled over when they are being driven on hours that are not normally driven by the registered owner. How many individuals have been arrested or charged on auto theft as a result of the CAT program?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: That, again, is a program of the Winnipeg Police Services. If the member wishes, we can make inquiries about their statistics.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I am a little surprised that the minister is not aware of the information. I know he has at least stated publicly that he considers the issue of auto theft to be a high priority and one that he wants to "wrestle to the ground" and the various other catch phrases he has put out over the last six years. I do not have time to go through all of them. We would probably use most of the 100 hours that we have. I would ask that he provide that information in terms of the number of arrests we have on the CAT program.

 

      Moving to the auto theft task force, can the minister indicate who currently comprises the auto theft task force in Manitoba?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The members of the task force are Rick Linden, Gregory Graceffo from Justice, Tim Meyerson of MPI who is the newly appointed co-ordinator regarding auto theft. I do not know his official position title, but it is something like that. John Douglas of MPI, Winnipeg Police Services' Corrine Scott, who is superintendent and Inspector Sinkora for the RCMP. I am advised that may well be changing. There has been a significant redeployment of Winnipeg Police Service personnel over the last few weeks. And the RCMP, Inspector Wheaton [phonetic]. As well, there was a superintendent from Westman there.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate how often the task force meets, if it is a kind of an ad hoc call of the chair, or how often, and if they have regular meetings?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The purpose and the scheduling of the meetings actually have been undergoing some change. There was an ad hoc meeting schedule that is changing now to a regularized monthly meeting schedule. In fact, they are meeting tomorrow I am advised.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate how often the auto theft task force has met over the past 12 months?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Yes. We can obtain those numbers.

 

Mr. Goertzen: Can the minister indicate what the budget for the auto theft task force is?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: No, the purpose of the task force is to bring parties together. It really was, I think, the first movement towards breaking down barriers between the different stakeholders on this issue, so it is not like a budgeted operation. It is more information sharing and generating ideas. The budget costs, because I think it would be unfair to say that   it has no budget because the individuals who are on the task force bear their own budget expenditures and budget costs for their participation in the task force.

 

Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): Mr. Chairperson, I did have a number of questions I was wanting to get on the record, but I want to first make the general comment that I have heard the minister on numerous occasions indicate that he is going to get back, take information or take questions and get back to us, and that does–

 

An Honourable Member: Thirty-eight times.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: The member from Steinbach says 38 times.

 

      I think it adds a great deal to the discussions around the table if, in fact, we are provided answers as quickly as possible, ideally, immediately following them being posed. I find it difficult to image why the minister, for example, would not know some of these answers. The member from Steinbach asked about bait cars, and I suspect with the incredible talent that the minister has at his fingertips, the individuals who are filling the chairs in this room, would be able to provide some of those answers. Part of the Estimates process is to provide support staff to the minister to be able to answer questions, not just to be here for decoration. I would suggest to you that it would be a more fruitful discussion if, in fact, some of these numbers were provided and, as I say, I use the bait car or the other 34 times in which the minister has taken it as notice.

 

      I do have some questions in regard to our  courts. I am trying to get a better understanding in terms of consequences. I think it is important that there is some consistency to a certain degree to some sense of public awareness as to what types of consequences there are when someone commits an offence, whatever type of offence that there might be. So the first question I would ask the minister is can he indicate to this committee what sort of recordkeeping does the province maintain in regards to judgments, statistically? Can he give us some  sort of an indication? If he wants a specific example, it would be wonderful if he could provide me the number of how many home break-in types of cases were held last year, and what sort of consequences did the individuals receive as a result of home  break-ins.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: First, what the member should appreciate is that most of the questions asked in this round of Estimates, which are rather different than I have seen in the past or participated in, are questions about the operations of police forces, whether it is gang intelligence or CAP programs, bait cars. Those are all outside agencies, very independent from government. Those are not figures that are generated by Manitoba Justice because they are generated by the police agencies. [interjection] Well, the member says, "I do not care." The member should be very cautious in pursuing gang intelligence in a public forum like this. I will have more to say to the member about that another time because that is a very, very serious issue about information police have that cannot be used to undermine any ongoing investigation.

 

      What information we can provide, we will. [interjection] The member wants to know gang intelligence. He should exercise some restraint there, as I must, and so I have sought information and advice from the police. [interjection]

 

Mr. Chairperson: Order, please. Honourable Minister, you have the floor.

 

* (17:00)

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I am advised that I have to be very careful on the information I put on the record publicly about intelligence and information that is held by police forces. Having said that, there is other information that has been sought about police operations, and we will provide what information we can but we will heed the advice of the police. There are others, questions like today, that we will seek information about from police forces. Perhaps MPI can help us on some, but it may be that that information is not provided by the police forces, and the member should ask the respective police forces for that information.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: The question was in regards to what sort of statistical information does the government actually maintain that clearly would demonstrate consequences to crimes that have been committed in which judgment has been made. So, while he gives some thought to that answer, Mr. Chairperson, I would suggest to you that if there is–I can walk into any community police office in Winnipeg and sit down. I can have more statistical numbers given from the front-line police officer than I have seen provided inside the legislative committee with some of these questions that are being asked. I guess there is a general feeling that just with the capabilities of these individuals that we have around the table, we could be getting more dialogue on some of the numbers.

 

      We are not saying we want right down to the very last one statistically a hundred percent accurate, but it would have been nice to be able to have that dialogue. We both had a chance to comment on that issue, and if you would just answer the question.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: I think it is important to defend the responsiveness of Manitoba Justice to questions when we cannot anticipate, coming into this room, what the questions are in terms of the numbers. I have seen the department generate numbers in quite an amazing way when you have questions, and so we will put that to work in terms of the questions.

 

      In terms of dispositions and the breakdown, we are moving into a new era now, I am pleased to say, in terms of automation and the ability to track these kinds of numbers, to track, for example, what offences are resulting in incarceration. We can provide that. I think the member is going to have to be a little more specific, though, in the information he wants because it could be that there is going to be a lot of work generated unless he is specific in telling us what he is looking for specifically. He did mention he wanted information, for example, about the number of B and E's, and that information is readily available. Stats Canada, by the way, also produces that on an annualized basis across the country.

 

      As well, there is information in our systems that can be sought and provided, but I think we have to make sure that if we are going to embark on some number crunching that we know exactly what he is asking for.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: Very specifically what I am asking for is what sort of statistical information capability does the department have which it can actually provide, whether it is to the minister or members of this committee, regarding dispositions of court cases where someone has been found as guilty.

 

      I will use a very specific example. I think that there is some need to be able to understand how many home break-ins there are in any given year. Are home break-ins on the increase? Are they going down? What about home invasions? If someone is involved in a home invasion, are they typically sentenced to two months in jail, two years in jail, conditional sentences? I think that there is an appetite that is there to have a better understanding in terms of how our judges are handing out what forms of dispositions for the many different types of offences that are there.

      I would think that there would be some form of  a data bank that is maintained, given the amount of technology. I would encourage the minister; I know  I had the opportunity with some of his colleagues to visit IBM, as an example, out in Washington. It    was just impressive in terms of what it is that they can do that ultimately provides a better service to  the population as a whole and becomes more informative.

 

      Well, I would think that we should have a sense as to what sort of penalties there are as a result of these types of crimes that are taking place. That is really where my interests are in regard to the courts.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: First, in terms of the incidence of, the member talked about home invasions and break-and-enters. By the way, I know there has been statistically a challenge across the country with home invasions because they are classified as different kinds of offences. You know, break-and-enters are robberies with intent. That is part of the problem and one of the reasons we have asked for a specific stand-alone provision of home invasion in the Criminal Code, which has so far been rejected, I can tell you. That is only one reason that we would like to see that.

 

      Break-and-enters though, on the other hand, are measurable. They are measurable by the respective police forces, and then, of course, Stats Canada in the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics collects those figures across the country, but we can provide the member with some indication about break-and-enters and what is happening there. I know that the break-and-enter rate today is significantly lower than the last 10-year average.

 

      Now the member then was also talking about dispositions. I am not sure if he means what the case law is. In other words, if it is a first-time break-and-enter, what would be the usual consequence, because that would be the kind of precedent, the case law that Prosecutions applies. Perhaps we can be helpful for the member there, if he can provide some examples of the kinds of offences that he would like to know the case law, what the range of consequences is for that kind of offence. Prosecutions branch, that is what they do as professionals is make sure that they have an understanding of the range that may be available in certain circumstances.

 

* (17:10)

Mr. Lamoureux: Yes, I would appreciate some specific numbers, and if the department can get back to me with those numbers it would be great. I am talking about home invasions, break-ins, whether it is the first time, second time. I am interested in knowing in terms of the number of repeat offenders.

 

      I realize there is a good chance we might be passing Justice, so I have got about another four or five minutes. What I would like to be able to do is get a sense in terms of automobile theft also. We  had 13 000 vehicles that were stolen last year. Do  we have any sense in terms of what percentage   those vehicles were actually stolen by repeat offenders? Do we have 150 people, for example, who are stealing 4000 vehicles? I think having that sort of information would be very valuable in terms of setting government policy in some areas. In other areas, by having the statistical breakdown in regard to dispositions coming from our judges, I think that would be good for lobbying, whether it is in Ottawa, whether it is within Cabinet.

 

      I guess the other issue I would raise is in regard to probation officers. I understand the minister indicated we have, I think, 211 probation officers in the province of Manitoba. I, for one, feel that the caseload for probation officers is such that we are not allowing them to be able to do the things that they could be doing, i.e. curfews, or following or doing more towards curfews. I think there is merit for incorporating some sort of a specialty group of sorts. I am wanting to use very general words here where we have some probation officers at work trying to assist us in some of those high-risk or high-repeat offenders because many of them are on probation. They are, from what I understand and from what I have been told, in violation of probation, but the resources just are not there to do the proper tracking.

 

      So those are some of the issues that I would like to see the minister act on. If he can get back to me, or his department get back to me with some stats, the ones that I have listed, I would very much appreciate it. If, in fact, it can be done prior to us being in concurrence, that would even be better because then we could, at least, carry on some sort of dialogue on those stats during concurrence.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: The department has been doing some considerable work to look to see what the profile is of those who are engaged in auto theft. We will make good efforts to answer the questions. We will go from the transcript in terms of delineating what the numbers are that the member seeks.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: One of the budget items that was passed was to give significant dollars in order for our police forces to be enhanced, both rural and urban. The other day I was ending my comments, if you like, or I had run out of time, as to what the actual needs were of Winnipeggers in regard to a police department. I think the deployment of our police officers and the type of work they do is absolutely critical in terms of how much time they are going to be on the streets and have that high visibility. I have walked by the courts on numerous occasions, as I am sure the Minister of Justice has, and you will quite often see them doing all sorts of court work.

 

      I have had opportunity to talk to what some have termed as courtroom junkies. I do not know if the minister has referred to that. There is a following of individuals who watch the courts virtually on a daily basis, and they, too, have some very constructive things to say about the process. I would ask the minister if he feels that there is a need to see changes within our court structure, in particular, issues like remands. Are there other things that we can do to the number of remands that are constantly being given, I am referring to? Are there other ways in which we can support our police officers by ensuring that they do not have to be in the courtrooms as much? Is the government looking at these two issues? If they are, can they give some sort of an indication as to what sort of action they plan on taking?

 

Mr. Mackintosh: There have been some recent efforts to deal with the issue of police overtime and attendance at court. I think that what overshadows all the efforts, though, is the Front End Project as it is called. I think there is a formal name for it, but the Front End Project began in the Family Violence area. It is headed by the Chief Judge and it is a result of a partnership and a deal that was made between the court itself, the Manitoba Justice prosecutions courts, and the Legal Aid defence bar, to usher in a new era so that we could defeat this remand culture that has built up across the country.

 

      The delays quite frankly feed on themselves. I think that the processes from adjournments add to the burden in the court system. Judges and court clerks are just dealing with adjournments and causing other problems where there are more breaches because of the delay and the adjournments and so on. So, as a result of this Front End Project, the time lines for dealing with cases in the Family Violence Court in Winnipeg have decreased significantly. The Chief Judge has said it is way beyond his expectations, and I would add my voice to that.

 

      Now we are looking at expanding that, and it is our hope and expectation that in the coming years that will become the new justice system in Manitoba. We have got other provinces that are now looking   at the Front End Project here. They are wondering   how we have done it, but it has not been easy. I think there have been glitches discovered and corrected and we are continuing to build that. It is the leader­ship of the Chief Judge that has been instrumental in this because, of course, the court can bring together all the divergent partners; I should not call them partners, but independent players in the justice system, wholly independent from each other indeed, if not adversarial, that no other place in the justice system could rally that kind of joint effort.

 

      What the front-end system means is time lines, stringent time lines for getting work done, for disclosing information to the defence, for entering pleas. They call it the Front End Project because it is to get more work done as soon as the case comes into the court system. That is really where it has fallen down, the court. Traditionally, the file comes in and there may be information not on the file that has to be disclosed, ongoing communications back and forth between Prosecutions and police and real   delay in providing that to the defence; real delay, then, in entering the plea and getting going with the disposition.

 

      So, if the member would like any more information, we can obtain that for him, but I think I have described in at least general terms what is happening in Manitoba now. I think we are about a year and a half into that program and the indications are from the Chief Judge that the backlog reductions are so significant that we are looking at reductions of a third to one half in the time that it has been taking to process cases. It depends, though, on the nature of whether the case is one involving an offender in custody or out of custody because there is a priority given to those that are in custody in terms of moving their cases.

 

      There are four FTEs, four positions, in the Justice Department to bolster this. We are finding savings on the other hand. My understanding is in the first year of operation we saved $150,000 approximately in overtime as a result of the efficiencies.

 

      There are other efficiencies as well. I can go into video courtrooms. We have expanded. We have got a video courtroom now at Headingley, one at the Remand Centre and both are operational. That has made a difference. We are continuing to look at the use of video and other technologies outside of Winnipeg. So, if that answers the member's question.

 

* (17:20)

 

Mr. Lamoureux: This will be my final question, at least for the Estimates portion, to ask or to stress that crimes of all levels from the relatively small minor crimes to the murders that exist–I have had the opportunity to know a couple of individuals where they have had family members murdered, and one in particular where it has been a number of years still in the court process and there is a high sense of frustration. I think that what is really needed more than anything else is a government, No. 1, that is committed to fixing the system, and some sort of a strategic time frame for that to be done.

 

      I would ask the minister in terms of when does he expect to see the initiative that he started in one area of the courts not only expanded, but when he expects to see tangible results at that stage. Again, just to re-emphasize the importance of helping our police officers throughout the province in dealing with the whole court process and how their time is being consumed in courts and how we might be better able to deal with allowing them to be on the streets as opposed to in our courts.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Just very briefly, I think the single most effective change, aside from expanding the Front End Project would be to eliminate preliminary inquiries. That is a horribly victimizing retardant to justice. It is expensive. It can triple the time it takes to process a case. There is some estimate that it could cost $1.6 million, as much as that perhaps in a year. Unfortunately, instead of eliminating it, the federal government has expanded it to the youth courts under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, but I think that it is very unfortunate. We have taken a strong view on it here provincially. It is not necessary ever since the early nineties of Stinchcombe where there is mandatory disclosure, and I think there are other ways to deal with concerns that have been raised from time to time about it.

 

Mr. Chairperson: If there are no further questions, we will begin with the resolutions.

 

      Resolution 4.2: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $104,202,600 for Justice, Criminal Justice, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.        

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      Resolution 4.3: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $25,284,300 for Justice, Civil Justice, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      There is a question here from the member from Steinbach.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I just want to thank the Department of Justice staff who are currently leaving the room for coming out for the last couple of days. We appreciate the work that they do in the department for coming. I look forward to the answers we asked.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Resolution 4.4: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $105,759,600 for Justice, Corrections, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      Resolution 4.5: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $41,234,700 for Justice, Courts, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      Resolution 4.6: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $1,910,400 for Justice, Costs Related to Capital Assets, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      The last item to be considered for the Estimates in this department is item 4.1(a) Minister's Salary, contained in Resolution 4.1.

 

      The floor is open for questions.

Mr. Lamoureux: I just wanted to in essence, I guess, it would be to conclude some comments in regard to Justice. This is a minister that has been around for a number of years now, both as a critic and a minister, and I think that he has been afforded the opportunity to really make a difference in Justice.

 

      For me, this would be, in essence, my second year as a critic, but I also have other roles that I play. I do appreciate the fact that the member from Steinbach, as a critic for Justice, puts in a great deal of effort to have his questions answered to the best of the minister's ability. I do think that the time frame that we are put into in regard to the Justice Estimates really does not give us the best service that we could get.

 

      I would have really enjoyed the opportunity to be able to get into some of the details of some of the numbers, the statisticals that we talked for a few minutes about, about the courts. I look at that as a fairly serious issue, a problem that needs to be dealt with. The minister made reference to $150,000 in savings in overtime in one area. I suspect that there is a great deal of money that could be saved, or more importantly, better spent. I think that you can have a very constructive dialogue when you have, as I indicated earlier, some incredible individuals that have the expertise and the background knowledge. It is just a question. To what degree do we want to allow that to proceed?

 

      I think when it comes to our courts, I personally would have welcomed the opportunity to have a good, positive exchange on ideas. In having said that, I do have a few more questions that I would like to be able to ask, but we will wait until we get into the concurrence, and at this point I will conclude my remarks. Thank you.

 

Mr. Goertzen: I might want to just add a few comments myself. Certainly, we have a number of concerns regarding the inability to get answers out of this particular minister, but also on a broader scale, the inability to get action on a number of issues. I think that throughout Manitoba there is an awareness now that this government has a lot of air time on justice, but not a lot of actions, and there is a growing cynicism about justice in the province of Manitoba and a growing concern, just from the headlines that people read, of increased gangs or domestic violence in the newspapers because of a lack of action and response to those particular concerns.

 

      I would encourage the minister, however, to try to get the numerous answers to the questions that he took as notice in terms of statistics and others prior to the concurrence process. That would probably make that an easier process when we get there in a short period of time.

 

Mr. Chairperson: No further questions? I will read the last resolution.

 

      Resolution 4.1: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $5,792,000 for Justice, Administration and Finance, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      This completes the Estimates of the Department of Justice.

 

      The next set of Estimates considered by this section of the Committee of Supply is for the Department of Health.

 

      The hour being 5:30 p.m., committee rise.

 

FAMILY SERVICES AND HOUSING

 

* (15:00)

 

Madam Chairperson (Bonnie Korzeniowski): Good afternoon. Will the Committee of Supply please come to order. Committee will be continuing with questioning on Resolution 9.1. We are presently on 9.1(b) The floor is open for questions. The minister has a statement.

 

Hon. Christine Melnick (Minister of Family Services and Housing): I just wanted to clarify some of the questions that were asked last day when we were talking about qualifications for social workers. I have a brief statement to read and then some documents to table that I hope will clarify any questions that might be outstanding.

 

      The member focussed a great deal of her questions on the impact of the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry Child Welfare Initiative on human resource related matters, specifically on worker qualifications. I am assuming that her concern is that there will not be a lowering of existing standards of worker quali­fications, and as a result, a lowering of the quality of services as a result of the roll-out of the Child Welfare Initiative.

 

      So, first, I would like to reiterate for the member that we have from the outset of the AJICWI process maintained a priority emphasis on worker qualifi­cations foundational standards. As I informed the member previously, prior to the AJICWI, there were no provincial standards regarding worker qualifi­cations. In fact, there never had been. The AJICWI was the first time that Manitoba had committed publicly to ensure provincial standards. Up until now, each agency established its own hiring criteria.

 

      I should point out that a Bachelor of Social Work, or a BSW, has generally been understood as a benchmark academic qualification in the field. However, all the agencies, including the government, have historically also accepted equivalencies, which is a generally understood alternative to a combi­nation of suitable or acceptable education, training and experience, including culturally appropriate background that could be language or cultural.

 

      When the consultation process, completed with the authorities and the departments, make the final decision on foundational standards, it will, I predict, recognize the appropriateness of equivalent qualifi­cations.

 

      I would also like to correct some related information that I gave the member at the last meeting. I had indicated that work on qualification standards had begun in November 2004. To correct the record, it in fact commenced in May 2004. The department's policy document was released in November 2003.

 

      The only exception in the hiring criteria by the authorities at this time is for positions relating to Winnipeg Child and Family Services, which is the conditional recognition of the Métis Child, Family and Community Service two-year diploma program which is delivered through Red River Community College and is referenced in the policy document. Graduates having successfully completed an additional one-year competency based internship program under the direct supervision of a social worker employed in the field, and following a further review or validation by the Child Protection branch of each individual's overall competencies, skills, experience and suitability, the graduate may be assessed as satisfying the hiring criteria for an entry-level position. So I stress that it is an entry-level position.

 

      Following completion of this process, eight of the possible 48 graduates met the criteria for positions as front-line social workers. It should be noted that additionally the Métis agency has agreed to an enhanced supervisory arrangement for a period of up to 18 months for these 8 workers.

 

      I would like now to address more specifically the member's questions regarding the department policy framework and, in fact, I have copies to table. I will be tabling copies of the policy discussion paper, qualifications of Child and Family Services workers, development of provincial standards, the legislation, and the current consultation process leading to the establishment of foundational stand­ards. As well, I am able to provide the interim hiring standards and the criteria.

 

      It is my hope that these documents will help to clarify any questions that might have been out­standing from our discussion a few days ago.

 

* (15:10)

 

Mrs. Mavis Taillieu (Morris): Madam Chairperson, yesterday, I asked a question in the Legislature regarding Jackie, a vulnerable person who had on several occasions threatened to take her own life and, in fact, had attempted that. I asked that the minister act today, that being yesterday, and get Jackie some help. Yesterday, an employee from Family Services called Jackie's sister, the person next to Jackie, and asked in a very, I can quote what Jackie's sister has said: "He is very insensitive towards the case." He told her to put Jackie on medication instead of asking for a behaviour therapist. He was verbally abusive and said, "Do not go down that road. Do not use that tone of voice with me." He suggested they bring in a pastor which had been one of the avenues they tried.

 

      I am going to ask the minister now a whole day later: Has Jackie received care from a behaviour therapist?

 

Ms. Melnick: Yes, I had discussions with the department upon receiving notice of the situation from the member. I thank her for that notice. I have been assured that the department has been working with the individual and, as in situations of this nature, the family is involved, the agency, as well as the community-support network. I am aware that discussions are under way with the various stake­holders, and that services which will be deemed appropriate for her will be provided.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Again, I will ask the minister does Jackie have today a behaviour therapist with her.

 

Ms. Melnick: There has not been a behaviour therapist assigned to Jackie. There is ongoing discus­sion. There is ongoing assessment. I think it is very important to recognize that when an individual is in a situation like this, there is care 24/7 in a group-home setting, in a day-program setting and, certainly, I know the department is working with the various stakeholders to determine and assess the appropriate care that will be provided.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I do not think by telling Jackie's sister, "Do not go down that road," in asking for a behaviour therapist, I do not think that is consulting with a stakeholder. I think that is threatening a stakeholder.

 

      When I provided that letter to the minister's office, there was a suicide note attached to that. Just last week, we learned in the Free Press that a person took the lives of two other people and then himself. He had threatened to do that and that may have been something that someone with intervention may have been able to prevent.

 

      I am asking the minister does she not think that this is serious enough to put someone with Jackie, to put a behaviour therapist with her.

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, I understand from the department that Jackie is receiving care 24 hours a day. There is assessment, there is discussion and that discussion will continue until the individual is receiving the care that we can all agree on. Also, in a situation such as this, we understand there are community stakeholders who are involved. There is the department, there is the family and, certainly, there is the individual herself. While I understand the member's concerns, I think it is important to recognize that there is care, there is support and we will continue to assess this situation as with any other situation of this nature.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Madam Chair, yes, you can bet I am concerned. I am concerned for Jackie's safety. I am concerned for her family that have been waiting two months and asking for two months for some help and they have not had any. They have now requested a new social worker because of the way in which their former one has been treating this case. They have been told, no, with no reason other than there is no one else.

 

      Will the minister look at providing Jackie and her family with someone more caring, someone who can understand the situation and someone who will advocate and get a behaviour therapist for Jackie. If the minister will not do it, will she put someone there that will?

 

Ms. Melnick: I think it is important to correct the record. Jackie has, in fact, been receiving–pardon me, a person in this situation would, in fact, be receiving care and support on a 24/7 basis. Also, I will take the member's comments under advisement and will look into the situation within the department.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell me how many behavioural therapist positions there are in the Department of Family Services?

 

Ms. Melnick: We have a total of approximately 10. We have 5 located in Winnipeg and 5 located throughout the province.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: What are the current caseloads of the ones in Winnipeg?

 

Ms. Melnick: The typical caseload would be a total of about 30. Cases would be active on and off so we would not have a total of 50 active caseloads. I do not know for each individual therapist how many caseloads would be active at any given time and the extent to the activity with any individual. Services would be provided depending on the needs of the individuals at any given time.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: When a behavioural therapist is requested, how long does it take on average for that person to receive those services?

 

Ms. Melnick: Pardon me. My allergies are really acting up today so I will be coughing a bit.

 

      Again, it would depend on the needs of the individual. There would be a prioritizing of cases and then the amount of time that would be spent with the individual would be based on needs.

 

       I think we have to have a bit of clarity here in understanding that if there are concerns around suicidal behaviours, a behavioural therapist may not necessarily have the skills that might be required. That is where the assessment I was referring to earlier on in a situation such as this is very important. If there are needs, for example, mental health supports, those services would be brought forward.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Well, if the minister is trying to deflect and say that the specific case I was speaking about with Jackie does not warrant a behavioural therapist, I would ask her then what she thinks would be appropriate for someone that is threatening suicide.

 

* (15:20)

 

Ms. Melnick: We have to speak in an overall situation, and that is why, when I talked about the care that is being received by any individual in a situation such as this, we would deal with the community support network, which could include mental health workers. If it was determined that a behavioural therapist would be helpful, certainly, it would include that. That is where I think we have to be very careful to make sure that we allow the community to do the work that they need to do, so that the individual is receiving, in fact, the services that will be most effective for them.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: In the specific case of Jackie, for two months she was asking for help. The assessments did not get her anybody except her own pastor. So the Department of Family Services failed Jackie in that they did not put anybody to examine the situation. They did not look at what was needed for this family. I would like to ask how many of those 10 positions, are they all filled, or are any vacant?

 

Ms Melnick: Perhaps I could go back to the first part of the member's question. In fact, the department has been working with the individual, with the family and with the community support network, as well as the involved agency. So I understand that there is concern from the member, I understand that there is concern from the family, and I think it is important to recognize that, as in any case such as this, there would be a group of stakeholders, a group of team members, who would be working around the care.

 

      The second question dealt with the number. I think there was a question about the number of vacancies. Currently, all the positions in Winnipeg are filled. We believe that there may be a vacancy in the rural areas.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Was that a vacancy? One?

 

Ms. Melnick: My understanding is that there may be a vacancy in the rural areas.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister say the amount of money spent so far in consulting fees, studies and architectural plans spent on the upgrading of the Manitoba Developmental Centre?

 

Ms. Melnick: That would actually be a question for the Department of Transportation and Government Services as they would have been the ones who would have been doing the contracting.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Madam Chair, last year in Estimates the minister said in regard to MDC, and I am quoting this, "The population is aging. There are no plans to make changes at MDC." Recently, she said that plans have been in the works for four years to make changes at MDC. Now which is it?

 

Ms. Melnick: All of our facilities are under review on a continual basis. The concerns around the modernization of the Manitoba Developmental Centre are around safety issues for residents as well as for workers. They are also dealing with ensuring that the modernized facility would have universally accessible facilities, but if we go by the universally accessible guidelines, which we have adopted in our government, we would make sure that people with even quite severe mobility issues would be able to move around comfortably and freely within their home environment.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you. I recently visited with a very disabled person born with cerebral palsy who lives in his own home, is very immobile, confined to a chair which he has very limited movement to control. He is very, very happy living in his own home, and, in his words, "I make my decisions myself."

      Who did the minister consult with before she made the announcement to commit $40 million to redevelop the institution known as the Manitoba Developmental Centre?

 

Ms. Melnick: Because this was not a change in policy, we did not have a wide consultation. If there would be a change in policy, certainly, we would have that sort of consultation.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Was there a policy change then from last year when the minister said in Estimates that there are no plans to make changes at MDC?

 

Ms. Melnick: No, there is ongoing monitoring. We, as I have mentioned before, monitor all the facilities on an ongoing basis and recognize there were some safety issues we felt would be appropriate to address at this time, as well as accessibility issues at MDC.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: How many people currently live at MDC in Portage la Prairie?

 

Ms. Melnick: Our latest numbers show a total of 397.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I am sorry, was that 397?

 

Ms. Melnick: Our latest totals show a total of 397.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister say what the total number of people living at MDC was at this time last year?

 

Ms. Melnick: There were approximately 409.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: How many people are moving out of MDC in a year period?

 

Ms. Melnick: We average about six or seven discharges a year. There can be people passing away, as well. I will just get the totals from the last two years. For the year 2004-2005, there were seven discharges. In that same period, there were nine people who passed.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: How many vacancies or how many spots could be filled if people were to be moved in there? How many places would be available for other people?

 

Ms. Melnick: We do not have a total number, as such. As people are needing accommodation for various reasons to come into MDC, it is accom­modated according to their needs.

 

      One thing that I would like to point out is that the modernization of the Manitoba Developmental Centre is also based on dignity issues and life issues that would afford a person in the design more privacy, more accessibility, easier movement through the developmental centre. So there is not a set number per se. What we are dealing with are the needs of the individuals who are there now.

 

* (15:30)

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I think that if the minister is speaking about dignity and privacy, there is no more privacy and dignity a person can have other than being in their own home, in their own community.

 

      As I said, I visited people; they have their privacy, and certainly they have their dignity because they are making decisions, they are involved in making their decisions with their supporters that are there to care for them.

 

      Can the minister tell me what the staff ratio, staff-to-client ratio is at MDC?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, I think that the member has hit on an important issue which is community living. Certainly, our record on community living has been very positive. It was the previous administration under our political party that led the Welcome Home initiative. It is also this current administration since '99 that has raised the support 130 percent for community living, Mr. Speaker.

 

      Certainly, with the changes that will be happening at the Manitoba Developmental Centre, we will be looking to increase the rate of acceleration into the community so that what we will see, as we go through the redevelopment and the modernization of the Manitoba Developmental Centre, a lowering of the number of beds which will translate into the lowering of number of residents within the Manitoba Developmental Centre.

 

      I will just check on the ratio of, I think it was, residents to staff. Was that your question?

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Staff persons to residents.

 

Ms. Melnick: The current ratio is approximately 1.5 staff to resident.

      I would like to get into a bit of explanation on that. That, of course, takes into consideration the 24/7 care that happens at the Manitoba Develop­mental Centre. There is housekeeping. There is also a very wide variety of professional services that are provided to individuals as needs be, and the degree to which care would be provided would again be based on the needs of an individual. So, whether it be a very high-needs individual, there would be a higher concentration of support and care provided when we would compare that with an individual who would be deemed a lower needs.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell me how many deaths there were at MDC last year?

 

Ms. Melnick: We believe there were nine. That is what our numbers show.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister say how many of these deaths were subject to an inquest?

 

Ms. Melnick: There is one that we believe will be subject to an inquest. It would be the first, certainly, that we have experienced since 1999.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: During a briefing on MDC from the minister and her staff, she indicated that there may be other folks that would be considered eligible or would be considered to be moved into the Manitoba Developmental Centre. What types of other folks would that be?

 

Ms. Melnick: On any given year, there would be three to four new admissions.

 

      Now, I think it is important, again, to talk about what is the process through which an individual would be admitted into the Manitoba Developmental Centre. Through legislation brought in by the prev­ious administration in the nineties, there was quite a well-developed process established through which admittance to the MDC would be determined through a process that would lead us to MDC being a last resort.

 

      There would be various community options that would have to be tried that simply would not have worked. There would have to be a certain concern around the behaviour of an individual and then there would certainly have to be court approval given for a person to be admitted.

      I think it is important to recognize that this is the sort of process that we would take very seriously and that we would work with the Community Living community to make sure that any person that we would consider who would, perhaps, be going into MDC would really have exhausted all of the resources that would be available in the community.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I am not sure that I understand that that was an answer to my question. However, can the minister say then, are these other folks, are they high-risk people, and how many would that be?

 

Ms. Melnick: The individuals who would be admitted to MDC at this time would be individuals who would be deemed high risk. Now that could be high risk to themselves or that could be high risk to other people.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell us then if there is a long-term plan? With the $40 million redevelop­ment of this property and with less and less people every year living there, but other folks maybe that are high risk, is there an intention to turn this facility into a high-risk facility?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, what we are planning is a smaller facility, less beds. We are not planning that this would be a high-risk facility, rather that it would be a facility that would meet the needs of the individuals who are currently living there. Certainly, that number will diminish over time.

 

      I think it is also important to recognize that people may come into MDC who have, in fact, been living in the community who experience some form of destabilization. There can be a lot of efforts put forward in the community to help people stabilize, but when that is not possible, it is a facility that is used by the Community Living community to have people go to have the sort of intense services and supports and care they will need to stabilize, with every intention to move people back into the community when that stabilization has been achieved.

 

* (15:40)

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I am a huge proponent of placing people in the community and a proponent of a group of caregivers and substitute decision makers for vulnerable people and those who have some developmental difficulties, certainly recognizing that vulnerable people are a huge part of our society, and it is our duty to care for them in the most respected of manners.     I want to leave this and go to another area, but I will come back to it.

 

      I would like to ask the minister who owns the Hydra House homes.

 

Ms. Melnick: Hydra House owns the homes, Hydra House Incorporation.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: How many homes are there?

 

Ms. Melnick: The current number is 15.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: How many people are living in the Hydra House homes?

 

Ms. Melnick: Currently, there are 52 residents in the Hydra House homes.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister say how many residents were in the Hydra homes at this time last year?

 

Ms. Melnick: We do not have that number handy right now. I could get it if the member would like it?

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I find that very hard to believe. The minister has her staff at the table. She knows the questioning we are going to go on today. There is no reason not to have that information at hand. Yes, I would like to have the answer to that question.

 

Ms. Melnick: Okay, we will be able to get that for you.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: The last I recall, the number of people at Hydra House homes last year was around 90, would that be correct?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, I prefer that we get the exact number and then we will know what number it is we are actually going to be dealing with here.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell me what the budget was for Hydra House? What was the total funding provided to Hydra House? I am sorry, erase the budget, I am not speaking about budget. I am asking for the level of funding this government provided to Hydra House in 2003-2004.

 

Ms. Melnick: For 2003-2004, the total was $6,440,435.

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you. Can the minister tell me the amount of funding given to Hydra House in the year 2004 to 2005?

 

Ms. Melnick: The total for 2004-2005, $6,236,502.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell us what that breaks down to per client?

 

Ms. Melnick: We could look into the care plans if you would like, but I think that we have to be aware that funding per client can change, depending on the needs of the client. We do not have a set amount that is allotted. Rather, due to the vulnerable nature of these individuals, funding would be provided based on their needs. If there are improvements, and we find that less care is necessary at any given time, then we would have the funding changed. Also, if certain concerns arise and funding needs to be increased, we would be in discussion on a continual basis with the caretakers as to the needs of the individuals.

 

Mr. Ralph Eichler (Lakeside): Surely, the minister and her staff can give us the calculation based on the participants that are in the Hydra House, divide that out and give us those figures, then we will follow up with a follow-up question to that.

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, we could have a look at that again. I do not think that would speak to the needs of the individuals. Also, some individuals have moved out part way through the fiscal year. There were no new admissions since July 6, so to go on a kind of yardstick basis would be quite difficult to do, because there are a lot of individual characteristics that would determine care of any individual.

 

Mr. Eichler: I will help the minister and her staff out, then. If the math is too difficult for you, we will use the figure of $120,000 per client. Is that a fair assumption?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, I think we have to speak to the nature of the care provided to each individual at any given time, depending on their needs.

 

Mr. Eichler: What is the provincial average then, if you want to not talk about the Hydra House per-client base, what is the average within the province per client? Again, using your same information, you said each individual client has individual needs, what is the average per client within the province?

Ms. Melnick: Again, this is not speaking to any individual needs that we have, but a very basic overview would be for an individual who would be needing this level of care, there would be about $90,000 a year for residential costs, which would include the residence and the in-home care costs. The individual may be partaking in a day program that could go to another, say, $30,000 a year.

 

      Again, I want to be very careful here that we are speaking in very, very broad terms, and not about the individuals. Each and every individual has an individual care plan, so that is why I am hesitating to give sort of broad numbers like that.

 

* (15:50)

 

Mr. Eichler: Broad numbers are fine, Madam Minister. However, where we are going with this is that if the average residential cost, you say that it is, within the province of Manitoba, $90,000, and yet we are paying Hydra House $120,000 on average. Then what are you paying St. Amant for that same service, based on your generalities?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, again, as frustrating as I know this is for you, we have to talk on an individual basis, and there are different levels of care that can be provided now. Although the AG did say that there was no substantial difference in the funding provided to Hydra House or any other organization, the level of funding can fluctuate depending on the level of care that is needed overall. The individuals at Hydra House were all what we would determine Level 5, which were very high-needs individuals. Other organizations may be caring for some Level 5 individuals. They may be caring for various other levels. So that is why, as difficult as it is for you to hear this, I am quite hesitant to sort of put a number beside a name at any given time.

 

Mr. Eichler: This is very frustrating. You are trying to tell me that we have department staff here that cannot give us a number on average what it costs us within Hydra House. We are not asking for individuals based upon their particular needs. You cannot tell us as members of the Legislative Assembly what the cost comparison is for Hydra House as opposed to any other department that you have in Housing with cost based upon those clients' needs. Surely there is a median there that you can say, this is a good deal; this is not a good deal. That is what we are trying to ask you. Hydra House costs us $120,000 average, so the St. Amant Centre, what is that average? What is the average around the province? You have got three simple places there to try and base your figures on. Surely that is available to us with the technology we have out there today. I find that very hard to believe.

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, again, if we go back to the AG's report, he did state that there was not a major funding difference depending on the individual, and I will go back to the level of care needed. I know that, for example, St. Amant would provide care to people who are high needs, a Level 5. They would also provide care to people who are not as high needs, and so for individuals who are not as high needs, it stands to reason that the same degree of care would not be needed.

 

      I did, a few minutes ago, I believe, quote some overall numbers of approximately $90,000 for resi­dential care for Level 5, which all Hydra House residents are. I also talked about whether or not the individual would have the ability to attend a day program, and there could be costs associated with that around about the $30,000 range.

 

Mr. Eichler: I will rephrase it one more time. With Hydra House at $120,000, $90,000 for the average residential, what then is the St. Amant Centre cost to the province per client?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, again, I think we have to talk about the levels, and all individuals at Hydra House were Level 5. We gave a very broad estimate of approximately $90,000 for residential care and then, if the individual was able to participate in a day program, there could be approximate costs of about $30,000.

 

      So to compare where an individual is residing may not give a true picture as to the level of care that they are needing, and so that would not give a true picture as to the average amounts that would have to be spent to provide the care.

 

Mr. Eichler: I will do the math myself, Madam Minister. If you just give me the total cost that the Province pays to St. Amant Centre, and the number of participants. Those two figures.

 

Ms. Melnick: I will preface my remarks with a bit of an overview of St. Amant Centre. St. Amant Centre provides care mainly for individuals what would be determined as Levels 2 and 3. They are individuals who definitely need care. There are very few Level 5s at St. Amant Centre, as compared to the Hydra House individuals, who were all Level 5s.

 

      There is also community living as well as living within the centre itself. So, when we look at what was provided to St. Amant Centre for the year 2004-2005, there were 182 clients, residents of various natures, and there was $6,196,500 provided by the Province.

 

Mr. Eichler: When the minister contracts with various profit organizations for care, residential care, what is the range that they normally contract for, for residential care only?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, it is based on the individual. It is based very much on the individual needs. There are the various levels that are determined, and whether it is a for-profit or a not-for-profit, a personal-care plan is developed for each and every individual. Now, again, I will go back to a previous comment, where I talked about a fluctuation in the level of service that may be needed, the level of care that may be needed, depending on the individual's own particular situation at any given time.

 

      So we could see fluctuations within a year that may call for an increase in care, so, therefore, an increase in funding. We may also see, on the other side of the spectrum, an individual not needing the services they had previously needed. So we have to go back to the individual needs of each and every person that is being cared for by an organization.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you very much. Now, we have had a bit of a time here. I am just wondering if the minister now has the figures, the number of people that were in Hydra House at this time last year.

 

Ms. Melnick: We do not have that information handy, and no one here has left the table, but we will certainly provide it to the member as soon as we can.

 

* (16:00)

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I do not understand why you would not have this information at the table, Madam Minister. Madam Chair, the department heads are here, your deputies are here. You have other information. It seems to me you just do not want to provide this information on the record, and I am asking you to please provide me with that infor­mation.

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, we will provide that infor­mation for the member as soon as possible.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Madam Chair, if my recollection is right, the numbers at Hydra House were in the nineties. Now the minister is saying they are down to in the fifties. I would like to know where the people from Hydra House have gone.

 

Ms. Melnick: As I had mentioned previously, there has not been any more admittance into Hydra House since July 6 of 2004. Now what also happens in this area is that individuals can be taken under the care of another organization. So where there have been a couple of people who have passed, who were residing in the Hydra House residence, the vast majority of those transmissions that we have seen have been into the care of other organizations.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Where have the people from Hydra House gone? Specifically, what organizations or institutions now house the people from the Hydra House homes?

 

Mr. Doug Martindale, Acting Chairperson, in the Chair

 

Ms. Melnick: Some of the residents have gone into foster situations and to foster care positions. Some have gone to organizations such as DASCH, such as New Directions, so there have been various place­ments made.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Mr. Chair, have any persons from Hydra House homes been moved to St. Amant Centre?

 

Ms. Melnick: With the information that we have here, we understand that none have.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Is it correct that the government is currently negotiating with St. Amant Centre to take over the Hydra House homes?

 

Ms. Melnick: Yes, there is currently a very complex set of negotiations under way. Those negotiations do include St. Amant Centre as a possible organization to take over the care of the residents who are currently under Hydra House care.

Mrs. Taillieu: What funding will be provided to St. Amant to do this?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, as I said, we are just at a stage of negotiations. I think it would not be appropriate to be discussing anything specific, but any organization that would be taking over the care of residents who are currently under Hydra House would–again, there are personal care plans for each and every individual. Funding is provided based on the needs of those individuals regardless of the organization that would be providing that care.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Well, Madam Minister, you are talking about taking over the care of these people that now live in the Hydra House homes. Are they going to take over the home, or are you going to move them out of their homes into St. Amant Centre or St. Amant homes?

 

Ms. Melnick: I think we must let the negotiations take their course and must respect the process around negotiations that there are people at the table who are currently in discussion, and I think it would not be appropriate to speak of any specifics that may or may not be under discussion at this time.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Well, thank you, again. If you are in negotiations, you have to know where you want to go with this. You cannot just say you are negotiating, but you do not know what you are negotiating. I mean, if you are negotiating for the people in St. Amant to take over the care of people in Hydra House, then that is what you are doing. I would ask again, are the people from the Hydra House homes going to stay in their homes? Is that part of your plan, or is part of your plan to move them out of the homes they are currently in and move them into St. Amant Centre or into St. Amant homes?

 

Ms. Melnick: I just want to correct the record there. At no point did I say anyone was unaware of what they were negotiating. To quote myself from a few minutes ago, I said, "It is important to respect the process around negotiation." It is a complex process, as I am sure the member can recognize and can understand. I think it is very important that we allow the negotiations to play out as they will.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: When does the minister plan to fully disengage from Hydra House?

 

Ms. Melnick: I am hopeful that the negotiations under way will be completed in a relatively short period of time, but I also am very aware of the high needs of the individuals in Hydra House, so we must make sure that their needs would be respected as well.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Last year, Madam Minister, you indicated on September 3, "I, as minister, announce that this government will begin the process of disengagement from Hydra House. This will effec­tively end our relationship through a period of transition." It is six months later, and you are saying that you want to expedite this process. Okay, I will ask you this. Have any of the residential care licences been renewed for Hydra House? How many have been renewed?

 

Ms. Melnick: While we have residents in any facility, we have to make sure they are properly licensed, so all of the facilities are currently licensed. There is an annual review that typically takes place. I cannot give you the exact dates for any specific residence that is currently licensed under Hydra House or any other organization, but can assure you that the facilities that people are in are currently licensed.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you. So, in fact, you have not begun the process of disengagement with Hydra House because you have renewed all of the licences for the residential care at Hydra House. Is that correct?

 

* (16:10)

 

Ms. Melnick: I will point out that the disengagement really began on July 6, 2004 when the decision was made not to place any more residents, any new residents into the Hydra House facilities. We have discussed today that the number of residents has, in fact, declined for various reasons throughout the past months at Hydra House. I have confirmed that there are negotiations under way and that I am hoping that in the near future we will be, in fact, completely disengaged from Hydra House, but, again we have to be very respectful of the process of a negotiation.

 

      I think, to put it in perspective, we have to recognize that it did take at least ten years for this situation to develop and, yes, it will take time for the disengagement to be complete. I know that we all are concerned about the residents of Hydra House. We would not want any sort of quick decision, any sort of a not-well-thought-out decision to be put into place that might in some way put any risk on the vulnerable people who are currently residing in the Hydra House homes.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Madam Minister, you indicated that there is an annual review. When was the last time an annual review was done at Hydro House?

 

Ms. Melnick: That was in relation to any licensed facility that we would have, so any facility that we would have people placed in would be reviewed on an annual basis. It is through that process that any facility would be licensed. At that time, if there were any concerns raised around the physical setting of the home, there would be a record made of what had to be improved on and a time set for improvements to be made. So that is the sort of annual review that I was referring to a few moments ago.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: There has obviously been no disengagement from Hydra House. Hydra House is still fully engaged with the province and receiving similar funding this year as to last year. There are less people, the minister said they have been declining, although she is refusing to give me the numbers of people living there at this time last year. I am simply wanting to know what arrangements are going to be made for the people that live in Hydra House? When is this disengagement going to happen? What is going to happen to these people? Where are they going to live? Are they going to live in the homes that they are presently living in, or are they going to be moved?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, I will, perhaps, go through what I was speaking of a few moments ago, where I talked about the process of, on July 6, 2004, making the decision not to place any new people in. Individuals have moved out and there is a complex set of negotiations under way.

 

Madam Chairperson in the Chair

 

      I think it is also very important to recognize that where there are individuals still in Hydro House homes, I have made a commitment to the residents, to their families, to the caretakers and to the people of Manitoba, that these people would, in fact, receive the level of care that that they need.

 

      Some moments ago we talked about the different determinants of care and I noted that the Hydra House residents were all of a Level 5 category, which is the highest level within our system, so there can be very intense care needs that have to be provided on an individual basis to residents of Hydra House and any other Level 5 resident in any agency in which they may reside. That is the commitment that I made and that is the commitment that I will stand by for the people that are residing in Hydra House.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Since July 6 of 2004, it is my understanding that you said that no new people have been taken as clients at Hydra House. Where, then, have vulnerable people at any level been placed that would have been placed in Hydra House? Where are they now?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, this would speak to any individuals needing any care throughout the system. Again, I will go back to the establishment of a personal care plan which would be provided for each and every individual, and placements would be to organizations based on those needs. So there are certain organizations and agencies that deal with Level 5 care needs individuals. Some of those would be St. Amant Centre, some would be New Directions and some would be DASCH. So it is on that basis that we would be placing individuals.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you. Could you tell me the current number of people living at St. Amant Centre, both within the centre and community under the care of St. Amant Centre?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, we have to talk in this case in terms of children and adults. The Department of Family Services and Housing funds the adult residence of St. Amant Centre, be that within the centre itself or within a community living setting. I had quoted the number of 182 which we believe is the current number. The care of the children at St. Amant Centre is actually under the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority. Perhaps that question would be better put to the Department of Health.

 

Madam Chairperson: Could I just take a moment before recognizing you that perhaps we would like to introduce–

 

Ms. Melnick: Sorry about that, Madam Chair. I would like to introduce Gisela Rempel, who is the Assistant Deputy Minister for Services for Persons with Disabilities.

Mrs. Taillieu: Just for clarification then, when the minister said 182 at St. Amant Centre, that would be adults?

 

Ms. Melnick: When I used the number of 182, that is within the community program. That is adults and one child. The main residence which is funded by the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority would be approximately 200 residents. We believe the break­down there is approximately two thirds adult to children when we talk about the main residence.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: In regard to personal care plans, how often is a personal care plan reviewed?

 

Ms. Melnick: There is an effort to review personal care plans annually. Now, if a circumstance has seemed to change at any given time, certainly, there would be discussion around what the changes are, and what changes would have to be made in regard to the care of the individual.

 

* (16:20)

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Can the minister tell me who does the personal care plans?

 

Ms. Melnick: The review of any care plan at any given time would be done in a consultative process with Family Services staff, care providers or service providers, families, and where there are substitute decision makers, with the substitute decision makers.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Madam Chair, I just want to ask a few questions in regard to people with disabilities. I recently met with a young married couple. She was a person with a congenital disability, and he was a person who was not a disabled person but did have some health problems.

 

      Would the minister say it is government policy to cut off a disabled person's income assistance because she would get married?

 

Ms. Melnick: The provision of financial supports to an individual with disabilities would depend on the income of the household.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: So, if a person with disabilities who had been receiving a disability allowance married a person who was not disabled but had some health problems, was working and not working, would it be automatic then that because she was married she would be cut off of the disability assistance?

 

Ms. Melnick: Again, there would be consideration given to what the family income would be when determining eligibility for a social services program such as Persons with Disabilities through EIA.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: If a person is disabled and is able to work for a certain amount of time, and then because of a range of things that happen with disabled people, from depression to other health-related problems, and then they are unable to work for a portion of time, what appears to happen is if they make a certain amount of income two months in a row, then their income assistance is cut back and they have to actually live on less if they then find themselves unable to work.

 

      Many of these people do not work in a traditional type of job where they would get sick leave or vacation time. They kind of go between jobs, and when they work, they work, and when they do not, they do not. It is causing some definite problems with those people that try and work, want to get off the system, want to become taxpayers in the province, want to make their own way, but find it difficult when there is really no incentive to go beyond a certain level because then they will be cut off their assistance. They know that in the future if they have some problems occur, they are going to have to apply to get back on the system and they find that very difficult.

 

      I think when you go through the maze of forms and the bureaucracy that any person has to go through dealing with government, it is difficult. It is even more difficult for disabled people, people that are maybe just a bit less mobile in getting to the offices, maybe have some difficulty when filling out the forms.

 

      I would just like to ask the minister: Are there no personal plans for people with disabilities, for people on income assistance, to help them through situa­tions, especially people with disabilities who work and then do not work, is there no personal plan for these people?

 

Ms. Melnick: Certainly, changes have been made since 1999 that are addressing some of the concerns that you have raised. One is when we are dealing with individuals with disabilities, we have brought in what is called rapid re-enrolment. This is a part of the system where, if an individual has a disability and is moving in and out of the workforce based on their ability, a lot of the scenario that you just outlined would, in fact, not be part of their exper­ience in that they would be enrolled rapidly. So there would be a picking up of where they had left off in regard to accessing services.

 

      We also raised earnings exemptions in July of 2000 for single parents and families with children to $115 plus 25 percent of earnings in excess of the $115. There is another category of "other earning exemptions" that has been raised for single parents with disabilities, which was increased to $115 plus 30 percent in earnings in excess of $115.

 

      Also, I wanted to point out that we did establish an exemption of lump-sum payments for persons with disabilities up to the amount of $100,000. This would be, for example, if an individual won the lottery, if an individual received an inheritance, if there was an insurance claim that an individual was successful in, the individual could take up to $100,000 of that without losing any of their benefits.

     

      The theory behind that is that we would ask that the individual spend that money on improving their lifestyle, for example, renovating their home so that it becomes universally accessible, widening door frames, using push door handles rather than the turn, perhaps getting rid of stairs leading in and out of the entrance of their home so that there would be a ramp which would make that easier perhaps, and up­grading of washroom facilities, lowering of counter levels if the person was in a wheelchair. Those are some of the things that we have done in an attempt to address some of the concerns that you have raised.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Well, it is just all fine to make all these policies and put out press releases and say all the wonderful things you think you have accom­plished, but when you talk to people that are not getting the help in the system they need, they do not have this information. I am sure your workers do not have this information. Who is communicating this information to the people that need it? I have spoken to many people. They have no idea. They do not know where to go anymore. I am asking how these disabled people that even have trouble getting around, how do they get this information. Do you have a list where you send out all this information to all the people?

* (16:30)

 

Ms. Melnick: When a person is receiving assistance, they should be receiving all this information. We can work within the department to make sure that information is further disseminated. I would ask the member, she has spoken a couple of times this afternoon of having discussions with individuals, if she would like to chat with me further in a more confidential setting about the individuals. We would be very happy to make sure that they in fact get whatever information they may be needing delivered to them.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: I will do that. I will ask that they get the information they need, but I would also ask that they get the personal program that they need and that they be assisted to get the income assistance that they need and have it tailored to their needs. Oh, sorry. I am losing it.

 

      I just would like to go back now and ask some more questions in regard to the devolution process.

 

Ms. Melnick: We are just getting staff up here if you would not mind waiting for just a moment.

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): I am going to throw  musical chairs on the minister and her staff. I have a few questions on domestic violence and family interventions. Sorry about that.

 

      I would like to ask a few questions, and I would like to have the questions be focussed on a global basis instead of specific to a section. I did not realize that you are going to a specific section.

 

Madam Chairperson: Is it agreed that we discuss on a global level, Madam Minister?

 

Ms. Melnick: Sure. As long as time can be allotted to make sure that the proper people are up here.

 

Madam Chairperson: Agreed? [Agreed]

 

Ms. Melnick: I think the member from Minnedosa talked about domestic violence. So I would just like to introduce Sharon Kuropatwa, who is from our Family Violence Prevention Program. She is a policy analyst.

 

Mrs. Rowat: Over the last weekend, we as Manitobans were saddened to learn of a very tragic event that occurred. A family lost a mother of three small children and also a father of some children of his own, and the whole family is grieving and have several questions regarding how something so tragic could happen to them. We as a society are also suffering with them and wondering how we as a society could allow and let something like this happen.

 

      My questions for the minister are specific to a few areas in Family Services and wondering what we can do to ensure that when women decide on their own to leave a situation that is unsafe and take their children and do what they know and believe is important to keep themselves and their children safe. In a situation like that which occurred this weekend, the woman was not motivated by anyone other than herself. She, on her own, located and determined a safe place. She found somebody that would protect her. Unfortunately, a tragedy occurred in her judgment and choice of supports. We did not help her as a society, and I think that all of us were saddened. We are really concerned about what message we are sending out to women who are looking at leaving an abusive situation.

 

      I, as a legislator, am going to try to look for answers on how we can strengthen the supports and to give, not necessarily her, but in her memory, ways that we can improve this system and ensure that measures are in place to address this.

 

      My understanding from individuals who work in the system of domestic violence is that measures currently in place are not working. My understanding is that protection orders and restraining orders that are being asked for are not necessarily always being granted. My understanding in discussions with the Minister of Justice (Mr. Mackintosh) in Justice Estimates a short time ago, that of 527 applications, only 305 were granted and that 222 were denied.

 

      That is almost a 50% denial rate, and I have asked the minister to provide rationale on the reasons why when a family member or a women or a man come forward and ask for judicial support, asking for help and asking to be kept safe, are denied. I am hoping that he will provide that information.

 

      I am also asking this minister, who is responsible for families, that she will also lobby and discuss and do what she can to work with the Department of Justice to ensure that stop gap measures are put into place before, as the Minister of Justice had indicated, the legislation comes forward and is brought forward in October. We need measures now, and we need to show Manitobans who are looking at us for support and help that we are working towards doing this.

 

      My question to the minister is I am looking at some information that was shared by a spokesperson for the Department of Justice. They spoke about the expansion of specialized domestic violence services to 28 communities. I would like her to speak to that to some degree, and I would also like her to share–I will leave it at that, and I will come to the next question.

 

Ms. Melnick: I certainly agree with the member from Minnedosa about the seriousness of what occurred last weekend and the overall seriousness of domestic violence. I think her question is rather broad, so I will give a rather broad answer, and if there are more specifics then I encourage her to ask.

 

      Since coming into government in 1999, our overall budget for domestic violence has increased by some 51 percent. There has been a 41% increase in shelters. We recognize that there are a lot of men who want to deal with these issues which is why, for the first time in the history of Manitoba, we have begun to fund the men's resource centre.

 

      The mandate of the men's resource centre is to help men deal with issues of violence, perhaps incidents in their own past, cycles that they may be experiencing and to help them find ways to not turn to violence when difficulties arise. As I said, this is the first centre of its kind in the history of Manitoba and it is only one of three across the country of Canada. So it would be perhaps appropriate to encourage that other such centres develop.

 

* (16:40)

 

      Also in the women's shelters, of which we have 10 in Manitoba, 2 in Winnipeg, and the rest in rural areas, workers there are trained that, if a male comes to them with these concerns, they will know where to refer these men to and, in fact, would be able to help them financially to get to the places which would be dealing with men who are wanting to deal with their issues of violence.

 

      In 1999, November was designated as Domestic Violence Prevention Month, and the main focus of that is public education. Public education on what is domestic violence, public education on where you can get support to leave a situation, public information on where counselling would be avail­able, and on an annual basis the department sends out roughly 10 000 packages throughout the province that would be going to public libraries, public offices, government offices.

 

      I think we have also seen the bus shelters. There is a real desire to make sure that people, wherever they might be, might be able to access some education as to how to stop a cycle of violence, or how to get out of a cycle of violence.

 

      We are also supporting second-stage housing. There is a need to, when a woman says, "no more," to make sure that there are safe places for her to go, which in many cases, would be a shelter. We also have to work together to ensure that there is a way for her to stay out of those situations, which is also why we are so supportive of the program run out of Ma Mawi, in which an individual woman can go and, for no cost, get furniture that she may need and other things that she may need to set up a home.

 

      While I recognize that we have gone a distance, a great distance, it was also very upsetting to hear of what had happened over the weekend.

 

Mrs. Rowat: I was interested in hearing what the minister had to say, but, obviously, there are definitely flaws to the system. There seems to be measures that are not working for families when things like the murder-suicide on the weekend occur. The Minister of Justice (Mr. Mackintosh) spokes­person indicated that training and resources is the main reason for the delay in proclaiming that domestic violence legislation.

 

      I guess my question is, if we know that there are issues and we know that the measures that are in place are not working, why do we have to wait for the domestic violence legislation to pass before we take action and start working on stop-gap measures to address this issue? I find a little concerning and confusing that she would want to wait for legislation when situations like this occur.

 

Ms. Melnick: Certainly, I cannot speak for the Minister of Justice, I think he does a fine job of that, and certainly your questions would be best put to him on his legislation.

      We also provide, in the province of Manitoba, $400,000 to shelter services to implement a toll-free crisis information line. Now, statistics have shown us that this line is often used as a prevention tool to avoid situations happening. I think we may be one of the only jurisdictions across Canada to provide that. We are also providing funding for follow-up workers at shelter services, again in an effort to help a woman stay out of a situation during the post-crisis stage.

 

      Manitoba is also providing support and funding for children's counsellors at shelter services, and this can also be seen as a preventative to end the cycle that we are aware can occur. As part of the con­tinuum of services, we also provide interim housing units for individuals through an agreement with our housing department.

 

      We are also, I believe, one of if not the first jurisdiction in Canada to bring in a children's visitation access and exchange service that is avail­able in Winnipeg, Brandon, Thompson and Selkirk. We are providing services to 34 agencies, over $10 million this year. I think it is not accurate to say that we are not doing anything. I think it is accurate to say that we have to continually look to improve our services, to work with our community which, in fact, we are very interested in doing, and we also have to ensure the services that are being provided are effective, are helpful, and that we are making sure we are providing the best we can with the view to improve where we can.

 

Mrs. Rowat: A quick question. I am very concerned with the statistical numbers that are showing that restraining or prevention orders are almost at a 50% denial. If the minister wants to do something about training and resources and working within the system to improve supports, I think this is an area she could do some work in and look at. I do believe this is very upsetting to a number of individuals who have tried to get restraining orders, and I am not quite sure what the rationale would be in denying these orders.

 

      One final question to the minister. The NDP government is apparently providing $40,000 to A Woman's Place, which is a downtown clinic that supports victims of domestic violence. What is that $40,000 going to be used for? What is the purpose of the centre?

 

Ms. Melnick: A Woman's Place is the first of its kind in Canada. I believe there may be a few in various jurisdictions throughout the United States. A Woman's Place is a unique model in that there are services that would be provided for women who do not qualify for civil legal aid.

 

      There is agreement between the Department of Justice and the Department of Family Services to provide a virtual cornucopia of services for women who may be having to re-establish themselves. If we go through the list, there would be legal advice provided to her on whatever her individual situation is. There would be information provided to her on how to access the type of housing that she may be requiring. Child care services, she would be made aware of those, certain counselling services.

 

      We also work with Nor'West Co-op on this, and they are providing counselling support services. It is a model that we are monitoring, that we are looking at and in fact we are very proud that we have brought this forward. It is another area that we are hoping women will be able to access the services they need to get out of bad situations and begin again and eventually find themselves in a safe and very positive living and life situation.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Thank you. It has been five years, I think, since the government has initiated the Abori­ginal Justice Inquiry Child Welfare Initiative, but what we are hearing from people within the system is there is a horrendous push on right now in the last couple of months to get those case works transferred. There is a flurry of secondments within the depart­ment which is causing enormous stress on the people that work in the department and, in fact, the chaotic upheaval of the department, the fear is that there is compromised care for children that are cared for within this system.

 

      Can the minister tell me what was the cutoff date to take children into care into child care agencies?

 

Ms. Melnick: There is no cutoff date for taking children into care.

 

* (16:50)

 

Mrs. Taillieu: What was the cutoff date then for no new referrals to Family Service units?

 

Ms. Melnick: I believe that in January of this year there was a plan put in place where intake would be done through other areas of the department so that the area of Child and Family Services that is working on the roll out could be focussing on the roll out, but there has been no cutoff of taking children into care.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Where are children taken into care? What is the first area?

 

Ms. Melnick: There is a joint intake which is typically used to take children into care. There is also the after-hours intake so that there is 24/7 coverage. If there needs be an apprehension, there is also the emergency intake in which the emergency team would go out to where the child is located, and the intake process would begin through that.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: In the case of an emergency intake and a child is taken into care, where are they then placed now?

 

Ms. Melnick: Well, the first option would be kinship care in which a child would be placed under the care of a family member, someone they are familiar with, someone they know, someone who knows them. We have also emergency foster beds which we have just opened, close to 70 new ones, and those certainly would be the second choice to kinship care. There would then be a shelter placement, if necessary, and as a last resort, a hotel placement. The hotel placements would be primarily used to maintain sibling groups. This is a policy that we brought in in May of 2004, where recognizing the trauma of being taken into care, we felt it was best to keep sibling groups together. Certainly, the vast majority of the emergency foster beds that we have within the system are for children under the age of eight or for sibling groups. This is something that was strongly recommended by the Children's Advocate in her report, and it is something that we undertook to work on immediately.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: We have heard that students have been hired to do file summary transfers. What students and how many have been hired to do file summary transfers?

 

Ms. Melnick: We have hired some social work students to do more administrative tasks. They are not doing any front-line casework. They are not dealing hands-on with individual situations. It is more a filing role, an administrative role, that they are playing.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Then you are saying, Madam Minister, there are no students doing file summary transfers?

Ms. Melnick: They are working under the supervision of social workers to help with the file transfers. So the tasks that they may be undertaking could be file summaries, but I just would stress that it certainly is with supervision of professional social workers.

 

Mrs. Taillieu: Well, which is it, Madam Minister? First you say they are just doing filing and adminis­trative things, now you say they are actually doing case summaries.

 

Ms. Melnick: Perhaps I could clarify. They are doing administrative tasks around the transferring of files which could include case summaries. But, again, I would stress it is under the supervision of professionals.