LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

 

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

 


The House met at 1:30 p.m.

 

PRAYERS

 

ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS

 

PETITIONS

 

Provincial Road 355

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): Mr. Speaker, 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 Harold Gilleshammer, Jim Graham, Sandy Opruk-Merke and others.

 

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

 

Pembina Trails School Division–New High School

 

Mr. John Loewen (Fort Whyte): Mr. Speaker, 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.

 

* (13:35)

 

      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 Parmjit Singh, Orisha Braun, Cynthia Letkemann and many others.

 

Ambulance Service

 

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

 

      These are the reasons for this 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 Liz Smith, David Smith, Joan Smith and many, many others.

 

Minimum Sitting Days for Manitoba Legislature

 

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

 

      The background to this petition is as follows:

 

      The Manitoba Legislature sat for only 35 days in 2003.

 

      In 2004, there were 55 sitting days.

 

      The number of sitting days has a direct impact on the issue of public accountability.

 

      The Legislative Assembly provides the best forum for all MLAs to debate and ask questions of the government, and it is critical that all MLAs be provided the time needed in order for them to cover constituent and party duties.

 

      Establishing a minimum number of sitting days could prevent the government of the day from limiting the rights of opposition members from being able to ask questions.

 

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba to consider recognizing the need to sit for a minimum of 80 days in any given calendar year.

 

      Signed by B. Singh, Paramjit Singh and Raj Singh.

 

* (13:40)

 

Coverage of Insulin Pumps

 

Mr. Gerald Hawranik (Lac du Bonnet): 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 the 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 much healthier, complication-free individuals.

 

      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.

 

      Signed by Odette Moffat, Joan Stenberg and Doris Vieville.

 

Closure of Victoria General Hospital

Maternity Ward

 

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

 

      The background to this petition is as follows:

 

      It has been decided that the birthing ward at the Victoria General Hospital in Winnipeg, Manitoba, will be closed.

 

      Some say the birthing ward is being closed due to safety issues. It has been proven time and time again that outcomes for normal pregnancies in normal women are better in a community hospital like the Victoria General Hospital than in a tertiary care centre like the Health Sciences Centre and with a general practitioner or midwife, rather than an obstetrician. Not a single study has ever shown the contrary.

 

      Obstetrics services at community hospitals can work if the political will is there to make them work.

 

      We petition the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as follows:

 

      To request the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale) to allow women options when they give birth and to consider stopping the planned closure of the Victoria General Hospital maternity ward.

 

      Signed by Bobbie-Jo Ratte, Kirk Wilkie and Brad Yamaoka.

 

COMMITTEE REPORTS

 

Standing Committee on Legislative Affairs

Fourth Report

 

Ms. Kerri Irvin-Ross (Vice-Chairperson): Mr. Speaker, I wish to present the Fourth Report of the Standing Committee on Legislative Affairs.

Madam Clerk (Patricia Chaychuk): Your Standing Committee on Legislative Affairs presents the fol­lowing as its Fourth Report.

 

Mr. Speaker: Dispense.

 

* (13:45)

 

Your Standing Committee on Legislative Affairs presents the following as its Fourth Report.

 

Meetings:

Your committee met on Monday, April 25, 2005, at 6:30 p.m. in Room 255 of the Legislative Building.

 

Matters under Consideration:

Bill 12 – The Liquor Control Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réglementation des alcools

Bill 13 - The Milk Prices Review Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur le contrôle du prix du lait

Bill 23 - The Workplace Safety and Health Amendment Act (Needles in Medical Work­places)/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la sécurité et l'hygiène du travail (aiguilles utilisées en milieu médical)

 

Committee Membership:

Substitutions received prior to commencement of meeting:

Hon. Ms. Wowchuk for Mr. Aglugub

Hon. Mr. Smith for Mr. Altemeyer

Hon. Ms. Allan for Hon. Mr. Mackintosh

Mr. Eichler for Mr. Cummings

Mr. Cullen for Mr. Goertzen

Mr. Schuler for Mr. Loewen

Mr. Rocan for Mr. Penner

 

Public Presentations:

Your committee heard 3 presentations on Bill 12 – The Liquor Control Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réglementation des alcohols, from the following organizations:

Deanne Olston, Rivercrest Motor Hotel

Gary Desrosiers, Brunkild Bar

Jim Baker, Manitoba Hotel Association

 

Your committee heard 1 presentation on Bill 13 – The Milk Prices Review Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur le contrôle du prix du lait, from the following organization:

James Wade, Dairy Farmers of Manitoba

 

Your committee heard 2 presentations on Bill 23 – The Workplace Safety and Health Amendment Act (Needles in Medical Workplaces)/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la sécurité et l'hygiène du travail (aiguilles utilisées en milieu médical), from the following organizations:

 

Ted Mansell, Service Employees International Union

John Doyle, Manitoba Federation of Labour

 

Written Submissions:

Your committee received 1 written submission on Bill 12 – The Liquor Control Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réglementation des alcohols, from the following organization:

Leo Ledohowski, Canad Inns

 

Bills Considered and Reported:

Bill 12 – The Liquor Control Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la réglementation des alcools

Your committee agreed to report this bill, with the following amendment:

 

     THAT the French version of Clause 5(2)(a) of the Bill be replaced with the following:

 

     a)dans le passage introductif, par substitution, à « des vins », de « des produits »;

 

Bill 13 - The Milk Prices Review Amendment Act/Loi modifiant la Loi sur le contrôle du prix du lait

 

Your committee agreed to report this bill, without amendment.

 

Bill 23 - The Workplace Safety and Health Amendment Act (Needles in Medical Work­places)/Loi modifiant la Loi sur la sécurité et l'hygiène du travail (aiguilles utilisées en milieu médical)

 

Your committee agreed to report this bill, without amendment.

 

* (13:50)

 

Ms. Irvin-Ross: Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the honourable Member for Minto (Mr. Swan), that the report of the committee be received.

 

Motion agreed to.

 

TABLING OF REPORTS

 

Hon. Steve Ashton (Minister of Water Steward­ship): I am pleased to table the Supplementary Information for Estimates for Water Stewardship.

 

Hon. Theresa Oswald (Minister responsible for Healthy Living): Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to table the Supplementary Information for Legislative Review 2005-2006, Departmental Expenditure Estimates for the Department of Healthy Child Manitoba.

 

INTRODUCTION OF BILLS

 

Bill 34–The Highway Traffic Amendment Act

 

Hon. Gord Mackintosh (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the Minister of Transportation and Government Services (Mr. Lemieux), that Bill 34, The Highway Traffic Amendment Act; Loi modifiant le Code de la route, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Speaker: It has been moved by the honourable Attorney General, seconded by the honourable Minister of Transportation and Government Serv­ices, that Bill 34, The Highway Traffic Amendment Act, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Mackintosh: This bill notably, Mr. Speaker, enhances some sanctions, including for drivers convicted of impaired driving with a child passenger, and for offences resulting in death.

 

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

 

Bill 38–The Residential Tenancies

Amendment Act

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, I move, seconded by the Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines (Mr. Rondeau), that Bill 38, The Residential Tenancies Amendment Act; Loi modifiant la Loi sur la location à usage d'habitation, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Speaker: It has been moved by the honourable Minister of Finance, seconded by the honourable Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines, that Bill 38, The Residential Tenancies Amendment Act, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Selinger: Mr. Speaker, this legislation is a balanced package which will increase consumer protection for tenants, while at the same time providing targeted incentives for landlords to improve their properties.

 

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

 

Bill 39–The Investment Trust

Unitholders' Protection Act

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): I move, seconded by the Minister of Justice (Mr. Mackintosh), that The Investment Trust Unitholders' Protection Law; Loi sur l'immunité des détenteurs d'unités de societés de placement, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Speaker: It has been moved by the honourable Minister of Finance, seconded by the honourable Attorney General, that Bill 39, The Investment Trust Unitholders' Protection Act, be now read a first time.

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, Mr. Speaker, this piece of legislation protects the beneficiary of an income trust from liability as a beneficiary for a trustee's act, default, obligation or a liability arising after the bill comes into force. The protection applies only to a trust that is reporting issuer under The Securities Act.

 

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 public gallery where we have with us today 20 students from Minitonas Middle School. These students are under the direction of Mr. Mel Lausman and are the guests of the honourable Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives (Ms. Wowchuk).

 

      Also in the public gallery we have from Selby Area High School from Selby, South Dakota, U.S.A. 32 Grades 9 to 12 students under the direction of Mr. Sam Glantzow.

 

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

 

* (13:55)

 

ORAL QUESTIONS

 

Floodway Authority

Eugene Kostyra Appointment

 

Mr. Stuart Murray (Leader of the Official Opposition): Mr. Speaker, last month we discovered that this Premier and his Cabinet quietly appointed former NDP Cabinet minister Eugene Kostyra as chair of the Floodway Authority.

 

      As much as the NDP attempted to downplay this issue, the appointment of a long-time CUPE union boss to a key position just prior to the start of the floodway expansion project is no coincidence. Just as Mr. Kostyra devoted his time with CUPE to recruiting new members and encouraging collective action and militancy against business and govern­ment, he is using his current position in the Floodway Authority to do exactly the same thing.

 

      Mr. Speaker, can the Premier explain why his floodway management agreement forces employers of non-unionized companies to hand over their names and addresses of their workers to Mr. Kostyra and the Floodway Authority?

 

Hon. Gary Doer (Premier): Mr. Speaker, the member opposite always only tells half of the truth on these issues. There is an agreement–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Doer: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. The issue of the floodway agreement includes two parts. One, of course, is the part referenced by members opposite not to the same insidious degree that he talks about, and secondly, it also provides for no strike or lockout during the period of time of the construction of the floodway.

 

      We think, on this side–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. The honourable First Minister has the floor.

 

Mr. Doer: We think, given the $85-million liability per year of failure to construct the floodway and the risk it presents to people in the Red River Valley, it is prudent to build the expansion of the floodway which we are doing. It is prudent to negotiate the funding for the expansion of the floodway which we are doing. It is prudent to have protection for the people in Winnipeg beyond the largest flood ever in the history of the province which will, of course, happen with the construction of the floodway. We are builders. We are builders of this floodway with no strike or lockout. They are not builders, Mr. Speaker.

 

Mr. Murray: Mr. Speaker, I know the Premier does not understand this, but we on this side of the House do understand that non-unionized companies never go on strike. Given the opportunity that is how it works.

 

      Mr. Speaker, the only reason he is forcing companies to hand over their names and addresses of workers to Mr. Kostyra is so the information can be used in union-organizing drives. That is a shameful abuse of the office of the Premier and he should put an end to it.

 

      Mr. Speaker, my office received a copy of a March 2001 speech that Mr. Kostyra, who at the time was this government's community and economic development committee secretary and made it in Australia at a union organizing conference, in discussing his union boss' success, and I quote from the speech, "Building local unions to greater mili­tancy at the bargaining table and against right-wing employers and governments" was one of Mr. Kostyra's most telling comments. From his speech I say Mr. Kostyra said, "We wanted shop stewards to do more than just deal with workplace grievances. We sought to encourage them to act as union builders in their workplaces."

 

      Well, Mr. Speaker, this NDP Premier, who was in debt to his union boss friends, who ultimately got him elected, put Eugene Kostyra in charge of the floodway to gather those names to carry out his political payback scheme.

 

      Mr. Speaker, it is an abuse of power. I would ask this Premier to do the right thing and take Mr. Eugene Kostyra, a political appointee, out of the Floodway Authority and replace him with somebody who is impartial on behalf of the taxpayers of Manitoba.

 

Mr. Doer: Well, Mr. Speaker, I would point out there has been an election since the banning of union and corporate donations here in Manitoba. As I recall, the last election seemed to go even better for us than it did in 1999. So here we have–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

* (14:00)

 

Mr. Doer: Thank you, Mr. Speaker. In the agreement we have a ban of any strikes or lockouts, and of course, with floodway construction including bridge work, there are building trade organizations that are part of unions. So, therefore, we will not have a delay on the bridge work with a no-strike or lockout provision. Secondly, we have banned union and corporate donations here in Manitoba.

 

      I would challenge the Leader of the Opposition to tell the people of Manitoba is he going back to the old way of having union and corporate donations in Manitoba, if God forbid, he is ever elected. Is he going to keep the new law?

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. We are fairly early into Question Period and we have students up in the gallery and we have the viewing public. I am sure they came all the way down here to be able to hear the questions and the answers. I ask the co-operation of all honourable members.

 

Government Contracts

Tender Process

 

Mr. Stuart Murray (Leader of the Official Opposition): Mr. Speaker, one thing I would tell this Premier that when elected we would not force non-unionized workers to pay union dues. We would expand the floodway the way that Duff Roblin did, without a forced union agreement. That is what we would do.

 

      Mr. Speaker, back to the issue which the Premier has avoided. To quote Mr. Kostyra at that unionized organizing conference in Australia, I quote what Mr. Kostyra said, "At present I work for the government and the Province of Manitoba in Canada. The NDP is closely aligned with labour and I am one of a number of labour folks that have been hired by the government."

 

      Mr. Speaker, this Premier has stacked his government with political friends because he is abusing his power and needs political payback for his union boss friends. Hopefully this Premier can assure all Manitobans that not one Manitoba taxpayer dime went to pay Mr. Kostyra's trip to Australia in 2001.

 

      Mr. Speaker, aside from using the floodway expansion project to flow taxpayer dollars to NDP union bosses, it has been brought to my attention that the Premier has admitted to not properly tendering a number of government contracts. I quote, "Last week when we were questioning the Premier whether he would force a similar labour agreement on the Hydro building downtown." He also told CJOB and I quote, "Ninety-nine percent of Manitoba projects have proper tendering."

 

      Well, Mr. Speaker, he is acknowledging that 1 percent of government contracts are not properly tendered. I would like to ask this Premier how many contracts did the NDP not properly tender, how much money were they worth and which political NDP friends did they go to.

 

Hon. Gary Doer (Premier): Mr. Speaker, we will put our political appointees that come and go with the government against Mr. Jules Benson and Mr. Taras Sokolyk any day of the week. We will put them against them. I know nobody is perfect, but I certainly believe–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Doer: When the member was asking about building and tendering I explained to the media and I will explain it to the Leader of the Opposition that when it is the Brandon general hospital, whether it is the Swan River hospital, whether it is the Gimli hospital, whether it is the Health Sciences Centre, whether it is the expansion of Concordia, whether it is the new Hydro building, whether it is a lot of other buildings that have gone on, the new arena that the members opposite were opposed to, the Pan Am Clinic, a new clinic, the primary health care unit in River East, on and on and on, the buildings we are building go through a process that is not required to have a no-strike, no-lockout provision.

 

      The floodway, Mr. Speaker, we believe it was recommended to us, is an exception. We believe the floodway agreement is similar to Hydro dams in the 1960s that were with labour agreements to require no strike or lockout similar to other projects. I would point out that when the member opposite worked for the former Prime Minister, there was the Confed­eration Bridge built by Brian Mulroney, not exactly a New Democrat, that had a no-strike, no-lockout labour agreement in place.

 

Floodway Authority

Eugene Kostyra Appointment

 

Mr. Jack Penner (Emerson): Mr. Speaker, the forced unionization of the floodway expansion workers is a shameful act by the NDP government. The Premier's decision to quietly place Eugene Kostyra, a former union boss and former NDP Finance Minister as chair of the Floodway Authority, reveals the Premier's true intention with the floodway expansion.

 

      Mr. Speaker, will the Minister of Water Stewardship tell this House, tell us all, why they are trying to unionize an industry that has currently chosen not to be unionized?

 

Hon. Steve Ashton (Minister of Water Steward­ship): Mr. Speaker, I am very pleased the floodway expansion is proceeding. In fact we are optimistic the construction will be underway this summer. That, by the way, is the focus of pretty well 99 percent of Manitobans. By the way, you do not have to ask which 1 percent I am talking about or ask about anything other than when it is going to be built.

 

      By the way, Mr. Speaker, this may be news to members opposite but we are getting many inquiries from contractors. The main question the people are asking is when are the contracts going to be tendered? How large are the contracts? What oppor­tunities are going to be there for Manitoba? We believe there are going to be tremendous oppor­tunities for Manitoba workers, unionized or non-unionized and Manitoba companies, unionized and non-unionized.

 

Mr. Penner: Mr. Speaker, the minister, the Premier and Eugene Kostyra's plan involves the Floodway Authority. In other words, Mr. Kostyra himself is handing over to the unions the names, addresses and phone numbers of all the workers of the Floodway Authority. This information is going to be used by Mr. Kostyra and the unions to try and organize the heavy construction industry. The minister's true motives are showing.

 

      Why is he shamelessly trying to force the unionization on an industry that simply does not want to be unionized?

 

Mr. Ashton: Mr. Speaker, I think members opposite may want to take off their ideological blinkers and recognize there are unionized companies and there are non-unionized companies in this province. There are unionized workers and there are non-unionized workers in this province. The project management agreement will give opportunities to all those Manitobans.

 

Mr. Penner: Mr. Speaker, talk about having blinkers on and an agenda. We hear from the Premier's right-hand man himself, Eugene Kostyra, who says that his government's own intention is to put union builders into the workplace and union people into government, this government that stripped workers of their democratic right to a secret ballot. Will the minister revoke Mr. Kostyra's appointment today and replace it with someone that is impartial?

 

Mr. Ashton: While we are speaking of the ideological blinkers and members opposite, I would like to remind members opposite, Mr. Speaker, this critic called the provisions that would apply employ­ment equity for Aboriginal people, for minorities and for women, he called it apartheid.

 

      We, Mr. Speaker, are with the majority of Manitobans. We think the workforce should reflect the diversity of this province, and thanks to the project management agreement, it will reflect the diversity of this province.

Prairie Production Centre

Purchase Justification

 

Mr. Jack Reimer (Southdale): Mr. Speaker, recently we have seen this NDP government pur­chase the Prairie Production Centre for $3 million when it was previously offered to this government for $1 plus a write-off of the debts. One of the major companies holding debt was the Assiniboine Credit Union, a company in which Eugene Kostyra was the previous president and now is the secretary to the Community and Economic Development Committee of Cabinet and at Treasury Board.

 

      Mr. Speaker, to the Minister of Finance: Was this the reason the money-losing company was purchased, to bail out an old friend with taxpayers' money?

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, the facility was purchased to provide the kind of venue that will attract film producers and film makers to this province to grow an industry which has seen a lot of success in the last few years. That facility is one of the keys to being able to attract that kind of investment to this province.

 

Mr. Reimer: Well, Mr. Speaker, let me ask the minister if he has any knowledge as to whether there was any contact, conversation or representation made by the present member of the board of the Assiniboine Credit Union, Mr. Geof Langen, who is the executive assistant to the vice-chair of Treasury Board, and the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale) as to look favourably upon the purchase of this money-losing business that the credit union had to recoup its investment in. Was there contact made?

 

Mr. Selinger: Mr. Speaker, the specifics of that question I will obviously have to take as notice.

 

* (14:10)

 

Mr. Reimer: Mr. Speaker, it looks a bit too cosy. We have the secretary to the Community Economic Development Committee of Cabinet, who also sits at the Treasury Board, who was the previous president of the Assiniboine Credit Union, who was the major creditor and holder of monies in the Prairie Production Centre. We have the executive assistant to the vice-chair of the committee of Cabinet, pardon me, of Treasury Board, the Minister of Health. There just seems too much cosiness in here to not ask the question: Was this the reason why the Prairie Production Centre was purchased to bail out the credit union and to get their debt paid?

 

Mr. Selinger: The member had a somewhat garbled question with all those relationships he was trying to identify. I would say this. First of all, under this government, the individual members opposite keep naming does not sit at Treasury Board. There is no presence of that individual at Treasury Board during the term that I have been chair of Treasury Board, and that has been for the entire term of this government.

 

      Now the member identifies a volunteer of Assiniboine Credit Union, a former chair of Assiniboine Credit Union, as having a relationship with the Health Minister as an executive assistant. I can assure them that any arrangement made with respect to the Prairie Production Centre was done on the basis of what is best for developing the economy of Manitoba and specifically the film sector–

 

Some Honourable Members: Oh, oh.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

Mr. Selinger: –and the specifics the member asked, we will get information on that for him.

 

Point of Order

 

Mr. Speaker: The honourable Member for Southdale, on a point of order.

 

Mr. Reimer: I am referring to the existing executive assistant to the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale), who sits on the board of Assiniboine Credit Union now.

 

Mr. Speaker: On the point of order raised by the honourable Member–

 

An Honourable Member: What a smell.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order.

 

An Honourable Member: They are not even trying to defend him.

 

Mr. Speaker: Order. On the point of order raised by the honourable Member for Southdale, he does not have a point of order. It is a dispute over the facts.

Crocus Fund

CentreStone Ventures Investment

 

Mr. John Loewen (Fort Whyte): Mr. Speaker, back to cosy relationships. We find out on November 27 that the Minister of Industry announced, and this is just days before we find out that trading has been halted in Crocus shares, and weeks and months after we have learned that the board at Crocus had been told they had serious problems and were in the midst of a crisis regarding their valuations, an announce­ment was made regarding CentreStone which includes about $5 million from government, govern­ment money from Workers Compensation, from MPIC, from TRAF, money from Crocus, all of whom have board members, have members on investment advisory committees. The crossovers are just too numerous even to mention in the brief time that I have.

 

      The question to the Minister of Industry is how is it possible this announcement could have been made at this time without the NDP government having any discussion about the impend­ing crisis at Crocus.

 

Hon. Jim Rondeau (Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines): Mr. Speaker, I would like to advise the member opposite as well as all members in the House that third-party venture capital funds and third-party funds are nothing new. They have been around for many years starting in the 1990s.

 

      There are all sorts of funds, and the purpose of these funds is to push investment and to push risk capital. There is the CentreStone fund, there is life sciences fund. There are lots of funds that have been developed by the former government and the present government. Those funds push industry, push research, push development and push the growth of Manitoba. I am pleased we have grown the economy by $10 billion in five years by making strategic investments with the partnership of the private sector and government and pension plans to make sure that we have a bright future in the future.

 

Mr. Loewen: Mr. Speaker, CentreStone is no ordinary fund. In fact, we find out that 23 of the 25 million came from government or government-related investments. As a matter of fact, I have an Order-in-Council dated April 30, 2003, signed by MaryAnn Mihychuk and Jean Friesen, the then-Deputy Minister, indicating that the government, through MIOP, had put aside $5 million into Magellan Venture partnerships through an Order-in-Council.

 

      What that was to do nobody knows. All we know is that it sat quiet until another Order-in-Council was issued on June 16, 2004, signed by the Minister of Industry and Economic Development, the member from Brandon West, and was also signed by the Premier (Mr. Doer) of the Province of Manitoba, which somehow changes the name of Magellan industries to CentreStone Ventures.

 

      It indicates once again that these discussions, these negotiations were done at the very highest level of government. They were kept secret and they were kept hidden. Again I would ask the minister to tell us how much did he know about the Crocus fiasco when this deal was announced on November 27.

 

Mr. Rondeau: Mr. Speaker, yet again, I would remind the member opposite that this government is not involved in the day-to-day operations. What we do as in what the Tory government did, they put $2 million of venture capital into Crocus so that the fund could be established.

 

      Since the 1990s, there have been six such funds where governments make partial investment. The fund proponent goes and checks other companies, other investors, private and public pension plans, et cetera, to bring venture capital, research capital and business capital to this province.

 

      It has been the practice since the 1990s, actually it was a practice under your government which made sense. We continued that practice where you gather investment capital in our province to create jobs, create research and push investment. It is a good decision economically, and what we have done is we think it is very important that government works with private industry to continue that.

 

Mr. Loewen: Mr. Speaker, this is an investment made behind closed doors, manipulated by the Premier (Mr. Doer), as we see from the Order-in-Council, manipulated by this government. As a matter of fact, the timing of this is completely unseemly. Just days before it was announced that the Crocus Fund had stopped halting in shares, this announcement of $23 million of government and government-related money going into a fund was negotiated behind closed doors quite likely by Mr. Eugene Kostyra.

 

      I would ask the Finance Minister if he could explain why Mr. Kostyra would be conspiring to announce this deal just days before the crisis at Crocus was revealed to the public, just days before this House stopped sitting. How did Mr. Kostyra figure in this conspiracy?

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): Mr. Speaker, the member opposite alleges conspiracy. He has not demonstrated any evidence of that. He is, once again, prejudging the outcome of the Auditor General's investigation. I know the immunity of the House allows the member to slag the reputation of individuals, but I would ask the member to be at least a little bit careful about his leaps in logic. Let us see what the Auditor General comes up with. We will be ready to deal with it and correct the problem to ensure Manitobans are well protected.

 

Hip and Knee Replacement Surgery

Private Partnership Agreements

 

Mrs. Heather Stefanson (Tuxedo): Mr. Speaker, I hope that while Mr. Kostyra was speaking at a union conference in Australia, he also had the opportunity to check out the health care system while he was there where clearly, private-public partnerships are working for their system.

 

      Mr. Speaker, Pat Ledger is waiting for two hip replacements and a knee replacement. Unfortunately, she has already waited seven and a half months, and she has been told she is to wait another year and a half. Once again this NDP government has demon­strated its willingness to put ideology ahead of patient care. The result is another Manitoban needlessly waiting in pain and seriously considering going out of province to pay for surgery.

 

      Will the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale) now agree to set his ideology aside and consider partnering with the private sector so people like Pat are not forced to suffer any longer?

 

* (14:20)

 

Hon. Dave Chomiak (Acting Minister of Health): I know, Mr. Speaker, members do not want to talk about the past, the past lean years or the past when members opposite were offered a $10-million saving to privatize home care. Then when they tried to do it the savings disappeared and Manitobans rejected them, but I will not talk about that.

 

      What I do want to talk about is what the Tories promised in their '90 and their 2003 election platform for health care. Zero dollars; zero dollars to health care. I want to contrast that to our budget committing $10 million this year for a thousand additional orthopedic surgeries which members opposite voted against. They promised zero. They voted against 1000 additional surgeries and that costs $10 million. It does not come for free like members opposite pretend, Mr. Speaker.

 

Mrs. Stefanson: Mr. Speaker, Mrs. Ledger is the primary caregiver to her husband who is suffering from bone cancer. This government's ideology is preventing her from being able to properly care for her husband. It is denying them the opportunity to enjoy, as best possible, the time they have left with one another.

 

      Will the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale) acknowledge the impacts his ideology is having on Manitobans who are waiting in pain and now commit to considering the proposals put forth by the Maples Surgical Centre?

 

Mr. Chomiak: Mr. Speaker, during our first term in office, we reduced the cancer waiting lists down from what was medically unacceptable to one week where people were dying. Secondly, we have cut the cardiac wait lists in half. During this term we have pledged to reduce the unacceptably high wait lists for hip and knee replacements. Even though we are doing more than ever before, we still pledge to reduce it more. That is why we committed $10 million in this year's budget to do a thousand additional surgeries. Members opposite voted against it, instead they want private health care where you are going to have to pay for it. We think that is unacceptable to Manitobans, and we are prepared to back that up anytime, anyplace, anywhere.

 

CAIS Committee

Manitoba Representation

 

Mr. Ralph Eichler (Lakeside): Mr. Speaker, the federal government announced on Monday that the national CAIS committee has been established to review and improve the CAIS programs, yet this Minister of Agriculture has not made any mention of the committee. This NDP government needs to ensure Manitoba has representation at the table, or is this Minister Kostyra as well. Is this just another example of the minister being out of the loop with their federal counterparts?

 

Hon. Rosann Wowchuk (Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives): I can tell you, Mr. Speaker, this whole Question Period has been a reach from the opposition trying to create an issue when they really do not have one.

 

      I can tell the member opposite, as well, Mr. Speaker, this government has been working very closely with the federal government on CAIS and looking at how we can make revisions to the program so it better meets the needs of the producers. Yes, we do have representation on that committee.

 

Mr. Eichler: The press release model states each province will appoint one government official and one producer representative to the committee. Who has the minister chosen to represent Manitoba and table the qualifications for appointments?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Speaker, the representatives for Manitoba, as the member says, is one government member and that is Mr. Greg Fearn, who is in the policy division of Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, and the producer representative is Mr. David Roth [phonetic]. I wonder whether the members opposite would approve of that appoint­ment or whether they are looking for his qualifications.

 

Crocus Fund

Financial Report Release

 

Mr. Kevin Lamoureux (Inkster): Mr. Speaker, the Crocus Fund and the future of the Crocus Fund has really been called into question. I think the govern­ment is doing a disservice to the Crocus Fund investors and Manitoba taxpayers by not being open and transparent as to what they know has taken place.

 

      My question for the minister responsible is will the minister clearly indicate to this Legislature as to why the financial year-end was not submitted by the end of March when it was supposed to be submitted. Surely to goodness the government knows some­thing. Will they not share that with Manitobans?

Hon. Jim Rondeau (Minister of Industry, Economic Development and Mines): Mr. Speaker, I think the member opposite is aware there are ongoing investigations by the Manitoba Securities Commission and by the Auditor General who are conducting investigations to make sure that the Crocus board has done the proper management, has done the proper investment, due diligence, et cetera.

 

      Those investigations are independent third party, independent of government and they are ongoing. Because there are these ongoing investigations, I understand Crocus has asked for and received an extension of their annual filing. That is because they want to make sure that all the information is accurate and up-to-date.

 

Mr. Lamoureux: Mr. Speaker, the reality is none of those that the minister has made reference to should have had any impact on the company's or the Crocus Fund's ability to be able to come up with its financial year-end statements. That is the reality of this situation. The government knows more than what it is prepared to share. One has got to ask the question why is this government not prepared to share with Manitobans, in particular the Crocus investors, what it knows.

 

      My question to the minister is this: Is it possible that we could be seeing the Crocus Fund shut down?

 

Mr. Rondeau: I think it is passing strange that the Leader of the Liberal Party last week said what are you doing with all the administrative costs. You should be decreasing administrative costs. The member behind him of the same party is sitting there saying, "Oh, you should have more staff to answer more questions, do more work presenting annual reports and doing all this work."

 

      There is a certain amount of staff; they are able to do a certain amount of work. They are working with the Auditor General. They are working with the Manitoba Securities Commission. They are doing the due diligence as they are able to. Because they are working hard with these independent third parties conducting investigations, they do not have the ability to also prepare their tax returns or annual statements. They asked for an extension to the MSC which is independent of government, and the MSC granted it.

 

Mr. Lamoureux:  Yes, Mr. Speaker, this financial year-end report in all likelihood should have been done before the end of last year so that it would be presented. It is not a choice. The Crocus Fund did not have a choice on whether or not to do it. This was an absolute must.

 

      What we know is that the government is hiding behind the veil of who-knows-what, Mr. Speaker, and they are not coming clean as to what is actually taking place with the Crocus Fund. There is a very real threat that the Crocus Fund will shut down. I think the government needs to come clean as to what it knows, what role it has been playing in this and has to be more transparent to the Crocus Fund investors and the taxpayers of our province.

 

      Manitobans deserve better, Mr. Speaker, and I ask the minister to be straightforward and tell this Chamber what is happening with the Crocus Fund.

 

Mr. Rondeau: I am pleased to inform the member that the following is happening with the Crocus Fund. There is a stop-trading order which has occurred. There is an investigation by the Manitoba Securities Commission and the Auditor General. That is occurring. The fund is re-evaluating its assets from independent third parties. All that is ongoing right now.

 

      I remind the member these are happening in public institutions so you have the Securities Com­mission which will report publicly. You have the Auditor General which is independent. It represents all Manitobans, all Manitoba taxpayers and all shareholders. That is independent and they will report publicly. The Crocus Fund will have to come up with another public prospectus approved by the Manitoba Securities Commission. These are all public bodies that serve all of government, all of Manitoba, and that is the proper way to proceed.

 

Provincial Nominee Program

Qualification Recognition

 

Mr. Cris Aglugub (The Maples): In the last several years we have seen a steady increase of immigrants choosing Manitoba as their destination. This is largely due to the success of the Provincial Nominee Program. Most of these immigrants are bringing with them their skills, experience and training acquired abroad.

 

      Mr. Speaker, given the government's commit­ment to qualification recognition for new immigrants in the province, can the Minister of Labour and Immigration inform this House of any new develop­ments in this area?

 

* (14:30)

 

Hon. Nancy Allan (Minister of Labour and Immigration): I am pleased to have the question. Manitoba is further along with their qualifications recognition strategy than any other jurisdiction in Canada. We have a foreign-trained doctor program; we have a foreign-trained doctor program for immigrants; we have engineers; we have a foreign-trained program in pharmacy and we have a teaching program in development, Mr. Speaker.

 

      I am pleased to tell members, if they would like to listen, that we recently made an investment in my department and we have increased funding for qualifications recognition, $125,000. We believe this is an important investment because we want new immigrants to participate in our society, and I want to remind members opposite that is a budget they voted against.

 

MCDCA

Government Support

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): Mr. Speaker, the Manitoba Community Development Corporation Association provides assistance to the communities in northern and rural Manitoba to help them identify local challenges and local benefits. Most impor­tantly, they provide training skills that help community leaders carry out their economic plans. Consequently, there appears to be no support by this government to further the long-range goals of the MCDCA  for sustainability.

 

      Mr. Speaker, my question is to the Minister responsible for Rural Initiatives. Why is this govern­ment ignoring the needs of over 60 northern and rural communities who support the MCDCA and the work it does?

 

Hon. Rosann Wowchuk (Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives): Mr. Speaker, the member is wrong. This government does support the work of CDCs and we have met and had discussions with the Manitoba Community Development Corporation umbrella group. I want to inform members opposite that I will be meeting with them and members of that group at Rural Forum later this week.

Rural Economic Development

Government Support

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): Mr. Speaker, they are meeting at their AGM tomorrow at noon, and they are probably likely going to disband. So I think this minister better step up to the plate and do something about it.

 

      Last May, the MCDCA made a presentation to this government encouraging them to support a joint initiative with the federal government. The federal government supported the proposal, but this program requires matching funds from this province which they have never done on this side of the House.

 

      The provincial contribution for local rural development initiatives has traditionally been allo­cated from lottery revenues. Mr. Speaker, can the Minister responsible for Rural Initiatives tell the House why she is starving rural and northern communities of needed dollars to create locally led development?

 

Hon. Rosann Wowchuk (Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives): Mr. Speaker, the member is wrong again. This government is not starving development corporations in their ventures to support economic development in rural and northern Manitoba. In fact, we have expanded some of the programs into northern Manitoba, an area that members opposite ignored.

 

Mr. Speaker: Time for Oral Questions has expired.

 

MEMBERS' STATEMENTS

 

Williamson Curling Team

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): I would like to take this opportunity to recognize a curling team from the Minnedosa constituency. I am very proud of the Williamson rink for all they have accomplished and their dedication to the game of curling. Skip, Kristen Williamson, and second, Kendra Green, welcomed two new members this season: lead, Tanya Robins and third, Tasha Hunter. Together they won the Brandon Tournament and did very well in the Scott Tournament of Hearts, which was hosted in Souris this year.

 

      Mr. Speaker, I have watched this team play with determination, enthusiasm and sportsmanship that is a credit to all four young women. I recently had the pleasure of meeting with Kristen Williamson at the Roseland Curling Rink. I was very impressed with both her strong sense of community and her leadership.

 

      Roseland Curling Rink is a community rink with one sheet made from natural ice where, as a toddler, Kristen watched her parents and grandparents curl and started curling herself at the age of seven. Kristen plays for the love of the sport and also to have fun.

 

      This team's community spirit extends beyond the curling rink, Mr. Speaker. In 2006, Kristen Williamson and Kendra Green will be travelling to Disney World to run in a marathon to raise money for the Arthritis Society. I applaud them both for their dedication and wish them the best of luck.

 

      Mr. Speaker, I will continue to watch and support this team of young women, both on and off the ice. They are talented young athletes who contribute so much to both their sport and their community. Once again, congratulations Kristen, Tanya, Kendra and Tasha. Thank you.

 

Movement Disorder Clinic

 

Ms. Bonnie Korzeniowski (St. James): Mr. Speaker, on Monday, it was announced that the Women's Tribute Memorial Lodge in St. James will soon serve as a movement disorder clinic for Manitobans. I take great pleasure in rising today to acknowledge the success of those involved who have worked so hard to ensure the spirit and the worthiness of this historic building would be honoured and restored for the benefit of all Manitobans.

 

      In 1931, after 14 years of hard work, the women of Manitoba proudly opened the Women's Tribute Memorial Lodge as a centre for physical and social rehabilitation in tribute to Manitoba veterans of World War I. After decades of use, the lodge fell on hard times and has been vacant since 1986. In November 1999, I was approached by a concerned resident who questioned its future. In learning of its history, I was compelled to pursue its preservation. With the assistance of colleagues from all levels of government, I was able to help in the formation of the Women's Tribute Building Committee.

      This diverse and resourceful committee has persevered to ensure the restoration and preservation of this historical building. They have worked creatively and tirelessly in their efforts to find the ways and means required to pay for the repurposing and the refurbishment of the Tribute building.

 

      How fitting that in this the Year of the Veteran their efforts have come to fruition. The incoming initiative of a provincial Movement Disorders Clinic maintains the integrity of the building's spirit by providing a valuable health service to Manitobans. Moreover, it pays tribute to our veterans and it honours the memory of those women who, over 80 years ago, also honoured Manitoba's veterans.

 

      Mr. Speaker, there have been a number of individuals whose work has been instrumental. Two, in particular, deserve personal recognition.

 

      Mr. Speaker, I invite you and my colleagues here in the Manitoba Legislature to join me in congratulating the Women's Tribute Building Com­mittee. I ask that you all join me in acknowledging the tremendous effort and success of committee co-chairs Margaret Mackling and Réal Cloutier. Together they have provided the vision, the convic­tion, the leadership and the determination to guide committee members, local residents, funders and public officials to this successful conclusion. Thank you.

 

* (14:30)

 

Pension Benefits Amendment Act

 

Mr. Ron Schuler (Springfield): Mr. Speaker, on April 20 of last week this House, in one of those rare moments of unanimity, gave leave to pass Bill 10 on to Royal Assent. Bill 10 is a coming together of members of this Chamber in a positive way. The opposition, the Progressive Conservative opposition, has pushed this government for many years to do some changes in regard to defined contribution pensions. We introduced Bill 212; thousands of people got involved in the process. After some shenanigans by the Premier (Mr. Doer) on a radio show not being completely forthright about who was holding up the bill, in fact, yesterday in Estimates he admitted that he was wrong in what he said and as close as this Premier can come to apologizing he apologized.

      However, we are now at a point, and yesterday I would like to point the House to Hansard where I got up on a point of order and I asked if the Speaker would canvass the House to see if leave could be granted so that the bill could be proclaimed.

 

      We found out yesterday in Estimates that the government has not done its work, did not want to see this legislation proceed in a quick and orderly fashion, did not have its consultations done. In fact, the Premier twisted all kinds of words about how you cannot do consultations on regulations, but we found out that no consultations had been done to get regulations ready. They have not even started the consultations.

 

      It is very unfortunate that seniors in Manitoba now have to wait as the NDP government holds up Bill 10, something they have been fighting for year after year, after year. Thousands of Manitobans are waiting for this and yet the minister will not proclaim the legislation. We encourage this government proclaim Bill 10. Let us get on with it.

 

Maples Collegiate

 

Mr. Cris Aglugub (The Maples): Mr. Speaker, I rise to congratulate the students and staff of the Maples Collegiate for being chosen to participate in the YMCA Youth Exchanges Canada program for 2005.

 

      Mr. Speaker, Maples Collegiate was one of 400 groups to apply for this program. The exchange saw 26 Senior 1 students from the Maples Collegiate leave last Sunday for Powell River, British Columbia, to spend one week with youth from that area. Maples students have been assigned a twin student from Powell River and have been busy learning about this community. In May, Maples students and their families will host in return 27 students from Powell River.

 

      Mr. Speaker, the YMCA Youth Exchanges program promotes cross-cultural learning for youth throughout Canada. This year alone, more than 100 groups are participating in this program. This will be the first time students from the Maples Collegiate take part in this program.

 

      Mr. Speaker, Maples Collegiate is the largest high school in the Seven Oaks School Division, and a symbol of cultural diversity found in my constituency of the Maples. The collegiate's approxi­mately 1150 students come from a mosaic of different cultures and backgrounds. Their trip to Powell River will help further enhance Maples Collegiate commitment to cultural diversity and inclusion.

 

      Mr. Speaker, I want to congratulate principal, Val McCorkell, and the Maples Collegiate for participating in this exchange program. I also want to thank the YMCA and United Way for providing the majority of the funds to send our children on this educational trip. Finally, I wish all participating students, teachers Dawn Wilson, Vern Zatwarnicki and vice-principal, Mark Miles, a safe trip. Thank you.

 

Health Department Planning

 

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Mr. Speaker, the NDP has become a government cloaked in secrecy and short on plans.

 

      Last December, $40 million in spending was announced to rebuild the Manitoba Developmental Centre in Portage la Prairie, but no plans have ever been revealed, despite repeated requests. What is the NDP afraid to reveal?

 

      Victoria General Hospital's maternity ward will close this weekend. The Health Minister (Mr. Sale) claims he had to do it because of safety issues, but no report to document the problems has ever been revealed publicly. Why not? Is the public simply supposed to accept that whatever the minister says must be true even though no one has seen any documentation?

 

      The minister says he wants a midwifery unit, but no plans have been provided for the conversion of the maternity ward to a midwifery unit. Where is the plan? What is he afraid to show the people of Manitoba?

 

      The annual report of Crocus Investment Fund was due at the end of March, but the deadline has been extended for no good reason, except to keep a veil of secrecy over the activities of this government. 34 000 thousand unit holders want to know what is going on.

 

      In Estimates on Monday, the Minister of Health (Mr. Sale) was unable to reveal a plan for the communities in the Assiniboine Regional Health Authority region, but he said he was consulting in case a crisis emerged because he had no plan.

 

      In Estimates yesterday, the Minister responsible for Manitoba Hydro (Mr. Chomiak) refused to answer questions about Manitoba Hydro. This is a Crown corporation that belongs to all Manitobans.

 

      Shrouded in secrecy, the government lurks and skulks along the halls and corridors of the Legislature. Do they have a secret handshake? Do they greet each with whispers of "The eagle flies at midnight?"

 

      This is supposed to be an open and accessible government, but the responses from its ministers sound more like the script of a bad James Bond movie. The people of Manitoba deserve answers, not secrecy and cover-ups.

 

ORDERS OF THE DAY

 

GOVERNMENT BUSINESS

 

House Business

 

Hon. Gord Mackintosh (Government House Leader): Mr. Speaker, would you canvass the House to see if there is agreement to rescind the previous agreement of the House regarding the business for this afternoon, so that departmental Estimates are considered in three sections and that the waiving of quorum calls for today are also rescinded?

 

      In addition, would you please canvass the House to see if there is agreement to change the Estimates sequence to move Industry, Economic Development and Mines ahead of Health in 254, move Finance from the Chamber into 255 ahead of Healthy Child and also move Intergovernmental Affairs from the Chamber into 255 after Finance, with these changes to apply permanently?

 

      Finally, Mr. Speaker, would you canvass the House to see if there is agreement for the House not to sit in Estimates on Friday, April 29, and Friday, May 6, and for two sections of the Supply to meet in the committee rooms while the House considers bills on May 5, 10 and 11, with quorum calls to be waived on these days? This is in addition to the agreement that is already in place for May 4.

      I will just also add that, after discussions with the independent members, the government will make best efforts to inform the independent members of the bills for May 5, 10 and 11 for consideration in the House.

 

Mr. Speaker: Is there agreement to rescind the previous agreement of the House regarding the House business for this afternoon, so that depart­mental Estimates are considered in three sections and that the waiving of quorum calls for today also be rescinded? Is there agreement? [Agreed]

 

      Is there agreement to change the Estimates sequence to move Industry, Economic Development and Mines ahead of Health in Room 254, and to move Finance from the Chamber into Room 255 ahead of Healthy Child Manitoba, and to also move Intergovernmental Affairs and Trade from the Chamber into Room 255 after Finance, with these changes to apply permanently. Is there agreement? [Agreed]

 

      Is there also agreement for the House to not sit in Estimates on Friday, April 29, and Friday, May 6, and for two sections of the Committee of Supply to meet in the committee rooms while the House considers bills on May 5, 10 and 11, with quorum calls to be waived on these days? This is in addition to the agreement that is already in place for May 4. Is there agreement?  [Agreed]

 

* * *

 

Mr. Mackintosh: Would you please call Supply, Mr. Speaker?

 

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

 

COMMITTEE OF SUPPLY

(Concurrent Sections)

 

AGRICULTURE, FOOD AND

RURAL INITIATIVES

 

* (14:40)

 

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 Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives.

 

      Consideration of these Estimates left off on Resolution 3.2, Risk Management, Credit and Income Support Programs. The floor is now open for questions.

 

Mr. David Faurschou (Portage la Prairie): Mr. Chairman, last day, by the banging of the gavel, I was unable to conclude to the minister in regard to the current grain grading system we have in the province of Manitoba and, in fact, all jurisdictions of the Canadian Wheat Board, and that is kernel visual distinguishability criteria.

 

      In light of the legislation passed that provides for the ethanol industry here in the province, genetics for high-yielding wheat, which is what the government is looking to have fill this requirement for crops to satisfy the ethanol industry here in Manitoba, currently do not fall within this kernel visual distinguishability criteria making them eligible to be registered.

 

      So there are two ways of going about this, Madam Minister, and that is, one, that they have a closed-loop type of production and do not apply for registration generally across the country so that they are produced under contract directly focussed on a determined market, or, effectively, that we change the kernel visual distinguishability criteria of regis­tration.

 

      Now where I am going, the bottom line in all this, Madam Minister, have you had discussions with the Canadian Wheat Board in regard to either of those two types of proposals?

 

Hon. Rosann Wowchuk (Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives): Mr. Chairman, the member raises an important issue and one that has resulted because the industry has changed and the interest in value-added, the interest in growing feed wheats for feed but also for the ethanol industry as the member mentioned.

 

      I can indicate to the member that we have had discussions with the Grain Commission, we have had discussions with the Canadian Wheat Board about the CVD as well as the contract option, so we are aware of the issue and realize that work has to be done.

      There is no doubt that we have to look at contracts, but there also has to be work done on developing some new technology, because the industry has changed and there are opportunities to grow different varieties of wheat that cannot be identified in the visual way. There is need for more work, but, yes, definitely, we recognize this as an issue and have had discussion with the industry.

 

Mr. Faurschou: While I appreciate the minister has had those discussions, further to that, the very nature and mandate of the Canadian Wheat Board is to make certain that all producers prosper from the marketing of grains. So, through the pooling nature of the board, producers in other provinces potentially can and will, under the current board mandate, profit from greater production here in the province of Manitoba, i.e., the high-yielding feed wheats.

 

      Now, being that this industry is supported by the taxpayers of Manitoba through the legislation to the ethanol industry, I want to ask the minister whether or not she has had discussions with the Canadian Wheat Board to make absolutely certainly that the closed-loop contracting type of production that will be necessary to support the ethanol industry here in Manitoba in fact is accounted for solely to the producers of Manitoba, and so those in the province of Manitoba are effectively the beneficiaries and not producers by the very nature of the function of the board in other political jurisdictions.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: As I understand it, the Canadian Wheat Board through their mandate can have limited pools now, but the bigger issue is you cannot contract any of the varieties that are not visually distinguished. You cannot identify them under the CVD. So I think the bigger issue is that we have to come up with a system of identification or a way to identify these new varieties so they can be grown and then work on the pooling issue.

 

      The more important issue is how do we get by the whole issue of identification so that these feed wheat varieties can be grown and still have our red spring and other varieties for the food chain protected that we do not put at risk the reputation Canada has of a producer of very high wheat for the food chain. So I think that is the area we have to work on. As I said, we have had discussions with the Wheat Board on those matters.

Mr. Faurschou: I appreciate that, Madam Minister, but we have to make absolutely certain that we cover all the bases because any one of these bases we have touched on today could, in fact, interrupt the entire development of the ethanol industry here in Manitoba. The contracting of them and the effects of the closed-loop limited pooling, until they are defined, is something I would like very much the minister make certain that the language is such that those producers of the feed wheats for the ethanol industry located here in Manitoba effectively are accounted for within that limited pool. If the minister is able to get that limited pool established, I know it will be a challenge.

 

* (14:50)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I hear what the member is saying. The board does have the ability to establish further limited pools, but what we have to remember here is this is a producer-controlled board, and it will be the producers that make the decision as to what kind of pooling they want, but, definitely, I say to the member we have had the discussions. We believe that it is very important that we continue to work on these issues, not only with the Wheat Board, but with the Canadian Grain Commission and others that ensure that research is being done so that we can move in these areas.

 

Mr. Ralph Eichler (Lakeside): Mr. Chair, I would like to ask the minister for leave to jump around on the itinerary a bit. We would like to finish up today if at all possible. The Liberal Party has some questions they would like to ask, so if we could ask for leave. Would that be possible?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Would it be agreeable that we pass the lines on the corporation and then move on into the other areas?

 

Mr. Eichler: There are some other members coming in to ask questions specifically on that. That is my understanding, so I would like to leave it. We will do them all at once at the end of the day.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Is there agreement to pass all resolutions at the end of the day? [Agreed]

 

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Mr. Speaker, my question is initially in terms of the Rancher's Choice project in Dauphin and would ask what proportion of the animals which are going to be slaughtered there are going to be under 30 months and what proportion over 30 months.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the industry has identified the need for slaughter capacity for cull animals, and that is the focus of Rancher's Choice, to deal with animals over 30 months. However, and I expect that that is what the majority of animals will be, but they also do have the ability to slaughter younger animals should that be the decision that they make or if that is the market that they find. But the focus of the project of Rancher's Choice is to slaughter animals over 30 months.

 

Mr. Gerrard: My question is does that mean 50 percent, 60 percent, 70 percent, 90 percent over 30 months. Normally, the over-30-month animals are culled more at certain times of the year, and so, if they are going to keep an operation that goes year round, one would anticipate that they would probably be slaughtering a certain proportion of animals under 30 months.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The plan is to start with 100% cull animals. That is the intent of the plant, and they are working with producers and people throughout the province on logistics, on how they will be able to have animals flow through the plant year round.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, and the number of animals slaughtered per year would be approximately what?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The goal is 60 000 animals per year.

 

Mr. Gerrard: And will this be a federally inspected plant?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Yes, Mr. Chairman.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Are there plans for testing the animals for BSE?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, this plant will operate as every other plant does with the routine testing. If the member is asking if there is intention to test every animal, there are no markets that are asking for testing of every animal.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Well, I think that one can debate in terms of the markets and testing of the animals. Certainly in Europe there are countries which are testing every animal, but I do not think we need to get into the debate here.

      What I wanted to sort of get an estimate was by the routine testing we are testing so many thousands of the animals slaughtered each year. What is the target in terms of total testing for Manitoba?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The goal is to test about 3500 animals in Manitoba for the 2005 year, and each of the animals at the plant is inspected by a CFIA inspector. If the inspector thinks or sees some symptom or some sign that an animal should be tested, it is pulled out and those are the animals that are then tested. It is the same routine that is followed in any other slaughter facility.

 

Mr. Gerrard: At 60 000 animals a year, what proportion of the total slaughter in Manitoba will that make?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: If the member could clarify, is he asking us what percentage of the animals that are slaughtered are tested? Is that what the member is asking? I am not really quite sure.

 

Mr. Gerrard: If we have 60 000 animals tested in a year in this plant, if we have 30 000 animals, for example, slaughtered elsewhere in Manitoba, that is 90 000 animals in a year. One might expect roughly two thirds of the total number of tested animals to be tested in Dauphin, perhaps, if that is the ratio of the total slaughter capacity at Dauphin to the whole provincial slaughter.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the number that has been set for Manitoba for testing is 3500. Then, about 3000 of those animals would be from what is called the three Ds, the dead, the downers, the diseased or those that are looking like they are dying. Those are the ones where you would get about 3000 of them.

 

      What we have to remember with Rancher's Choice or any other slaughter facility is that every animal is inspected. If 300 animals would go through in one day and every one of those animals was healthy and a CFIA inspector gave them a healthy brand, they would not be tested; but, if on another day they found some suspicious animals and might find a few animals that are suspicious, those are the ones that would be tested. You really cannot say what percentage will be tested that are going through the plant. That will depend on CFIA and the recommendation that the inspector makes.

Mr. Gerrard: Two questions here in one, but the total number of animals expected to be slaughtered in Manitoba, if there are 60 000 at Dauphin, what will be the total slaughter capacity in Manitoba? Second, the minister has said that the animals with symptoms will be tested. What proportion of the animals which tested positive, say in the last couple of years in the United Kingdom, for BSE has been symptomatic? Do you know?

 

* (15:00)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I cannot provide that number for the member right now. We do not have that number here. If we might be able to find some information for the member, we could share it later, but we do not have the number of what is happening in the UK with us here.

 

Mr. Gerrard: The total slaughter capacity once Dauphin comes on-line would be what?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: We anticipate it will be around 90 000; there are about 30 000 now. If 60 000 come on stream, we are hopeful that with other people that are looking at increasing their capacity, we will see that number rise further. Right now, when Rancher's Choice comes on stream, it would be about 90 000.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Will the minister undertake to get back to me with an answer in terms of the proportion of animals in the UK in recent years which tested positive, were symptomatic?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Yes, we will endeavour to find that information and get it to the member.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Question on the proposed Planning Act changes. The Planning Act will take away the responsibilities in terms of manure spreading, storage, handling and so on from the municipalities and make that essentially a provincial responsibility for all areas, including enforcement. I would ask the minister what the plans are in terms of enforcement, how many inspectors there will be and how they will be deployed around the province.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Those inspectors will be in the Department of Conservation, not in this department.

 

Mr. Gerrard: But I would presume that the minister would be up to date in terms of what would be available.

Ms. Wowchuk: I might be up to date, but it is not fair for me to answer your question that is in another minister's department.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Well, let me ask the minister this. There have been concerns in the past in terms of inspectors and potential of conflicts in relationship to farmers or areas being inspected. What is the policy in terms of avoiding conflicts in such circumstances?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, we take this issue of proper management very seriously. As a department, we have just updated manure management software that is available for producers as they do their manure management plan. By using this technology and information, we believe that is one of the ways that we can avoid some of the issues I believe the member is referring to.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Perhaps the minister can indicate in terms of enforcement and testing and so on, what specific tests will be undertaken so that there are objective measures of whether producers are in compliance.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, part of the application process to file a manure management plan requires the producer do testing, and that testing is part of the application for a manure management plan. Should there be issues, through an enforcement issue, then additional tests would be required and additional tests would be taken.

 

Mr. Gerrard: What type of tests is the minister referring to? Is this soil content of nutrients? Is this water quality testing? What kind of testing is the minister referring to?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Because the test was based on the nitrogen measure, that is the regulatory base of it, it is a residual test on the amount of nitrogen that is in the soil at the time. As the member is probably aware, the Minister of Conservation (Mr. Struthers) has also indicated that government is going to begin, or the Department of Conservation is going to begin, discussions on regulations to regulate phosphorous. After those consultations are complete, then phos­phorous would become part of the base as well as nitrogen.

 

Mr. Gerrard: Is the minister indicating that phosphorous will not be tested for in the initial stages or perhaps not for several years? What is the situation?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: When a producer does their testing they do their testing on all of the nutrients in the soil, because that is beneficial to them to know how much nitrogen is in the soil, how much phosphorous is in the soil. The regulation that we have right now for manure management plans requires that we do the study, the tests, based on nitrogen.

 

      The Department of Conservation, now that we are beginning the process of introducing regulations and phosphorus, we will be notifying those people that are filing their next round of manure management plans that they will also be required to collect data on phosphorous to start that baseline information on each of the individual areas where nutrients are being applied.

 

Mr. Gerrard: This deals with soil testing. Is there going to be water testing too?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: That is really a question that the member should be asking in Water Stewardship and Conservation, because it is Water Stewardship that has responsibility for those. As the member knows, there have been some recent announcements made with regard to mapping and water testing, and I would suggest that he ask those questions in that department.

 

Mr. Gerrard: I just take that to indicate that, from an agriculture producer point of view, they are not going to be required to do water testing. Is that essentially what the minister is saying?

 

* (15:10)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There could be. There are municipalities that may require water testing, and, in this department, the testing, what we have is a requirement to test nitrates and, as I said, nitrogen. There will be steps taken towards phosphorous. There has been work on monitoring phosphorous to start to build the base. This department puts money into a variety of projects that do water testing. For example, the Deerwood project is one of the projects where we have put money in. There could be in specific areas where there is a requirement, de­pending on which area of the province an operation is in where there would be requirements to test water. There could be a requirement when a lagoon or some operation is given a licence that one of the requirements is also to test and monitor water, but in this department our work is with nutrient manage­ment. As I say, there is work being done in a lot of areas. We are changing and increasing the amount of testing, but more detail would be available from other departments.

 

Mrs. Leanne Rowat (Minnedosa): Mr. Chair, I would like to ask the minister a few questions regarding an organization that is critical to rural and northern communities in providing supports for economic development. In the House, she had indicated that she has met with the Manitoba Community Development Corporation Association, I believe. If the minister can confirm that the meeting occurred last May. Can she confirm that that meeting took place?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, I can indicate to the member that staff met with MCDCA on May 28 to discuss issues, and I can indicate to the member that I met with them. We have not got the exact date, but I believe it was in October or November that we met, somewhere in that time frame. I can get the member the date of that meeting. I do not have it at my fingertips, but MCDCA was in my office in the fall discussing some of their issues.

 

Mrs. Rowat: Can the minister elaborate on the meeting and what occurred at that meeting? Was there a discussion of a proposal to sustain the community or the association over three years?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: When the group came to my office, they did come with a proposal. They were looking for funding. What we indicated to the group was that we do not provide for funding to organizations like MCDCA, but that we would support them, and we would look through in-kind. We, in fact, have been able to give them some money. We have been able to leverage some federal dollars, matching dollars, for the association. Our commitment was to work with them and offer them in-kind support. We have given them a $5,000 grant and have worked with them. Again, that grant is subject to matching funds as well. There will be additional funds that will be going to them, but we are just waiting for confir­mation of federal dollars on that one as well.

 

Mrs. Rowat: There are some discrepancies in what the minister is providing here. I believe the organi­zation did receive a start-up grant of $40,000 from the provincial government to help set up by-laws and a vision statement, et cetera. It was $40,000.

 

      Also, in 2004, based on the strong and skilled work of the association, they were able to access $75,000 from the federal government. The federal government at that time had asked the Province to match that grant, and what the Province was able to provide was $13,500 in cash plus in-kind. MCDCA understood and realized the importance of receiving that $75,000 from the federal government, under­standing and very distressed that the Province would not consider the importance of this organization or the work it does and did not want to provide the matching dollars. They went out and raised on their own $14,000 cash plus provided in-kind. The federal government then at that point went ahead and provided their end of the bargaining on the funding.

 

      My concern I guess with this government is that the community association right now has an opportunity to receive funding from the federal government under the Rural Capacity Building Program, under the Rural Secretariat. There is an opportunity to receive up to $100,000 in a matching grant from the Province which would be over a three-year period. So, for the minister to say they have given a $5,000 grant here and a $10,000 grant, waiting until they have received confirmation from the federal government that they will support this initiative, I think what I have just shared shows in leaps and bounds the support that the federal government has towards rural development and rural economic initiatives. I am very disappointed that this government has failed to see the importance of MCDCA and the work they do for rural communities.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: If the member wants to go back, she is right that in 2002-03 there was $40,000 that was provided as a one-time seed funding to start the organization. That was–[interjection] The member really likes to interrupt. I would like to explain to the member that this was one-time seed funding. That was not core funding. That was to get their by-laws to set themselves up.

 

      In 2003, the organization approached Intergovernmental Affairs and Advanced Education for funding for a community capacity building project, and it was clear that was actually for operating dollars. I can tell the member that I met with the organization on December 6. At that time we had a discussion, and again, I provided them with the information that we do not provide core funding but we would work with them. As I said, we provided a $5,000 project grant.

 

* (15:20)

 

      The member refers to federal money that she was implying is waiting for provincial funding. That is the money that I said to her we were waiting for the federal government to respond to. That is in this year's budget, and that money from the federal government, I believe, has not been confirmed. They do look for matching dollars. That is why the organization is raising money, and that is why we will continue to work with the organization, but my understanding is that the federal money is not confirmed.

 

Mrs. Rowat: I guess I need clarification from this minister in the rambling that she provided.

 

      What funding has the Province provided to this initiative or this association in the last year, in 2004 and in 2005 proposed, and then to match?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: In 2004-05, we provided the $5,000 that I spoke to the member about. There is a cheque for $10,000 that has not been delivered yet because we are waiting for the federal contribution. So that is in 2004. As well, I mentioned in-kind support, and we support them at rural forums, so that would be about $15,000. That is very important because the association can then use that money as part of their share when they are going for additional funds. So those are the dollars.

 

      With respect to this year, we are again supporting them through rural forum, so in-kind that would be about $15,000, and then we will wait for their projects. There has been no application, no submission made yet on what their projects will be for '05-06.

 

Mrs. Rowat: I guess I sort of smirk that the minister is indicating that she supports the association. It is my understanding that the association has played a strong role and a leadership role in Rural Forum and actually has been key in pulling together and co-ordinating the seminars at rural forums. So I find their support is probably tenfold compared to what this government is providing in support for MCDCA.

      I would like to know, the minister has indicated that she is waiting for the federal support commit­ment toward this association's grant. My under­standing is that the $100,000 grant proposal, I guess the Rural Capacity Building Program, which offers a maximum of $100,000 grant, was approved in principle by the federal government and waiting for the assurances from the provincial government that they would contribute and match that grant, and it is a three-year-period grant. So I am a little confused, and I am not sure if this minister really understands what has actually happened here because MCDCA did indicate that they had the approval from the federal government in principle on their application for the capacity building program and that they were waiting from this government, this minister, to show that she would support their initiative.

 

      To date, I understand from the association, that she has committed $6,500, far short of a matching grant that would sustain this organization. This organization is having their annual general meeting tomorrow, which is Thursday, at the UCT Pavilion in Brandon, and I do know that they have some very tough decisions to make at this AGM. Without the government's commitment or support or interest in what they do as an association, I think this organization, in very likelihood, will be looking at terminating.

 

      As an individual who lives in a community who has a strong community development corporation, and other communities like Minnedosa who have just recently structured a community development corpo­ration, I find this government's backward support, regressive support, of rural and northern commu­nities in economic development is disgraceful. I really encourage the minister to have somebody from her department attend this meeting and assure the association that she will not let them down, that she will work with them to provide the supports that they need to remain active in the communities where they are needed and required.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I can assure the member opposite this government has far more commitment to northern and rural Manitoba than the member opposite. I want to clarify a couple of things. The member talked about the Manitoba Community Development Corporation Association being key to getting Rural Forum going. I want to indicate to the member that this is the first year this association has played a part in it, had their meeting–[interjection]   

Mr. Chairperson: Excuse me. Do not interject. When you have the floor, you can speak to anyone here.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. This is the first year that MCDCA has been part of the seminar planning. This is the very first year. They did have their annual meeting at Rural Forum last year and we certainly support that. There is also support that comes for the association from the CDCs that pay a membership and not all of them belong to the membership, but their membership is very low. They pay $25 to be part of it.

 

      The member talks about money that is confirmed from the federal government. I want to again indicate to the member opposite, she is talking about $100,000 and looking for matching funds. We have had no confirmation from the federal government on the $10,000. I outlined to the member opposite where we were putting money in and the money that we had available, but there has been no confirmation from the federal government.

 

Mrs. Rowat: Who is the contact person that has been dealing with MCDCA, and when was the last time they have spoken to them in discussion regarding the $10,000? If their AGM is tomorrow, it would be enlightening for the association to at least have a thread of hope that this government is going to provide some type of support for them to continue.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, Peter Reimer is our government contact that has been working with them. I can tell you there has been a lot of contact because as I said this is the first year they have been involved with planning of sessions and seminars so there is close contact between staff and the MCDCA. As well, it is a Rural Secretariat that we are waiting for, for a response on the $10,000.

 

Mrs. Rowat: I think I will probably make a call to Darrell Pack with the Rural Secretariat, and just ask if that is the case because my understanding is that is not the case. Also, I would encourage the minister if she would direct her staff to contact Ruth Mealy, who is the executive director of MCDCA as soon as possible and let her know there is still a hope that there would be $10,000 available to this association.

 

      I think the $10,000 is piecemeal. This government has to be looking at this organization on a long-term basis. The importance of the work they do in providing skills for individuals and individual economic development officers and community leaders, they fill a gap in the local rural development initiative. To learn that this organization may no longer be out there providing the supports, especially with what is happening in the agriculture sector and the business sector within these rural communities. If we lose an organization based on this government's inability to meet and to consult and to determine how best we can keep this organization going, I would be very saddened and very disappointed in this minister and this government.

 

* (15:30)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I can assure the member that there has been contact with Linda Ransom and others at MCDCA because we are working very closely with them on Rural Forum, and I can assure the member that they are aware of the $10,000 and the fact that we are waiting for the federal government to make their commitment.

 

      I would tell the member also that, if she will look at our reorganization and the additional effort that we have put in place, and the additional people that will be on staff across the province working on economic development, this government is definitely committed to economic development in rural Manitoba, both on the agriculture side and in the rural communities.

 

Mr. Eichler: Mr. Chair, I would like to get back on track here a bit. Start on page 50 with the Canadian income stabilization program, the CAIS program. With the recent announcement of the committee being formed on Monday with the federal govern­ment and the minister saying that she has her two people on staff, could the minister outline the basis on which her government is going to try and negotiate changes, and what changes are you trying to bring forward for the farmers in the province of Manitoba?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: That is exactly the reason why there has been a safety-net committee established with representation from industry and to develop recom­mendations. There will be a broad representation right across the country of industry people who will come forward with recommendations and will then bring them back to governments. But I want to also tell the member that we have a safety-net committee that I will be meeting with very shortly, and we will have a chance to talk to representatives from all sectors to talk about the programs, to look at how we can make improvements to the program, and we will feed those concerns and recommendations into the committee.

 

      So it will be a two-way stream: the committee will come up with suggestions; the industry will come up with suggestions. From those, hopefully, we anticipate that for our July ministers' meeting we will have some recommendations as to what changes can be made to the program.

 

Mr. Eichler: For clarification, the changes that are going to be brought about as a result of this committee, does the Province have to sign off on these, or are they a mandated program that once the committee gets some recommendations and brings them forward, is it an automatic, or is it something the Province has to sign off on?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, this would be an amendment to the APF, and there is an amending formula that requires that if there is to be change, two thirds of the provinces or provinces that have 50 percent of the production have to sign off. As well, the federal government has to sign off.

 

      As we just went through with the deposit issue, I indicated in the House that Manitoba and Saskatchewan and the federal government had signed off. That is still not enough. At the time I made that statement, that still was not enough for the amendment, so, yes, there has to be an agreement to the amendment.

 

Mr. Eichler: The other provinces that are not signed off specifically on the CAIS deposit requirement, where does that leave the province? I do not know. The ministers said that they have not made require­ments to pay it until March of 2006, but does that leave us in contravention of the CAIS program? Are we going to be in a conflict there?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The amending formula that I talked about that requires two thirds of the provinces to sign is dealing with the refunded deposit, and I have no doubt that the other provinces will be signing onto that and that deposit will flow, but that does not affect the rest of the agreement. It is only that one clause that is affected. I anticipate that that will be signed very shortly, but it is a matter of provinces getting through their treasury boards, getting through their cabinets. I was fortunate that ours was able to move quickly, and we were able to get it done and sign off. Other provinces are working through it, and I anticipate very shortly that money will be able to flow.

 

Mr. Eichler: Is there a number of producers that have paid into the CAIS deposit that the minister is going to refund the money to, and how much money are we talking? I believe the number that she mentioned in the House was around the $60 million mark. Could she just confirm that?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The exact number of accounts I cannot provide the member with, but there is $63 million that is sitting in Manitoba accounts that, once this amendment is passed, will be able to be returned to the producer. They will have to make application for it. The form will be sent to their bank and it will then be returned to them.

 

Mr. Eichler: Just for the benefit of the farmers that I get calls from, is there a time line of which the minister is looking at to refund this money, or is it if we do not get the other provinces to sign off, then the money will not flow–that is my understanding? So I guess it is imperative that we try to make, or suggest, the other provinces get on board in order to refund this money to the producers in a timely manner.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the member is right. It is an amendment. It has to be signed by two thirds of the provinces before the amendment can proceed, but my deputy tells me that yesterday we were given indication that there are three more provinces that are just getting ready to sign and it is only a matter of time. I anticipate that very soon we will have enough provinces that will have signed on so that this money could flow. Producers can then make their appli­cation.

 

Mr. Eichler: Do they make that at the local Ag office, then, the application?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The people would make their application to the CAIS office and then the CAIS office, once the application is made, will send the required withdrawal forms to the bank. That is how it will happen. There is nothing to do with this at Ag offices.

 

Mr. Eichler: So the payout, then, just so we are all clear on it, the CAIS money is paid out by the federal government out of Winnipeg for those farmers that have CAIS payouts. The deposit, is that held by the Province, or is that held by the federal government? The $63 million in particular is what I am talking about.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The $63 million is held in the farmers' financial institutes. Everybody's holding is there, but what they have to do is apply to CAIS so that CAIS will then give the withdrawal form to the bank to allow it to flow out of the CAIS account into the farmer's regular account, or whatever.

 

Mr. Eichler: Thank you for that, Madam Minister. The CAIS program, the way it is set up now, and my understanding on what the Committee's responsi­bilities will be, they will be having hearing requests, I guess, across Canada, and, with the crop getting ready to be put in the ground, we probably will not see a lot of change on this program until probably fall in order to allow input from the farm groups that are going to be affected by the changes. Does the minister have any indication of what might come about with respect to these hearings? Is there a time frame on these?

 

* (15:40)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the committee and governments are targeting to have some recommen­dations for ministers for the annual July meeting. So the plan is that there will be some meetings held prior to that. I think consideration has to be given to the time of year that it is and the busy season for producers, that all has to be taken into consideration.

 

      I will be meeting with my safety-net committee to get input. It is the hope that there will be recommendations that ministers can look at, at the July meeting.

 

Mr. Eichler: Just for my information, the ministers meet in July, and then when would the next meeting be?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: That meeting can be called whenever is necessary, but this is the annual meeting. But ministers have been known, I think, ministers can meet as is needed. In the past year, I think, we met either three or four times, plus we have regular conference calls to discuss the issue. But the meeting that I speak of is the annual meeting in July, early July. That is when we are hoping that the committee can make some recommendations to us and also that we will have input from other com­mittees as well.

 

Mr. Eichler: With respect, on the CAIS program, the $123 million is being flowed as new money, not CAIS money from the federal government. It was announced, when the minister was out of the loop on that, that $123 million will be declared as income, I believe, my understanding, for 2005. Is that correct, Madam Minister?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: My understanding is that the payments that the member is referring to will come in 2005 and they will be considered as income in CAIS. This is federal money and this is the decision that the federal government made, that this would be considered income.

 

Mr. Eichler: So, then, in the budget you have budgeted, you put an extra $2 million into the payment program. So the Province, by not partici­pating in this program, with this being declared as income, is going to benefit financially by a huge amount of money if just the 40 percent in savings because that is going to lower the CAIS payout, that is my understanding. So that payout, then, will be reduced by 40 percent of the $123 million. So the Province is going to benefit by $53 million?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Yes, we have budgeted $2 million in additional money for CAIS. I can tell the member that I know that producers would much rather get their money from the marketplace than want to have to draw on programs. I have had producers tell me this all of the time, that they hope that they do not have to trigger these programs.

 

      It is very early in the program. It is very early in the year to indicate what incomes are going to be. There will always be some producers who do not draw from the CAIS program. So, to say that we are going to save money on CAIS because of some payments, that is only one element in the whole picture and there is much more that comes into it. Very honestly, I hope that farmers do get a better return from the marketplace, so they do not have to count on programs.

 

      The money is budgeted and we will have to wait and see what happens at year end, but I can tell the member that we are working with producers in other areas where we are going to also make investments.

Mr. Eichler: Having said that, Madam Minister, you must agree, though, that the province is going to benefit considerably financially by this $123-million cash injection into the economy. So the CAIS payout will be substantially less. That will free up some money that the minister could flow to the struggling farmers we have in the province of Manitoba right now, whether that be through increasing slaughter facilities, whether that be increasing through new initiatives for cereals and oil crops. There is a substantial amount of herd out there, and this money would now come at a great time. We cannot just keep banking on the fact that we think we are going to have this bumper crop and our turn has finally come. So, with that amount of money that is going to be saved, the minister and her staff could use that initiative to move some of these other programs forward.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: You know, the federal government has put trade injury payments in before. They put money in, in the previous year, that was a similar amount, and that amount did not end up reducing the draw on CAIS. So, yes, there is additional money that is coming in from the federal government. I am very happy it is there, but it is too early in the year to be able to indicate what the returns are going to be or the impact. The member has to look at last year's where we had record levels of farm cash receipts. We had record levels of government payments. Yet there were certain sectors that got a payment out of CAIS. So you cannot say that just because there is $123 million coming from the federal government that there is going to be an equivalent reduction in the amount that the Province is going to have to pay out through CAIS payments.

 

      We are in the agreement. It is a demand-driven program, and we will meet the needs of our producers. We will continue to look at areas where we can invest to diversify the economy of this province, and certainly slaughter capacity is one of those areas.

 

Mr. Eichler: With the $1.3 billion that has been announced as paid out in the CAIS program over all of Canada, how much of that has actually been triggered within the province of Manitoba, and the number of producers as well?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: For the 2003 year, Mr. Chairman, there were 5190 payments made for a total of $87,863,137. There are still some outstanding claims that are being worked on that are a fairly substantial size, so we anticipate that as we wrap up this year, the 2003 year, we will be very close to the targeted amount that was budgeted for this year.

 

* (15:50)

 

Mr. Eichler: The $87 million, is that the total amount or the 40% amount?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: That is the total amount. Our share would be 40 percent of that.

 

Mr. Eichler: What was the budget in '04? That was $50 million, I believe, so you had a substantial amount of money left over from that.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: For the '03-04 year, our preliminary budget was $42 million. Then we had a supple­mentary budget of $7.8 million which brought us to a total of $50.3 million. If you do the calculations on the 87 and the additional claims that are still outstanding, we will be very close to budget.

 

Mr. Eichler: That is fine on the CAIS program. We will move on to the Livestock and Development Assistance program. The objective of this is to expand parts of the livestock industry. Would the minister or her staff like to elaborate on that a little bit?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Our focus has been to put incentives in place to help facilities move to federally inspected standards. Last year our focus was on beef. This year we continue to work on beef. We are also looking at expansion that will meet the needs of other species and in other areas because we recognize there is pressure in those areas. Our real goal is to move to federally inspected standards so that we can then move to some interprovincial trade and, in fact, international trade.

 

      We recognize it is unfortunate that we lost the slaughter capacity we did in the nineties and, really, the beef industry has moved to Alberta. We have to work to build that up again. Our goal is to work with some of the smaller facilities that can work in niche markets. If they have the desire to work in international markets, we are also prepared to work with them in that area.

 

Mr. Eichler: With that is there funding that has specifically been requested by the processing plants to upgrade federally other than the request that I brought forward yesterday with B J Packers? What are the criteria which the department uses to transfer money to these owners wanting to upgrade to federally inspected plants?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: As I said, the goal is to help people with their feasibility studies to put their business plans together. There is an application form that is available for them. We have had several people pick up applications forms, but there has been no formal requests for funding.

 

      We continue to work with several people in this area. Those that have applications, some of them are talking to their consultants. Some of them are looking at the information package we have put together as far as a prefeasibility study. That study we did that the member is aware of to collect the data for the province so that everybody can use one base data, of course, yesterday, I also mentioned we want to have input from the industry because I think it is very important that you consult with the industry if you are putting a package together that will help them. There is not much sense in putting a package together if it is not going to work for them. We will be meeting with the industry early in May to have that discussion.

 

Mr. Eichler: Would the department consider the way the payments are made right now? Once the packing plant enters into an agreement with a consulting company, as to whether or not the viable, would the department consider paying for those funds rather than, the way it sits now is, the producer or the meat packer has to pay out that full $50,000. In specific, the requests that we talked about yesterday with B J Packers. He puts out 50 grand out of his pocket, which limits his capital, limits his needs, that he has to have. Can the Province look at the fact that perhaps they can enter into that agreement with the consultant and pay their share, rather than have the meat packer put out all the money and be on the hook for it until such time the government pays his 90 percent back?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The bills are paid on receipt of invoice and receipt of the report. We could make the payments if we receive invoice and we had a progress report, but it is really an audit requirement that we have invoice and we have report. So we have to be very careful that we are not stepping beyond the bounds of the Auditor.

      I understand what the member is saying. It is a significant amount of money that has to go, but I believe that knowing that there is up to a 90% recovery is important and that also is useful for the people who are doing the feasibility study and the people that are looking at it.

 

Mr. Eichler: I know the minister would have the authority to do that, whether or not she has the will, I guess, or her department has the will, in order to make the changes. I mean, I know this particular individual that we are talking about with B J Packers is going to have to go borrow that money or take it out of his operating line. So he is going to have some borrowing costs and some other costs and, to me, I just cannot see why the Province cannot enter into the agreement itself with the consultant and pay them the 90 percent and leave the B J Packers, in this case, the 10% responsibility, rather than have him have to upfront all of the money.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Well, the member opposite says that I have the authority. I have to live within, and this department has to live within, the rules of the Auditor.

 

      What the proponents can do is break their projects down into smaller components and that has happened in some cases, but we have to be very careful with public money. We cannot be paying for something that we have not received. But, as I said, we have discussions with individuals and staff from this department will work very closely with them and sometimes the better way to do it is to break it up into components and that might also help. So we are open to discussion, but in reality we cannot pay a bill or advance money without an invoice.

 

Mr. Eichler: Out of the 29 plants that are in the province of Manitoba, there is one that is federally inspected, and, hopefully, we can get another one here very soon. My understanding on contacting these processing plants, there is only one that has received funding from the Province. What does the minister think that the problem is? Is it the lack of will? Is it the lack of business wanting to take the chance, or is it lack of initiative on the government's part to not let them know about the programs?

 

* (16:00)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: It is an interesting question that the member raises. There are people that have made applications. We had a program that covered 50 percent of the costs, and there were some people who applied, were approved and withdrew their appli­cation. We have a concern that we are not getting the kind of uptake or interest in moving to federal standards. That is why we have moved to covering up to 90 percent of the feasibility studies to hope to encourage more people to do this.

 

      Really, we have worked with the industry and it is industry and the processes that have to make the decision. It is a big investment, and I know that there are some that are looking at it. When people are looking at these kinds of options, there are staff that work with them and we will continue to work with them and, hopefully, we will see some people move to the next level.

 

      I think one of the things we also have to recognize is that many of the plants right now are working at full capacity, and they are content with the business that they have. Many of them do not have the desire to move to federal standards. We would like to see more move to federal standards, but it also has to be a desire on the part of the business owner. If they are happy with the way their business is going, we can only do so much. We have put the money in to help them with their feasibility studies now going to 90 percent. We have various programs that are available should they want to move in that direction, but it is up to the individuals. If you want to slaughter an animal right now in this province, many times you have got a long waiting period because they are busy, so that is really the issue.

 

Mr. Eichler: Out of the budget, how much is going to Rancher's Choice with the initiative that they have going? Is there a set amount?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The money for Rancher's Choice was budgeted in last year's budget, so we do not anticipate that there will be a need to draw from this fund. We are hoping that this fund will be used for other facilities.

 

Mr. Eichler: With respect to Rancher's Choice, what is the process that the Rancher's Choice are going to use to try and get rid of the offal that is going to be built up there? Is that all going to be hauled into Brady, or is there a long-term plan trying to deal with that?

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the business plan was to haul all of the offal to Brady Landfill site and their business plan was viable with that component in it, but we have been in discussion with them about looking for opportunities locally, and it is my hope that, as we move forward, we may come up with a local solution. I have always said that, if it is being hauled to Brady, somebody is making money on it. We have transportation classes on it. I would much rather see a local solution where we might create some jobs in a rural area. So those are discussions. Their plan is Brady Landfill site. We are hoping that, as we move forward, there might be a local solution.

 

Mr. Eichler: Well, I thank the minister for that. That is an issue that affects all the packing houses within the province, and I know specifically with McCreary and with B J Packers in Beausejour that is a cost that is substantial that they have to pass on to the client in the end result. I would think that the government should take some leadership roles and try and find ways to deal with the product since it is no longer rendered, and it is a cost that we are going to have to deal with in the future. Hopefully, either through the university or one of our other initiatives, we can move forward to make that where it is not quite so expensive. Also, Brady is going to run full one of these days as well.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The issues that the member raises are accurate. I can tell the member that we have funded a study at the university to look at composting. Our department has been providing information on how composting might be done, but the municipalities also have to get engaged in this issue. These are local issues, and I do not believe it is right to be just sending everything off to Brady Landfill site because, as the member indicates, there could be a point when this is not going to be an option.

 

      So we have to look for local solutions, and I have been in discussion, raised it with AMM as an issue that they have to look at. There are sites in rural Manitoba that would qualify for sites that could be where the offal could be composted or disposed of because some of the landfill sites do meet the standards that are required, but in my view there is a resistance on the part of the municipalities to deal with it. I believe that it is an area that more work has to be done.

 

Mr. Eichler: I am glad to see the minister has taken the initiative. We did meet with a company out of Brandon that had a compost site at the Brandon airport and I do not know if the minister has met with them or not, but–[interjection] 

 

An Honourable Member: Chater airport.

 

Mr. Eichler: I am sorry.

 

An Honourable Member: Chater airport.

 

Mr. Eichler: Chater airport. I do not know if the minister has met with them or not, but it is an issue where they are doing some composting now for Maple Leaf and they have the ability I think to handle some more offal, ways of dealing in the composting. I know Stony Mountain penitentiary has an excellent program there as well. I think the science is out there and a lot of work is being done on it. Hopefully, the department or her staff could meet with some of these groups to move their projects forward.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, I can assure the member that our department has been meeting with a variety of groups. I am not sure of the particular one that he has spoken to, but we have met with a variety of groups. We have put the information on composting on site and many farmers are using it. They say that the information that has been provided through workshops is working very well for them. We have also put the information on the Web site so that people can use that, access information there as well, and, as I said, we have invested in a compost project at the University of Manitoba and are working with a variety of people who have different ideas on how we might be able to deal with the by-product of this industry.

 

Mr. Eichler: Thank you. We will move on in respect of time in order to try and stay and get through this today.

 

      Just a quick comment back on the school tax rebate on farmland. We met with another group this morning, and I have to tell the minister and put this on record. They are very concerned about this being in the agricultural budget. If it is a political move just to show that the agricultural budget has been increased by $20 million, I would ask the minister to re-evaluate that. It is not going to go away, and with it being in the particular department that it is in, does open that door for criticism. I do not think we need to put our farmers in that situation at this point in time.

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, the member has raised this issue before. I have said, and will continue to say, that if there is a trade challenge, it is not going to matter in which line this is, but I indicated to the member also that, as we do restructuring of the department and restructuring of our services, this service will be provided through the Manitoba Agriculture Services Corporation through the insurance division. I have to just completely disagree with the member that we could somehow hide a support for farmers.

 

      If we are in a trade challenge, they will look at every line to look at supports, just as we would look at every line if we were challenging someone else. This is a support for farmers. I am proud that our government has been able to work on the farmland school tax rebate and I am proud that a branch of this department can deliver that to farmers.

 

* (16:10)

 

Mr. Eichler: As I have stated yesterday, and I will still state again today that we will have to agree to disagree about it. Hopefully, it does not come to that, but, when it does, we will say that we told you so.

 

      Moving on to the next program, Agri-Industry Development and Innovation, with the irrigation development, in particular with the Portage area, Carman area, Treherne area, what are the depart­ment's plans with respect to upgrading or licensing of the irrigation development?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: We are not the licensing agency for these projects. We provide technical assistance and funding for off-farm water storage, and any project has to meet the licensing requirements that are regulated in the Water Stewardship branch. Their water rights licence would come from Water Stewardship, and their environmental licence would come from Conservation.

 

Mr. Eichler: I would like to have it recorded that I thank the minister for her invitation to attend the Agri-Food Research and Development opening last week and her staff on the great job they did. She announced several times about, I believe it was 13.5 million. Could the minister give us a breakdown on how much of that was federal and how much was provincial?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The 3.278 million was from a federal GRIP surplus, 5.252 was equipment that we got under the APF, and then the 5.08 was the provincial funding. As well, the ongoing operational costs are provincial dollars. So we used the federal money, which is in the range of 8.5, which was federal dollars that we had left over from GRIP, and we were able to negotiate a use for that. When we were in those discussions, I thought it was very important that we take those dollars and use them in something that would be a long-term investment. So that is the portion of federal dollars.

 

Mr. Eichler: With the funding then, there is no funding that is going to be coming forward from the federal government for any of the operation costs. It is going to be the responsibility of the Province of Manitoba?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There are no federal dollars for the operating of the project, but there could be federal dollars if someone comes forward with one of the projects. For example, somebody may get money through ARDI, the Agriculture Research and Development fund, so there could be federal-provincial dollars that would then be used on a particular project, but the ongoing operating costs are funded by the Province.

 

Mr. Eichler: Just taking that to the next level then, the dollars that have been budgeted for that are $1 million. Is that correct?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: For the ARDI, for the Agricultural Research–

 

An Honourable Member: Right.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Yes, there is $1 million budgeted there. That is $1 million provincial money.

 

Mr. Eichler: With that then, some of the initiatives that are being brought forward by the different levels of the sector that wants to have products tested and developed, what portion of that is recovered from the producer or the client?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: About a third of the costs of testing the product or developing the product is recovered from the proponent.

 

Mr. Eichler: And how is the cost filled out? Do they use a per-hour formula or is it something that is prenegotiated?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: It is a set rate for projects. It is something that is negotiated at the beginning of the project so the proponent will know what their costs are as they move forward. There would be a different rate for Manitobans than there would be for someone from out of province or out of country. The member knows we have an interest in attracting business and partnerships with other countries, and that is why we had representation from China, from Mexico and the U.K. at our opening.

 

Mr. Eichler: Just so I am clear on the research and development, that is only for consumption, then? Any new oils or that type of process where we would be wanting to look for new initiatives, new programs for something other than food, that would be through the University of Manitoba rather than through the Food Development Centre?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: It would be food and beverage products that would be tested and developed at this centre.

 

Mr. Eichler: The Agri-Environment line there for $1.9, what is the Province's position? This is where the farm tires and so forth would be under in that particular department.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: This is the whole gamut of issues that we work on with farmers on environmental issues like environmental farm plans, nutrient management, soil testing, surveys. All of those would be included in that area.

 

Mr. Eichler: With respect to the tires within the province of Manitoba, what is the department's position specifically in regard to farm tires?

 

* (16:20)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: We have no program dealing with tires in this department. It would be under Sustainable Development. It is in the Department of Conservation where there is the environmental program on tires. It is not in this department.

 

      Mr. Chairman, I think we will have to clarify that. I am not sure if it is in Energy, Science or whether it is in Conservation. I can clarify that for the member.

 

Mr. Eichler: The Agriculture Sustainability initiative, in particular when we are talking about that particular fund, local organizations and that has to do with agricultural practices, is there a particular initiative that the government is looking at, or what is the idea on that particular area?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: This is our Covering New Ground program, and the program areas are sustainable crop management, sustainable forest and livestock management, integrated pest management, and the programs vary across the province. They are deter­mined by the local groups, for example, and there is a provincial team that works on it, and then there are teams in different regions of the province, and some of them could be working on livestock budgets, some could be working on crop project, so it varies across the province. The goal is developed to address priorities that have been identified in Manitoba's framework on sustainable agriculture and food.

 

Mr. Eichler: Then with the grant to the University of Manitoba for the $868,000 there, the minister's department, I believe, was part of the ceremonies out there with the Canadian Wheat Board. Is this mainly for the cereals and oil crops?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, this grant to the University of Manitoba spans across all aspects that are covered in the Faculty of Agriculture and Food Science at the University of Manitoba. There is also a portion of it that is used in Human Ecology on the nutritional side and the food side of that division as well.

 

Mr. Leonard Derkach (Russell): Mr. Chair, I would like to turn my attention to the Rural Development side of the department that the minister is responsible for. I would first like the minister to point out to me where I can find in her Estimates book the amount of money that is allocated from Lotteries to programs in rural development.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: If the member would go to page 116, under 4H, we will see that the total amount for the budget for 2005-06 is $21,750,000, and that is REDI money.

 

Mr. Derkach: That is about less than 50 percent of what the Department of Rural Development used to receive from lottery funds. I ask the minister where the remainder of lottery funds that was designated in an agreement back in the nineties, in terms of the 50-50 sharing and the appropriate sharing for a lottery funding, where that money has gone.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: REDI is a formula-driven program and it is 25 percent of the revenue from VLTs that goes back into rural Manitoba to promote rural economic development. That is the formula that has been used and is used for allocation of the funds from REDI, from the VLTs. So I am not sure what the member is referring to as previous funding.

 

      The other portion of the funds is the UDI funds, which are the urban funds and that, as well, is formula driven and that is 25 percent and the UDI funds are located in the Department of Inter­governmental Affairs and trade.

 

Mr. Derkach: I am not going to argue the issues; I just want the answers. Can the minister tell me where I can find the money that has been allocated for the Grow Bonds program?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I believe the member is aware that we are not operating the Grow Bond program now. There are Grow Bonds that are in existence, but we have moved to a new program, which is a tax credit program, and that program will be found under program operating under the $16,443,500. That is where the tax credit or the new program is found.

 

Mr. Derkach: The minister described the new tax credit program?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The CED tax credit encourages local, private investment in Manitoba-based oppor­tunities by providing community-based enterprise development projects with a means to raise necessary equity capital. Eligible investments may be made either directly in qualifying Manitoba community enterprises, or indirectly into qualifying community development investment fund pools.

 

* (16:30)

 

      A Manitoban who invests in an equitable local investment could earn up to 30% income tax credit on a maximum investment of $30,000 which would be a $9,000 tax credit, and no one individual can acquire more than 10 percent of any issue. The tax credit offsets Manitoba income tax payable. Rather than having a Grow Bond that is then invested, the individual makes their investment in an approved investment fund, and they get their tax credit for their investment.

 

Mr. Derkach: What is the guarantee to the investor regarding his or her capital investment in a project?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There is not a guarantee in principle. Their benefit is through their tax credit.

 

Mr. Derkach: That means that, if I invested $30,000 into a business and that business went belly-up or bankrupt, then I would lose all my $30,000.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: When people make an investment, they make an informed decision on how they want to make their investment just as they would with Grow Bonds. The only thing different is they would get their tax credit. They stand the chance of making an investment that they will also make a huge profit. But they might have their money up–if they invest in a business, they may make a profit. They make a decision to invest, but what their benefit is, is their advantage on a tax credit.

 

Mr. Derkach: I wish the minister would get her facts straight, and perhaps her staff could straighten her out a little. She says this is not venture capital, but the essence of the program is exactly that. Just because the person gets a tax credit, this is not unlike the Crocus Fund, and basically what you have set up here is another venture capital program for rural Manitobans to invest in what are usually very risky businesses in small communities.

 

      The Grow Bond program, the investors–Manitobans and communities who usually try to invest their money in secure things thus usually find their money invested in larger communities, in cities and in banks–are able to invest in a project at home and have the comfort of knowing that their principal will not disappear even if the business should not be successful. As I understand this program, we have a situation where an investor will invest in a business, and if the business is unsuccessful, then they lose their principal. The only thing they would have to retain is their tax credit.

 

      To me, that seems to be, first of all, a little bit illogical. Secondly, it certainly does not promote or encourage people to invest in their own local communities. We know that in rural Manitoba any business is much more risky than a business in a larger centre. There have been some very successful businesses in rural Manitoba, but there have also been businesses that have failed. If you look at the risk that is associated with this, this then becomes very similar, it mirrors what the venture capital programs in this province are.

 

      What she has done is she has changed a secure program, like the Grow Bonds program, where the government guarantees the investors their principal. She has turned this into a cost to the government of the tax credit, because it is the government that has to pay the tax credit, and there is no security for the person who invests. Can the minister explain to me how this makes some sense, as opposed to what was there before?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The member is questioning this program and implying that it will not be successful. I can tell him that there are four or five communities that are working on this. They see it as a viable option. It is a new option and I believe it can work.

 

      The member talks about Grow Bonds, and, yes, if a Grow Bond was not successful, the government paid out the bond. If it was successful, the bond was paid out and the people who had invested did not get anything anyway, so the people that were investing, once the bond was paid out,  got their money back. So I can say to the member that we have changed the program because we have moved towards a tax credit that will have the people who make their investment get their money up front.

 

Mr. Derkach: Well, Mr. Chair, the minister has just admitted that this is now a venture capital program, and I want to ask the minister where the tax credit money is coming from. Is the tax credit money coming from the Treasury, the general Treasury, or is it indeed coming from monies that are supposed to be allocated or are being taken out of the allocation of the video lottery terminals? What is the source of the tax credit?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, when we talk about tax credit, the member said, "Well, when the person got their money paid out from the successful bond, they got their interest," but if you look at tax credit versus interest, the tax credit is a higher value for the individual than, usually, what the interest rate is.

      However, the member asked if it is a portion of the tax credit coming from this budget. Yes, a portion of it is coming from this budget, just as a portion of this budget would be used to pay out Grow Bonds that failed. Grow Bonds that failed in the past would have been paid out of this budget, so, in this case a portion of the tax credit will be paid out from this budget because we are looking for ways to encourage investment in rural Manitoba.

 

Mr. Derkach: This is sickening, Mr. Chair, to be honest with you. I have never seen a disaster like this. What the minister has just said is that she is going to take, now, money from the Grow Bonds program that is supposed to be invested in projects in rural Manitoba and she is going to pay out tax credits with it. This is an abuse of money that is owed to rural Manitoba.

 

      Secondly, Mr. Chair, in the Grow Bonds program, and if I just might enlighten this minister, the Grow Bonds program was designed so that local people would invest in local projects. Their interest came from the success of the project. The risk that every individual was taking in Manitoba was that if, in fact, that project in their community were to be unsuccessful, the investor could realize the principal.

 

      That means that every investor in Manitoba took some risk, but it was not a huge risk, because it was the interest that they were risking. When a member was paid out, he was paid out or she was paid out the principal plus the interest after the Grow Bond was paid out.

 

* (16:40)

 

      Mr. Chair, this program is a sham, because what we are doing is, instead of helping the businesses, we are providing another opportunity for those people who are investing in the New Yorks of this world to be able to extract from the Grow Bonds program, or from the lotteries program, an additional tax credit, which she says could amount to 30 percent. That is an absolute insult to what the objectives and the goals of an economic development program should be in rural Manitoba. This program makes no sense because what you are doing is you are lining the pockets of people who could get their money out of New York, but at the same time, although mutuals and stocks might disappear or might devalue, in a rural community if you lose your money in a business, you will never reinvest that money in a small business again. So we will never have any kind of encouragement of people investing in their local community.

 

      That is why, Mr. Chair, this program is a complete waste. I do not know what the minister found so objectionable about the Grow Bonds program. If she wanted to change the Grow Bonds program, fine. But it was touted across this country and beyond as one of the most innovative investment vehicles for small businesses across rural parts of Canada and the United States. We had people looking at this program from England, from Ireland, from Scotland, from the United States, from all across Canada. Then, just because it is philoso­phically contrary to this minister's thinking and this government's thinking, not only have they decimated the Department of Rural Development, but they have scrapped the program and put in its place a strictly venture capital program that lines the pockets of investors who can get their returns out of mutual and stock programs in New York and the banks.

 

      So I do not understand. If the minister could provide any more clarity on this, I would be really happy to listen to it.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The member has made a few comments that I would disagree with him on. I can tell the member that we, in fact, have enhanced the services to rural Manitoba. There are more economic development officers working there. There are more people working on economic development than there has been in the past. So the member is wrong on that.

 

      I want to also tell the member that I would much rather people make their investment at home rather than the New York Stock Exchange that he is talking about. This program will help to create funds here in Manitoba and investment for small businesses.

 

      I can also tell the member opposite that we have been asked to go to other provinces to talk about our tax credit program because they see this as a program that will work, and they are trying to develop a similar program.

 

An Honourable Member: Saskatchewan.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I can tell the member–he refers to Saskatchewan, and he seems to have a dislike for Saskatchewan. I can tell him that it is the Maritime provinces that have been looking at this program very favourably and asking us to work with them on this.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me how many projects have now taken advantage of this program, and which communities they are in and which projects they are?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There are four communities that are in discussion with the department. None have concluded their agreements.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me which communities they are?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, there has been interest from several parts of the province. I can indicate to the member that we are in discussions to establish a program with Pine Falls, Steinbach, Ste. Rose and Brandon. It is the business community that is coming forward to develop this package. I can tell the member that, as I said, this program is in its early stages, and I believe we have to give the chance for the program to work, but there is interest.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me what kinds of projects we are looking at?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The Pine Falls project is a co-op dealing with forestry products. The Steinbach project is a furniture project. The Brandon project is a communication project. The Ste. Rose one is one that I will have to get back to the member on, but I can also tell you that there is also recent interest and early discussions with some sectors of the food industry.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me what the criteria are for this program?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: An eligible enterprise must receive endorsement or sponsorship from a local community development organization. The enterprise must employ no more than 200 employees, and at least 25 percent of the employees must reside in Manitoba.

 

      Enterprises that are professional practices or involved in primary industry, mineral exploration, recreational and seasonal enterprises or commercial property developments are not eligible. So that would be the criteria to be eligible.

 

      I said enterprises that are professional practices or involved in primary production, mineral exploration, recreational or seasonal enterprises or commercial property development are not eligible, so things that do not fall into that area.

 

      But the priority is to have received endorsement or sponsorship from a local community development corporation and employ no more than 200 employees, and at least 25 percent of them must be residents in Manitoba.

 

Mr. Derkach: The minister says that they must have support from their local community development corporation.

 

      Can the minister tell me how much money she is putting into the Manitoba Community Development Corporations Association as an umbrella group?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: In the last year, we provided a cheque for $5,000. There is a $10,000 cheque that is waiting to be delivered to them. We are waiting for confirmation on federal support, plus in-kind support of $15,000 which comes through the support we give them through Rural Forum.

 

Mr. Derkach: How much money does the–oh, pardon me. The federal government has just announced $100,000 that they are prepared to give to the Manitoba Community Development Corpora­tions Association.

 

      If, in fact, the Province is prepared to match that, is the Province prepared to match the $100,000 that the federal government is prepared to give to the Manitoba Community Development Corporations Association?

 

* (16:50)

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The Member for Minnedosa (Mrs. Rowat) asked a similar question about an hour ago. We went and checked. We called the Rural Secretariat. What they told us is there is $100,000 that is available, but it is for project funding. There is no commitment to core funding, and that is what we told the MCDC when we met with them, that we could not provide core funding. I have outlined to the member what we have provided for them in the last year and, in this coming year, we have not had any application for specific projects.

 

Mr. Derkach: Is the minister prepared to lay aside $100,000 to match the federal government's money for project funding?

Ms. Wowchuk: Every project is considered on its merit, and I can indicate to the member that we have not had any application for projects, and each project is reviewed when they come to us.

 

Mr. Derkach: Well, the minister has to have some sort of a budget line for projects of that nature. Can she tell me where and what the project line for that is?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Mr. Chairman, we have flex funding that is in the operating line that is there to accom­modate projects as they come along. The member is asking is there a specific line in here that is there for MCDC. I can tell him no, because there have not been specific projects that have been made to us, but we review projects as they come forward, and there is the flexibility to deal with a variety of programs as they come forward.

 

      The member knows full well that there could be programs that come up throughout the year that would then come under that operating budget.

 

Mr. Derkach: This is political gerrymandering then, because what the federal government has done is it has laid aside $100,000 for project funding, which means that once those projects come in, they still have to be scrutinized by the Secretariat, but at the end of the day there is $100,000 made available to the Manitoba Community Development Corporation Association for projects of that nature, as I understand it.

 

      Is the minister going to be prepared to match those dollars for projects that are worthy, that are determined to be viable and fundable?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The member is implying that there is $100,000 that is available there for the MCDC and we have not had that confirmation, and those funds are available, but they will be made available as projects come forward.

 

      The projects have not come forward, but the member is saying that, just as they have an operating line where they might be able to approve projects, we have an operating line where we might be able to approve projects, and they are approved on a case-by-case basis, but there is no core funding to go to organizations like this.

      There are supports and we have supported them, and in particular in-kind, but when the federal government has also said that this kind of matching can come from other sources, it does not necessarily mean that it has to be funds that come from the Province. It could be the in-kind that we provide to the organization for their meetings, and what they do for us at Rural Forum can be considered part of what will be used for matching in other projects.

 

Mr. Derkach: Mr. Chair, there is no point in pursuing this. I think the minister, although she did not answer it, has given us an indication of where the Province stands on this issue. I think she will find out more at the annual meeting of the Manitoba Community Development Corporation Association where they stand on it.

 

      Mr. Chair, I would like to ask through you, the minister indicates that the operating program funding under the Rural Economic Development Initiatives is $16.4 million. Can the minister tell me, of that money, how much money is going into departmental operating costs?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The program operating is 1.695 and that includes economic development, staff, some work that we did on livestock stewardship and a few areas in there. These were areas but the majority is on economic development and community rural development. Those were the areas, but it is 1.695.

 

Mr. Derkach: What is the 1.695, Mr. Chair?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: That is the total program operating that the member asked about, what part of the REDI funds was used for program operating and salaries.

 

Mr. Derkach: So can the minister tell me whether the other $1.39 million, or $13 million, I am sorry, is used for programs?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The balance of the 16.4435 is used for various programs.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister table the expenditures for those programs?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I can provide the member a breakdown of where the money has gone, of the various departments where we are proposing to spend money in the upcoming year. I can provide that.

Mr. Derkach: Can I also ask for the breakdown of where the money was spent in 2004 and 2005 so that there would be a comparison as to where the money has gone and where it is intended to go this year?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: Yes, we can provide that for the member.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Order, please. A recorded vote has been requested in another section of the committee of supply. I am therefore recessing this section of the Committee of Supply in order for members to proceed to the Chamber for formal vote.

 

The committee recessed at 4:59 p.m.

________

 

The committee resumed at 5:11 p.m.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Will the committee please come to order?

 

Mr. Eichler: In the essence of time and the hours that have been allocated, Mr. Chairman, we would like to start into the approval of the Estimates. If we would start on that now, please.

 

Mr. Chairperson: I will read the resolutions.

 

      Resolution 3.2: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $107,117,400 for Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, Risk Management, Credit and Income Support Programs, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      Resolution 3.3: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $18,639,500 for Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, Agri-Industry Development and Innova­tion, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      Resolution 3.4: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $40,081,700 for Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, Agri-Food and Rural Development, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

      Resolution 3.5: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $533,800 for Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, Costs Related to Capital Assets, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

      The last item to consider for the Estimates of this department is item 3.1.(a) the Minister's Salary contained in resolution 3.1.

 

      At this point, we request the minister's staff leave the table for the consideration of this last item. The floor is open for questions.

 

Mr. Derkach: I have got a whole bunch of questions.  I had not finished my questioning on 4.(h) and there were also questions on 4.(e) and 4.(c) that I had, but we will have to reserve those for another time. I would like to ask the minister if she could provide me with a list of capital projects that grants were extended to under the Capital Grants program under 4.(h).

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I believe the member would be asking for projects '04-05, and, if that is the case, yes, could provide him with information.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me what nature these capital grants would be provided for? What nature of projects that would fall into this category?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There is a wide variety of programs under the capital. There is a new program that we have, which is the Hometown program, and it is the Main Street and Hometown Meeting Place programs that were part of it. There is support for the Brandon Keystone Centre that comes out of this initiative. There are some northern initiatives that I could provide the member assistance for. There were a couple of programs that were in the Department of Conservation that funds were used for that I could also provide the member information on. I will put a list together for the member on a list of programs that funds were provided for.

 

Mr. Derkach: These are just grants that are provided for capital projects, I would think, and the minister would have to have some criteria for projects to be eligible for application. I was wondering whether the minister could provide me the criteria that would be relevant to this program. But the other one I have is can the minister tell me whether the Green Team program for rural Manitoba is still alive, and how much money is going to that program this year, as compared to last year.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: The Green Team program is still alive, and it was funded last year through this program. It will be funded again this year.

 

Mr. Derkach: Can the minister tell me how many dollars are flowing to this program, and whether or not the criteria under the Green Team program have been changed?

 

Ms. Wowchuk: There has been very little change to the Green Team criteria, and the funding is 19.7. You want the criteria for Green Team? Just give me a minute.

 

Mr. Derkach: If the minister would just provide them to me in writing, and if you could just give me the amount of money that is going to the Green Team, and whether or not the regulations regarding those who could apply for Green Team members have changed, and when that program is made available to communities and businesses.

 

Ms. Wowchuk: I apologize to the member that I am not able to put my figures out right now, but I will provide him with that information.

 

Mr. Eichler: I move, seconded by the member from Ste. Rose,

 

      THAT line 3.1.(a), the Minister's Salary be reduced to a dollar.

 

Mr. Chairperson: It is moved

 

      THAT line 3.1.(a) Minister's Salary be reduced to $1.

 

      The motion is in order. Shall the resolution pass?

 

Some Honourable Members: Agreed.

 

Some Honourable Members: No.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Shall the motion pass?

 

Some Honourable Members: Yes.

 

Some Honourable Members: No.

 

Voice Vote

 

Mr. Chairperson: All those in favour, please say yea.

 

Some Honourable Members: Yea.

Mr. Chairperson: All those opposed to the motion, please say nay.

 

Some Honourable Members: Nay.

 

Mr. Chairperson: The Nays have it.

 

Formal Vote

 

Mr. Derkach: We request a recorded vote.

 

Mr. Chairperson: Does the member have support?

 

Some Honourable Members: Of course.

 

Mr. Chairperson: A formal vote has been requested by two members. This section of the committee will now recess to allow members to proceed to the Chamber for a formal vote.

 

The committee recessed at 5:21 p.m.

 

________

 

The committee resumed at 5:32 p.m.

 

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

 

FINANCE

 

* (14:50)

 

Madam Chairperson (Bonnie Korzeniowski): The Committee of Supply will be continuing with the Estimates of the Department of Finance.

 

      When this committee last met on Friday, April 21, in the Chamber, it had been agreed to consider the items contained in Resolution 7.8. Consumer and Corporate Affairs. Is that still the will of the committee? [Agreed]

 

      The floor is now open for questions.

 

Mr. Gerald Hawranik (Lac du Bonnet): I think where we left off was the Residential Tenancies Branch. There were a number of questions with respect to that branch from my colleague from Portage la Prairie. I have a few questions dealing with that branch as well.

 

      I have noticed the minister had publicly stated that he did not plan to eliminate rent controls within the province, and I am wondering whether there are any circumstances which would convince him to eliminate rent controls in the province.

 

Hon. Greg Selinger (Minister of Finance): The statement I made publicly was of rent regulation. I saw no immediate demise of rent regulation, and the member will note that we have tabled the bill today that makes some improvements in the rent regulation regime in Manitoba.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Can the minister indicate how many multiple-family dwelling units for rental were constructed in Winnipeg, and how many were in Manitoba for rental purposes just last year?

 

Mr. Selinger: Over the last three years, there has been construction of approximately a thousand rental units.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Is that within the city of Winnipeg or the entire province?

 

Mr. Selinger: Province-wide.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Can the minister indicate how many of those thousand units were private sector driven versus public sector driven?

 

Mr. Selinger: Subject to any corrections, the overwhelming majority of those would be private sector.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Were any of those units, in fact, condominiums which were for resale as opposed to for rental?

 

Mr. Selinger: We do not have that kind of information on whether the condominiums, when they were built, were for occupancy by the pur­chasers of them or were for acquisition in order to make available to the rental market as an individual unit. We suspect, however, that some of the condominiums that are constructed are for the purposes of the investor putting them on the market for rental purposes.

 

Mr. Hawranik: If I read you correctly you cannot tell me exactly how many units, multiple family units, were strictly for rental purposes in the province.

 

Mr. Selinger: When I gave the number of a thousand units for rental purposes, that does not include condominiums. Any condominiums that were acquired or invested in for the purposes of rental as opposed to occupancy are over and above that number.

 

Mr. David Faurschou (Portage la Prairie): I was wondering whether the minister was able to research and provide for the answers to the questions last Thursday in regard to the Residential Tenancies Branch.

 

      I might just ask the minister made reference to someone within the department being on long-term medical leave. Was that the director of the Resi­dential Tenancies Branch, Mr. Roger Barsy?

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, Roger Barsy is currently away for medical leave. We are optimistic he will make a full recovery and might be able to resume some duties with us.

 

      On the specific questions the member asked me on April 21, I have a two-page answer. Do you want me to read it into the record or do you want me to provide it to you? It is your call.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I think the questions that I asked are very important and should be part of the official record, Madam Chairperson.

 

Mr. Selinger: The summary of the process: A landlord who is found to have charged rent in excess of the amounts permitted by legislation is required to reimburse the affected tenants the amount of the rent overpaid. Often landlords voluntarily reduce the rent to the allowable amount and return the amount of rent overpayment to tenants without receiving an order from the Residential Tenancies Branch. The branch will issue orders setting the rent and ordering the refund of overpaid rents to tenants if the landlord does not voluntarily comply.

 

      In cases where the landlord cannot locate one or more tenants, the landlord must pay the amount owing to the branch. The landlord provides a list of tenants and the amount of overpayment each tenant is entitled to receive. When tenants present themselves to the branch, they are asked to produce identification and sign a statement that they are entitled to the overpaid rent. A cheque is then issued.

 

      Although an active search is not conducted, the branch's computer system now allows tenants' names to be flagged if the branch is holding money that they are owed. Any interaction with that person will alert staff to the fact that money is being held in trust for the individual. Staff will ask questions to confirm that they are the right person and inform them that the money is being held for them. The branch holds the amount for two years. At the end of two years, the amount is forfeited to the Crown and is paid into the Security Deposit Compensation Fund. So that is by way of process.

 

      On the specific information: The number of landlords that paid money into the Residential Tenancies Branch for overpayment of rents in '03 was eight, and in '04 it was twenty. The amount paid into the RTB for overpaid rents for tenants that cannot be located, in '03 was $15,700 and change, and in '04 was $88,750 and change. The amount paid out to tenants who have been located was $17,790 and change in '03, and $22,900 and change in '04. Information respecting the number of landlords required to refund overpayments of rent to tenants is not available.

 

      Additional information: The Security Deposit Compensation Fund is used to pay the amount owing to tenants if a landlord has failed to comply with an order from the branch to return all or part of a security deposit to a tenant and there are no reasonable and appropriate measures available to allow the order to be satisfied within a reasonable period of time. So that money that is forfeited after two years goes into this fund, and it pays back security deposits when other means are not available.

 

      Money deposited into the Security Deposit Compensation Fund includes unclaimed security deposits, unclaimed rent overpayments and un­claimed property sale proceeds that have been held in trust by the branch for two years. If the balance of the fund exceeds $30,000, the legislation provides that the excess amount can be used to contribute towards the cost of providing educational and other programs for landlords, tenants and the public. The legislation also states that any amount that is not required for future security deposit payments or to meet future costs of educational programs is to be paid as revenue into the Consolidated Fund. To date, there has not been a payment in the revenue account of the Consolidated Fund.

 

      The amount transferred into the Security Deposit Compensation Fund in '03 was $3,517, and in '04 was $7,270. This amount, once again, includes unclaimed rent payments, overpayments, unclaimed security deposits and unpaid property sale proceeds. The amount paid out of the Security Deposit Compensation Fund for educational purposes in '03 was $12,952, and in '04 was $22,965. The balance in the Security Deposit Compensation Fund as of March 31, '05, is $48,863.

 

      The uses of the funds in this Security Deposit Compensation Fund for '03 and '04 went for things such as rewriting the guidebook, update to include changes in legislation regulations, updating fact sheets due to changes in legislation regulations, production of a newsletter, increased information for clients concerning changes in the guidebook, legis­lation regulations and focus testing of reasons for decision form, the form that they plan to use for rent regulation orders.

 

      I can make a copy of that available to the member if he wishes.

 

* (15:00)

 

Mr. Faurschou: I really appreciate the detail that has been provided, although probably a little quicker than I could transcribe it on my–

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, and I will make a copy available, then.

 

Mr. Faurschou: If you could, that would be much appreciated.

 

      So, understanding, then, the surplus monies, or monies that are unable to be returned after two years to renters that have not been able to be located; I find it, though, rather curious that the only activity that the branch takes on to actually locate renters is to wait to see if they appear on a current renter's list, and not have someone actively looking, or searching out these individuals through forwarded addresses or through other government agencies, whether it be the Finance Department, sir, that keeps pretty good records on people to make sure they pay their income taxes, or perhaps Manitoba Public Insurance Corporation. All of these others are quite accessible to you, sir, to make certain that these monies get back to the individual that it is duly owed to.

 

Mr. Selinger: The member is correct that the mechanism used to track people that have not claimed a refund is the flagging of that individual's name in the data base of the Residential Tenancies Branch. Then when there is interaction for any reason with that individual, it pops up to indicate that there is a potential refund available to them. That is what they do. There is no cross-reference with tax data, et cetera. To do that would require a careful look at the personal protection of private infor­mation, before we started transferring data from one branch of government to another branch of government.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Madam Chairperson, it just last year alone paid out $22,000 on the renters that were found by this method of flagging, and $66,000 more, according to my quick writing here, is being held, $66,000. That is a fair chunk of change to most people, and I would suggest that persons would not be too terribly concerned how the government, which department kept records on them that made sure that this money got back to them, because, I think, the personal privacy act is one that should allow for, and I believe does allow for, the exchange between branches within your own department, sir.

 

Mr. Selinger: I think the member is taking the 88.7 in '04 and deducting from it the amount paid out to tenants of $22,900 to get his $60,000 and change number. That $22,900 covers the previous two years, and so there is still a possibility that more of the $88,000 will be claimed on a two-year, go-forward basis. So I just do not want to leave the impression that it is a one-year kind of reconciliation and then, boom, the money is gone. It is a two-year time frame where people can claim their money. So that is just by way of clarification.

 

      I think lying behind his question is: Are there more active measures that the branch might be able to take to allow tenants to get their cash back on an overpayment? and the member raises an interesting point. It is something we will take under consid­eration if there is more active measures that could be taken, but I do not want to leave the impression that these are people that have just moved recently. In some cases, these rent overpayments are calculated on circumstances that go back several years and the tenants could have long moved out and moved more than once, maybe several times, so the trail could be quite cold in this case.

 

      So there are some challenges in doing this. If there are other practical and cost-effective measures to get in touch with them, if the member has ideas, we are not going to say, "No, we will not consider them." We certainly will consider them. We are not going to hire a bunch of gumshoes to chase around looking for tenants to make an overpayment rebate. But, if there are some other practical measures the member has, I know the branch administration would consider that, as would I. If there are some other practical measures, we have an open mind to how we might be able to get overpayments back to people.

 

Mr. Faurschou: No, I do not make it a habit of suggesting that we spend more hard-earned taxpayers' dollars that are not cost-effectively spent. By all means. But, if there exist data bases that are easily accessed without too much effort that could assist in making certain the dollars that are duly owed to renters here in the province of Manitoba get back to the renters.

 

      I want to follow through, though, the dollars that, after the two-year period, flow into the Security Deposit Compensation Fund, which is capped at $30,000 and, then, if that fund then exceeds that level, the monies flow through to what I believe the minister said was an educational fund that provided for correspondence and newsletters and seminars and that. Where would I find that accounting, or mention thereof, in the Supplementary Estimates or the report?

 

Mr. Selinger: Just on the member's previous point about cross-referencing databases, income tax information is very sensitive information, so we normally do not cross-reference to that. My Deputy Minister of Finance will take that under advisement and look into the legalities of that and appropriate­ness of that. Because I understand the member's point, it could be to the benefit of the Manitoban in question. So we will take a look at that.

 

      There might be requirements, but we will verify this, for releases to be signed, which would beg the question of how you get a hold of the person to get the release signed. So it gets tricky. But we will look into it and see what is possible.

 

      On the question of the accounting, for how the monies over and above the $30,000 are used for educational purposes, I am informed that there is not an accounting of that in the annual report. That will be taken under consideration. If you want a specific breakdown of how that money was used, we would be happy to provide that to you.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Yes, I am interested, I know, in the amount. Perhaps, not the last year. But maybe if there is an accounting over the previous few years so that we can eventually track how the dollars flow because I am gravely concerned that the renters of Manitoba and, admittedly, perhaps, some of the landlords do not make a huge effort in finding previous renters so as to return monies.

 

      Then the monies flow to the department and, unless flagged, they take up another residency somewhere that the Tenancies Branch has some involvement with. Again, does not make what I term a very strong effort in locating them.

 

      These monies are flowing over in, I believe, quite a substantial amount over the course of the years. So these questions are being asked on behalf of all renters in the province of Manitoba, and I am yet unconvinced that we are making the best effort to safeguard renters here in the province of Manitoba.

 

      So I think the minister should also be knowledgeable of the amount of money that we are talking about. It may not just be over the last couple of years, but maybe even the last decade, how much money does this accumulate to?

 

* (15:10)

 

Mr. Selinger: We will take a look back a decade, if the member wishes. I did indicate to him that it was about $22,965 in '04 and $12,952 in '03 for educational purposes. We will go back an additional eight years and see how much monies were allocated for these purposes. Would the member like to get a breakdown of that money for, what, the last two or three years on the specifics of how it was used? You do not want it every year for 10 years, do you?

 

Mr. Faurschou: I think we are looking for a trend as to where the monies are actually done. Like one year, you might feel that it is very important to run a series of seminars, for instance, for making changes in legislation. If we are able to have three, or four, or five years to see basically how the education fund expends the surplus, or unreturned renters' monies, I think it is important to Manitobans to know how this is spent. Now the point the minister made, the last point, is that there have been no funds paid into the Consolidated Fund out of the Residential Tenancies Branch. Is that over one year, two years, ten years, ever?

 

Mr. Selinger: Since 1990, there has been no money transferred from this Security Deposit Compensation Fund to the Consolidated Fund of the Government of Manitoba.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Now from the Security Deposit Compensation Fund, yes, which is capped at $30,000, but what about the education fund? Are there monies deemed surplus in that fund flowed to the Consolidated Fund?

 

Mr. Selinger: Just for purposes of clarity there is only the Security Deposit Compensation Fund. After the amount remaining, the balance in that fund exceeds $30,000. They have the legislative enable­ment to spend some of that balance over $30,000 for education purposes. There have never been monies out of this fund transferred to the Consolidated Fund of government. There have only been monies used in excess of the $30,000 for education purposes, and I have given the amounts for the last two years. I will give any amounts that may have been spent for the last 10 years. I will break out more details in terms of trend, the types of educational activities for the last five years unless the member wants more infor­mation than that.

 

Mr. Faurschou: So there does not exist an actual education fund. It is just deemed surplus monies. What line does it then flow to? If you got a cap at 30,000 in the compensation fund, and you have got $48,000, where does that 18 then flow to? What line does it show up in?

 

Mr. Selinger: The balance over 30,000 remains in the fund and shows in the fund. A plan is put together for what educational purposes the balance over 30,000 may be used for in any given year. So it stays in that line.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I want to just then leave this line of questioning with the minister with the understanding that we will, for the last five or so years, be able to receive in detail of what educational-type activities have been undertaken by the branch and how things are going.

An Honourable Member: Yes.

 

Mr. Hawranik: With respect to that security deposit compensation plan, the tenants we have in this province, some of them are the poorest citizens we have in this province. I know the minister talks about leaving impressions and so on, but by not getting back to tenants, and not actually making a real concerted effort in getting back to tenants, I do not think he is leaving the right impression in the minds of Manitobans because it is in the best interest of government not to get back to tenants. The reason being is that it goes to the Security Deposit Compensation Fund and then it goes to education purposes, and then, even though the minister has said that no money has flowed to general revenue, in fact it could potentially go to general revenue.

 

      I am wondering whether it would, and I know that the member from Portage la Prairie has indicated that we have to look in terms of cost recovery, what it really costs to search down people who are entitled to refunds, but certainly I think the minister could take the step of putting names of people who are entitled to refunds even on the Web site. That could be a potentially powerful tool, I think, to get back to people in terms that a refund is available, or even if not names of individuals, even addresses of proper­ties that, in fact, have had orders made against them to refund rent overpayments of tenants. Would he consider that proposal?

 

Mr. Selinger: Well, a couple of comments. First of all, the responsibility to rebate to tenants any rents that they have overpaid is the obligation of the landlord who received that benefit, and most of that is returned through the landlords themselves. Only a small percentage is passed on to this compensation fund because the landlord was not able to locate the tenant or get the money into their hands. And, of course, I have indicated that we flag it in the Residential Tenancies data base and try to rebate monies which we have indicated the amounts that were rebated here.

 

      There has never been a take-out of the fund for consolidated revenues. The only purposes to which the excess of $30,000 has been used is to benefit people that are involved in landlord-tenant relations, landlords, tenants themselves and the general public. I am glad the member raised the question. We do not want to leave the impression that we are trying in any way to take advantage of these monies that are accruing in the Security Deposit Compensation Fund, and that probably explains why there has never been a transfer to the Consolidated Fund. It has always been used for the benefit of landlords and tenants, people involved in these kinds of property relation­ships. We will break out the information how that money has been used.

 

      The idea that the member asked me about posting the names of individuals on a Web site and indicating that they are eligible for a refund, on the face of it that might be helpful, but it might also raise privacy and security concerns with respect to those individuals. So we will have to take that under careful consideration under our private information protection act and see what issues that might raise. So I am not going to dismiss the member's sugges­tion out of hand, but my staff are already saying to me that it might raise some issues around privacy concerns and private information protection. So we will take it under advisement and see what is possible there without putting people at risk. Sometimes it could be dangerous to have somebody's name on a Web site with some money coming back to them. That might set them up for other kinds of experiences that would be unhelpful. They might be preyed upon for that reason.

 

      So it is a delicate matter. I actually thank the member for the suggestion. These are small amounts of money in the larger scheme of things for government. They have no desire to take advantage of this for the Consolidated Revenue Fund and there has never been any benefit to the Consolidated Revenue Fund.

 

Mr. Faurschou: How far back would you be able to track if there was someone that was a renter and wanted to follow this up as to the rental monies that potentially were overcharged? How far back would your records be able to track this?

 

* (15:20)

 

Mr. Selinger: The money is kept in the fund for two years before anything is moved along, and records retention is usually about seven years.

 

Mr. Faurschou: How many landlords would actually be assessed during any given year, perhaps last year or the year before that, who would be paying in monies to the branch for overpayment? I think you may have mentioned 8 or 20 were paid out, but how many were paid in?

 

Mr. Selinger: The numbers that I gave to the member from Portage la Prairie were the number of landlords that paid money into the RTB for overpayment of rents. We do not have another number for the number of landlords that received overpayments. We would have to go back to every file and draw that out which would be quite onerous. We do not keep track of every landlord that overcharged rents who received overpayments. We do get a record of those that have overpayments that they were not able to get back to their tenants, either past or present. They are then sent on to us.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I am just trying to get a gauge as to how many landlords in the province are assessed or found to be in non-compliance with the legislation in a given year. Like last year, for instance, how many landlords were found that they were overcharging and the branch issued an order to return monies to renters?

 

Mr. Selinger: In the annual report on page 64, does the member have a copy of that with him? Page 64, '03-04, on the bottom table there, there is, are you with me? Madam Chairperson, '03-04, it is in the Manitoba Finance Annual Report. I will get this for the member.

 

      What we have is a statistic on the number of unauthorized rent increases that were complained about. What we have is a statistic of the number of files opened where there is the possibility of an unauthorized rent increase. In '03-04 it was 725; in '02-03 it was 433; in '01-02 it was 426, but all these files open do not necessarily prove to be the case that they were a rent increase that was unauthorized. Some of them are found to be a complaint without substance. That is data base we have.

 

      Now, you can see from that, that there is a very small number who wind up paying into the compen­sation fund because (1) they would have had to have been found to have an overpayment received or they overcharged, and (2) they had not been able to get the money back to all the tenants that should have gotten a rebate. It is in only those instances where those first two things have not been fulfilled. In the first case they have to have fulfilled that they overcharged; the second case, they could not find everybody. Only the remaining number of landlords pay into this compensation fund the monies they have not been able to disburse.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I appreciate that we are trying to glean from it, and some of this information, I thought there would have been a database as to the number of actual orders of rent to be returned. How many landlords would actually have been ordered over the course of a year, last year, the year before actually to repay? I thought there would have been some type of record keeping as to how many orders for rent rebate going out from the department.

 

Mr. Selinger: Currently there is not necessarily, in the cases I indicated where there are files open, say 743 or whatever, it is not always the case that an order is issued. Sometimes just opening the file and having a discussion with the landlord, they will voluntarily agree to make a repayment of an over­payment. So then we do not keep track of it. I mean, they have looked after it. It is informally resolved. So, as you can see the way the branch operates, they are not trying to compile statistics. They are trying to get satisfaction for landlords and tenants and how they are treated under the act.

 

      Now, as the member knows, there has been the acquisition of some new software in the last couple of years. There has been a complete re-engineering done of the technical capacity of the Residential Tenancies Branch to serve clients, and there has been quite a bit of capital put into upgrading their soft­ware. It could be considered for the future as one of the additional statistics that could be gathered, but at the moment it is not gathered.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Thank you, Mr. Minister, and I do appreciate it. I am just looking at making certain there is follow-through. If you have issued an order, because obviously if you are issuing the order the landlord has been less than compliant and less than agreeable and amenable to work with, so you issued an order. If you do not keep active logs of how many orders or who has been ordered to rebate rental monies, how do you make follow-up? In my own personal business filing, I would suggest, sir, that would be a fundamental ability within the depart­ment.

 

Mr. Selinger: Before a file is closed, in the case of a specific complaint, there has to be evidence that the money was returned to tenants or there is a cheque conveyed to the branch for those that they could not return the money to. So there is a follow-up to make sure that each file is dealt with appropriately.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Well, I am not suggesting that the files are inappropriately handled or anything. I am just talking about a master list of actual active files that to me is a standard index of how many files have opened, how many are active. So that it is easy at a glance to know the current situation at the branch. But anyway it is a suggestion, and perhaps the new software can yield up that ability.

 

      I wonder, though, can the branch tell me directly then, once the orders have been issued there is an appeal process that the landlord can engage in to ask for re-evaluation of the order to return rental monies. I wonder if the minister can tell me how many appeals actually came forward from landlords that felt that the assessment needed to be looked at again.

 

* (15:30)

 

Mr. Selinger: While my staff is collecting that information for me, there is a count of how many files are open. But they are open for a variety of reasons not just for overpayments. The old tech­nology did not have the ability to sort of refine the types of reasons they were. They were not analyzed into categories as to why they were opened, but they were, the complaint had to be resolved one way or the other before the file was closed. There is the possibility now with some of the new technology that we can start categorizing the types of complaints and tracking them by category as we go forward.

 

      So I understand the member's point. I am just explaining to him the focus has been on getting satisfaction from landlords and tenants on a file-by-file basis in the past. The technical capacity to gather this kind of data was not really there in the past.

 

      As to the member's question on the number of appeals on compliance issues, in the annual report, which I think he has for '03, if he would go to page 11. Yes, for the Residential Tenancies Commission Annual Report of '03, he will see there that appeals received in Winnipeg to the end of December 31, '03, were in Winnipeg; nine buildings, 103 units, and none for either Brandon or Thompson. This is specific for unauthorized rent issues. These are the number of appeals for that specific kind of complaint the member has been probing me on.

      Now, as you go down that table, you can see, of those nine buildings, three were confirmed for 11 units, and there are seven still active. We may not have the same report. I am referring to the Residential Tenancies Commission Annual Report of '03. That might be it, we are not on the same page, I guess yet, but we will get there. Page 11 is the data they provided for us under part 9 of The Residential Tenancies Act.

 

      So you can see, for the last two years, the number of appeals received: six for 165 units in '02, and nine for 103 units in '03. Then there is a carry-forward from the previous year. There was one building from 1 unit carried forward from '02 to '03.

 

Mr. Faurschou: So we are looking at nine buildings and then three where decisions were confirmed, one is carried forward. Where did the other six, well, four, five go?

 

Mr. Selinger: There were ten, one carried forward, nine new, for a total of ten. Three, the decisions that an overpayment occurred, were confirmed for 11 units. Seven on 93 units were still active; they had not been resolved yet, which gives you your totals, your reconciliation.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Well, I will thank the minister for that. I appreciate that looking into the commission side of things was my oversight, but I appreciate the minister's response in that regard.

 

      I wanted to ask, just overall with the branch and the efforts being made to make sure that renters and landlords are treated fairly and equitably, the resources that are used within this department, I see, are getting larger. But the concern I have is that this branch, you know, is in relationship to the Ombudsman which is the independent party. That does yield up a great many files being opened at the Ombudsman's level.

 

      I am wondering whether or not there is communication from the commission to the Ombudsman that there are areas that can be improved upon so the Ombudsman is not in receipt of as many complaints, I think, to the Residential Tenancies Branch and renters is second only to MPIC in the number of files opened by the Ombudsman on any given year.

 

      I am asking, at this point in time if there is an effort to debrief and learn from some of the events or files being carried over to the Ombudsman that we can maybe address or change our method of operation at the branch, so that the Ombudsman is not as active as he has been in the past in this regard.

 

Mr. Selinger: I thank the member for the question. My staff informed me that the number of issues that go to the Ombudsman with respect to this branch in relation to the number of files dealt with is actually quite small in percentage terms. They also believe they have a good relationship with the Ombudsman's office for how they resolve these complaints.

 

      This is an area that is highly contentious, landlord-tenant relationships. There are a lot of units in this province. There are a lot of people living in these circumstances. There are a lot of misunder­standings and communication and real issues that arise there. It is a very people-intensive business. There is a lot of pressure on the people that work in this branch for the kinds of services they provide to the public, and usually providing services where people are unhappy. So it is a difficult area.

 

      I know the staff work very hard, and I know the kind of stresses they are under from all sides. So I would say that there is quite a good ability to satisfy the concerns that are drawn to the attention of the Residential Tenancies Branch. In addition, people have the right if they feel that they have additional concerns, to go to the Ombudsman. There is a positive relationship between the Ombudsman's office and this particular branch on how those issues that go to the Ombudsman's office are resolved. My administration here feels that they have a positive working relationship with the Ombudsman's branch, and I do not think that the Ombudsman feels that the Residential Tenancies Branch is, in some way, not doing its job properly. I think they understand it as part and parcel of what is the nature of the business that they are dealing with.

 

Mr. Faurschou: Just one last question in regard to Manitoba Housing. For disputes that exist between renters within government-owned properties, does the branch carry forward with some of its services as well in that area? I do not know.

 

Mr. Selinger: With respect to landlord-tenant disputes, Manitoba Housing is treated like any other landlord. The only exemption they have is with respect to the rent-setting process itself. That is a rent geared to income process. On all other matters on landlord-tenant relations, they are under the juris­diction of the legislation governing this branch, and they are treated in the same way.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Yes, I have a question for the minister with respect to The Landlord and Tenant Act. There are many yearly sites and seasonal sites in campgrounds that are rented throughout my consti­tuency. They go largely unregulated, both with respect to rent controls and with respect to rental conditions, as compared to regular residential tenancies. Is there any plan for the minister to expand the application of the act to those kinds of situations, particularly since they really are residential tenancies and some people, in fact, occupy them probably for six months or more every year?

 

* (15:40)

 

Mr. Selinger: At the moment, there is no consideration of including campsites under residential tenancies legislation. I am aware that there was an issue with a private campground, not in the member's constituency, where there was an issue of charges on the campers there, and the Ombuds­man looked into that. I think it was a situation where it was a private operator, but on Crown land, so it came under the jurisdiction of the Auditor in terms of how that operator was performing the responsibilities that they were required to perform as a condition of getting the lease for that campground. So the Ombudsman is available in circumstances like that and did make a recommendation for some corrective measures there. I think that is reported in the Annual Report of the Ombudsman for last year, but at the moment, there is no intent to expand the jurisdiction of the Residential Tenancies Branch to campgrounds.

 

Mr. Hawranik: I have another question with regard to the Residential Tenancies Commission. I will refer the minister to page 115 of the supplementary department list, Expenditure Estimates. On page 115, I have a question with regard to the second line down Professional/Technical Salaries and Employee Bene­fits. In 2004-2005, the salary paid for one person was $58,000. In 2005-2006, the salary paid for, again, one person was $111,500.

 

      I ask the minister why is there more than a hundred percent increase in salary costs. Is there a new staff member? What could possibly make that difference in one year?

Mr. Selinger: I can understand the member's concern. On the face of it, it looks like that particular individual received a dramatic increase in salary. I can assure him that is not the case. What was done here is that in anticipation of this legislation, which is going to allow for the rehabilitation of distressed units, some resources were put aside under the Professional/Technical budget, but the FTE would have to requested later on if the legislation passed. So they budgeted some resources for these rehabilitation schemes, but only when the legislation passes will they come forward and ask for an FTE to deploy those resources. So it was simply a budget measure to anticipate the legislation, which I actually tabled today.

 

      I just want to get back to the critic. We had a commitment last time that we would go to Residential Tenancies and then proceed from the beginning of the Finance Branch to go through each area. Before I move to the member from Fort Whyte, and I do not know what his question is, but are we completed Residential Tenancies? I am trying to use my staff's resources efficiently here.

 

An Honourable Member: Yes, we have completed Residential Tenancies.

 

Mr. Selinger: So can we pass that then and get that out of the way in the budget process, so I can dismiss them, bring in the next crew and we can keep working?

 

An Honourable Member: Yes.

 

Mr. Selinger: Okay, so could you help us with that, how we pass this line?

 

Madam Chairperson: Yes, I will do that right now.

 

      Resolution 7.8: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $11,277,600 for Finance, Consumer and Corporate Affairs, for the fiscal year ending the 31st day of March, 2006.

 

      Shall the resolution pass?

 

Mr. Hawranik: Just for a point of clarification, we are not going to be passing all of Consumer and Corporate Affairs. The minister asked whether the Residential Tenancies Branch and the Residential Tenancies Commission would be passed, which is section 7.8.(c) and section 7.8.(g), and I have no objection to that.

 

Madam Chairperson: The rules have changed. We no longer pass separate lines. We pass resolutions. So we will just set it aside to when you are ready to pass the resolution.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Yes, just so the minister is aware, even though we are not going to be passing those two lines, I will make a commitment that we will not be asking any more questions with respect to those two sections.

 

Mr. Selinger: In terms of trying to get an orderly proceeding, are we now going to continue to explore the rest of Consumer and Corporate Affairs and then go to other branches of Finance, because we were trying to get into sort of the process of going through the branches and resolving this?

 

Mr. Hawranik: Just with respect to that, the member from Portage la Prairie just has a couple of other questions within that section, so maybe we ought to complete that first before the Member for Fort Whyte (Mr. Loewen).

 

Mr. Faurschou: I want to ask the minister of an update as to the status on the Claimant Advisor's Office which comes under this section. I understand there has been more than a year since this was first announced as a press release and allowed for in the budget. In fact, this is the second budget year. How is the operation of this office going at the present time?

 

Mr. Selinger: I am informed that the staff have now been hired and training has occurred and an office has been put in place and there is an opening planned with proclamation of the legislation likely by the end of May.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I believe this particular office has appeared in three budget years already now, and there was a half year and then last year it was 468, this year we are looking at 665. I believe there was appropriations almost two years ago for about a quarter of a million dollars just to start the process of planning and engagement of the personnel that would be in this office.

 

Mr. Selinger: The legislation was passed by the Legislature last session, last summer, last spring. So our intention is to have it up and running this spring.

Mr. Faurschou: I understand. Well, this is long overdue. We supported it in the Legislature and it is going to provide support to persons that are most vulnerable. They have had injuries through accident and need to be looked at. Are they going to be afforded, through this office, actual legal counsel, because they are coming up before commissioners that, essentially, are appearing on behalf of Manitoba Public Insurance Corporation, very skilled legal personnel, and is this office going to afford at least equitable representation for persons that are appealing their injury claims?

 

* (15:50)

 

Mr. Selinger: They will not be getting access through this office to legal counsel. They will be getting access to trained, skilled advocates. That is why there has been an extensive training program entered into before the office was open to the public. These people will be specialized in this particular area on how to advocate on behalf of clients who have concerns about the way they have been treated by MPIC. So it is very similar to the model used with the Workers Compensation Board, the workers advocates over there. The advocacy is not coming through legal counsel. It is coming through trained advocates, and that has been part of the reason there has been this period of time that has been used this year to get the people hired and trained properly.

 

Mr. Faurschou: It is a little bit different insofar as this is, by legislation, a quasi-judicial body that deals with injury claims. I suggest that having an advocate go up against two or more highly skilled barristers that the individual who is appealing the decision is seriously outgunned.

 

      I would like to ask the minister, at the very least, are the advocates going to provide to the persons that have experienced injury and are appealing the decision of MPIC that they are given a list of potential lawyers who could then be engaged to assist in their representation in front of this commission.

 

Mr. Selinger: The model that is developed here is to have specialists in the MPIC act as trained advocates. They will not be providing a list of lawyers they can go shopping with to make their case in front of it which would drive up their costs. The purpose of putting this office in place was to have advice available to people from trained, skilled advocates specific to the MPIC legislation.

 

      Over time these people will become very good at what they do as compared to a person who is in private practice that might be doing this type of case among many other types of work they do. These people will only be focussing on this during their working career in these positions. They will get quite good at it, and that is why there has been an extensive period of training up to now. They have access to legal advice and legal opinions if they require it through civil legal services, but they are not lawyers. They are skilled, trained advocates on salaries not a fee-for-service basis or anything like that. That was done in order to make sure there was cost containment of this form of appeal support that is being made available to people that have concerns about how they have been treated by MPIC.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I think the minister can truly appreciate that one even as familiar as they might be able to make themselves does not have the schooling of years like lawyers do before they have to, effectively, pass the bar exam to become practising lawyers. Also, be mindful that MPIC lawyers are very focussed as well. They are not doing civil litigation or property real estate transactions, they are focussed very much on MPIC issues.

 

      I suggest that the individual with only an advocate in their corner is still very much outgunned. I would believe this office should, under their mandate, be able to provide as part of their advocacy mandate the identification of lawyers in this province that are not in a conflict of interest that are potentially able to carry forward through legal representation individuals because it is a challenge for persons that are coming before the Automobile Injury Compensation Appeals Commission to find a lawyer.

 

      You have to appreciate that MPIC does retain a number of firms throughout the province for their representation and by association this takes in the majority, if I will be so bold as to predict, of practising lawyers here in the province of Manitoba. A lot of time can actually be expended just trying to find a lawyer that does not have a conflict of interest. I think it should be part of the advocacy office's mandate to make it known, or compile a list at the very least, of practising lawyers here in the province of Manitoba that are available for representation to individuals coming before compensation appeals commission.

 

Mr. Selinger: I think the member might be underestimating the ability of trained, skilled advo­cates to represent and advocate on behalf of people making an appeal. They will get good at what they do. This is not the first time this has ever been done. There are examples of this done in other areas, where the advocates get very effective at what they do.

 

      It is probably not a good idea for them to be referring people to lawyers because every lawyer that did not get a referral might be unhappy with that. It could get extremely complicated. So it is not going to be their job–[interjection] Pardon me? It is not going to be their job to make referrals to lawyers.

 

      I mean, the client, or the individual who has the concern has a choice. They can go and use the Advocate's office under the resources we are going to be providing for the first time, or they can contract with the private bar to have legal support and advocacy. If they wish, they have that choice.

 

      But we do not think it is our job to be bringing them into the office, giving them advice and then referring them to a lawyer where they are going to rack up another bill. It is just not going to work that way. You can imagine the problems of them being accused of maybe referring them to the wrong person, or a person that may hold themselves out as being qualified, but then not available and not qualified as they thought.

 

      So it is up to the individual to decide whether they want to get the Advocate's support or to get somebody from the private bar. That is a choice they have to make themselves.

 

Mr. Faurschou: I am not suggesting that the advocates, in fact, act as a referral agency. But there have been a number of individuals come forward with the very specific complaint that they have approached–and one individual said, "I have been to more than 50 lawyers trying to find somebody that does not have a conflict of interest either directly or indirectly through association," able to represent the individual.

 

      So all I am suggesting is that I believe that part of this automobile injury compensation advocacy office, appeals office, compile a list of the practising lawyers here in the province of Manitoba that are available to represent persons that are coming before the commission. It does not have to be a referral. But I am just saying that this is a need at the present time, and I am identifying it with you, Mr. Minister.

 

Mr. Selinger: I know the member's intentions are good here, to make sure that the person who has the concern gets the best representation they can get. But for them to have a list of lawyers that they would refer to, it might create insuperable problems.

 

      I mean, a lawyer can have new clients roll in the door everyday. One day, he or she may have a conflict of interest, the next day they may or may not, depending on the case that is in question. So I do not think, I mean, I would have to create another agency to manage all the issues around conflict of interest. I do not think you would want me to spend taxpayers' dollars on that.

 

      The private bar, if an individual like you said, "I cannot find somebody who is in a conflict of interest," this agency will not be able to help them sort that out. They do not have that kind of information about the private bar and what the caseloads of the private bar are. Those are usually confidential matters. You have to shop until you find somebody that is comfortable taking a case and does not believe they have a professional conflict of interest.

 

      I understand the problems of that, but this agency will not be able to solve that problem. This agency provides an alternative to the private bar. If the private bar is not able to provide the services the individual wants, they now, for the first time ever, will have a trained, skilled advocate available to them to help them with an appeal in front of this commission, this Automobile Injury Compensation Appeal Commission. That resource was never available before. They will now have this resource.

 

      But, if they want to access the private bar and get additional representation or substitute repre­sentation, if they are not happy with what they could get in this new agency and want to go to the private bar, we are not going to be able to keep an active, up-to-date list on all the potential conflicts of interest. I mean, I am going to leave it there, I guess. Anything else I could say might get me in trouble.

 

* (16:00)

Mr. Faurschou: Your officer is responsible for trying to provide an appeals mechanism that is impartial to conflicts between individuals and Manitoba Public Insurance Corporation, and I am posing the question to yourself. How does the individual to which I cite that has approached 50 firms and has yet to secure some firm in the province of Manitoba to represent him because of the existence of conflict of interest. I do not think it changes on a day-to-day basis like the minister suggests. Manitoba Public Insurance does not engage one day and disengage another legal firm as the minister might suggest. But that is the question I leave for the minister, and I have to clear it up there.

 

Mr. Selinger: Once before this, I mean I understand that you have a particular individual that has not been able to find a lawyer that wishes to represent them–[interjection]

 

An Honourable Member: More than one. I am just reciting one that has got 50–

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, the member is presenting to me the case of an individual that has tried 50 different firms to get legal representation without satisfaction. All I can say, once this agency is up and running within the next 30 days or so, they will now have an alternative to that. They will have a skilled advocate they can go to get support from, but that skilled advocate will not be finding for them a lawyer that does not have a conflict of interest. They will not have access to that information. They will not be able to do that, but they will be able to provide them a resource that was not available heretofore. You can come back to me on this if you wish.

 

Mr. Hawranik: At this time we would be prepared to move Resolution 7.8.

 

Madam Chairperson: Resolution 7.8: RESOLVED that there be granted to Her Majesty a sum not exceeding $11,277,600 from Finance, Consumer and Corporate Affairs, for the fiscal year ending the 3lst day of March, 2006.

 

Resolution agreed to.

 

Mr. Selinger: Which department or branch do you want to go to next now? We originally said we were going to go to the start of the Estimates book. I think the member from Fort Whyte has a question. I do not know which branch he wants to probe in now.

Mr. John Loewen (Fort Whyte): I can tell you it is, possibly, under Treasury, but I think, probably, if your deputy minister is at the table, it is probably not. It has to do with the holdings in Crocus in terms of clearing up some information presented to the House.

 

Mr. Selinger: I understood we were into a branch-by-branch review now that we are out of global. If there is a question with respect to the Treasury Branch, I understood we were going to work through from the front to the back, the branches now. If the member wants to jump to another branch, I guess I need to know that.

 

Mr. Loewen: Well, as the minister can appreciate, there are Estimates going on all over the place and members have different responsibilities to different places. So I have got a couple of questions dealing with some information that was brought to the House regarding the government's holdings in the Crocus Fund. I simply would like the opportunity to ask a couple questions. The minister can have who he wants at the table.

 

Mr. Selinger: If the official critic wants to bring Treasury forward now, we can try to answer any questions that might come under Treasury.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Yes, I would be prepared to bring Treasury forward at this point.

 

Madam Chairperson: If the minister would like to introduce his staff.

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, in the House, I introduced the Deputy Minister of Finance, Ewald Boschmann, and the Director of Administration for Finance, Erroll Kavanagh. I now have with me the ADM of Treasury, Don Delisle, and two members of his staff, Gary Gibson and Scott Wiebe.

 

Mr. Loewen: It was raised in the House on a couple of occasions, particularly on April 12 by the Premier (Mr. Doer), that the holdings the Province owns in the Crocus Fund have been written off. I just wonder if the minister could describe for me the holdings the government owns in the Crocus Fund.

 

Mr. Selinger: I am informed that, with respect to the $2 million provided by the previous government, at the time it was provided in 1993-94, it was fully provided for. It still shows on the books as $2 million, but it has been fully provided for.

 

Mr. Loewen: Well, I am asking for all the holdings. Can the minister indicate whether the Province still owns two million shares?

 

Mr. Selinger: The amount was $2 million, and there is a full valuation allowance against that $2 million for a net of nil, or zero. That is what is showing on the books in the Public Accounts of '03-04.

 

* (16:10)

 

Mr. Loewen: I thank the minister for that. The Premier, in his statement in the House that he has made on a number of occasions, has indicated the Province has no ongoing pecuniary interest in the Crocus Fund and has no opportunity to benefit from it in terms of shares. I am just wondering if that is the case.

 

Mr. Selinger: When the valuation allowance was put against the $2 million of shares by the previous government that, in effect, assumed that they would not get anything back.

 

Mr. Loewen: Is the minister aware of the term "warrant"?

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes.

 

Mr. Loewen: Is the minister aware that the Province has ownership of 200 000 warrants in the Crocus Fund?

 

Mr. Selinger: That question probably should go to the Minister of Industry and Trade because that is where this arrangement was originated. Finance is not aware of that.

 

Mr. Loewen: Well, just for the minister's clarification and just so that in future he will be fully apprised of the situation and be able to advise his Premier (Mr. Doer), I will read him a quote from the 2001 financial statements. This is a direct quote from 2001, September 30, of the Crocus Investment Fund. I quote from page 13.

 

      "The rights and restrictions attributable to the Class "G" special shares held by the Province of Manitoba provide that these shares are non-convertible, non-redeemable equity allowing the fund to use such equity as a loss reserve to absorb the deficits of the fund up to $2 million on a permanent basis.

 

      "In consideration, the fund issued to the Province of Manitoba, 200 000 Series 1 warrants, each warrant entitling the Province of Manitoba to purchase one redeemable participating Series 1 class "I" special share for $10 exercisable at any time after the year 2000."

 

      Does the Province still own these warrants?

 

Mr. Selinger: Well, we will take the question under advisement. I thank the member for drawing this piece of information to my attention, and if he would be willing to table the document, that would also help in verifying the question he is asking.

 

Mr. Loewen: Is the minister aware that at the time that this financial statement was published, the share price of Crocus was $14.62? I am sorry, I have quoted the wrong figure. That was 2000, September 30, 2000, was $14.82.

 

Mr. Selinger: Subject to verification, if the member is quoting from the annual report, that share price, I will take him at his word until I get to see the document myself.

 

Mr. Loewen: Well, my quick math indicates that if, at the end of 2000, and the share price was still at $14.82, and the government had exercised its $10 warrants, it would have been able to in fact generate 200 000 shares at $4.82 per share, giving the government a profit of over $960,000. Is the minister aware that type of transaction is open and available to the Province to take advantage of at any time or has something changed with the nature of these warrants?

 

Mr. Selinger: Well, once again, the member is bringing new information to my attention. What I would say is that when the previous government put a valuation allowance against the $2-million investment, I think they were saying with that they had no intention of collecting any money back from that $2 million of shares invested in Crocus.

 

Mr. Loewen: I understand that the minister, prior to entering his current position, did not have a whole lot of experience in financial matters in terms of corporations, as is, but would he not agree that the statement in the financial statements of Crocus, starting with "in consideration," would indicate that, as a consideration for giving up its rights and writing off those shares, the government took in return the opportunity to exercise its rights as given under the warrants and to buy shares for $10 and sell them for whatever price the shares were available at the time?

 

Mr. Doug Martindale, Acting Chairperson, in the Chair

 

Mr. Selinger: Yes, I understand the point that the member is making, and I am simply saying to him that the previous government had made a provision or a valuation against the 2 million shares. If they received some consideration for that, as pointed out in what looks like the member has indicated to me was the '01 annual report of the Crocus Fund, that is information we will take into account, but the previous government wrote off those shares. They may even have received some warrant consideration as the member points out here, and I thank the member for providing me with that information.

 

Mr. Loewen: I trust that the minister will bring this to the Premier's (Mr. Doer) attention forthwith, so we will not be faced with another situation in the House where somebody has to again get up and remind the government that they are making statements that are, as the Auditor has quoted, "misleading by omission."

 

      I would refer the minister again; I only have one copy of the document here, it is a public document that the minister has. I see the Minister of Industry (Mr. Rondeau) at the table, and I am sure he has it in his files, which indicate that in fact the government did not just simply write off the value that it had in Crocus. In fact, it made a determination to write it off, and in consideration for that gesture, it received some warrants and considerable warrants that could have, had things gone right–unfortunately, for a lot of Manitobans they did not, due to the lack of oversight of this government–if they had gone right, then the government might have not only fully recovered its $2 million but recovered more. In any event, at a point up to, at least, and including 2002, there was certainly a lot of value there.

 

      With regard to a question that I asked previously to the minister, I wonder if he has had the opportunity to ask either the Crocus Fund or Mr. Curtis to ensure that his reference on the Web site that he is a financial advisor to the Minister of Finance of the Province of Manitoba is removed immediately. I do think it leaves a rather false impression with the people who look into that Web site that, in fact, the Minister of Finance has a representative that is close to that board.

 

Mr. Selinger: I did correct for the member and for the public the status of Mr. Curtis, who is in full retirement now, with respect to his relationship with the Department of Finance, and I corrected the dates around that. That is now on the public record.

 

Mr. Loewen: I appreciate that, but, once again, it did not have anything to do with the question I asked. I asked him at the time, and I am asking him again if he or someone on his staff would follow up with Mr. Curtis and with the Crocus Fund and ask them, in whatever way it takes, and if it takes a harsh way maybe that is what should happen. I think it is definitely misleading for someone looking on that Web site to see that one of their board of directors is still putting himself out as a senior advisor to the Minister of Finance. I am just asking him to ensure for the public that that is corrected and definitely corrected before the fund might start selling shares again.

 

Mr. Selinger: As I have indicated, I have corrected the record for the public and that stands as the accurate information. The advisability of having conversations with either Mr. Curtis or any other member of Crocus, or Crocus itself, will be considered. The member might, as he has in previous Estimates questions, start querying me about which meetings and which conversations I have had with board members of Crocus as if, once again, he is trying to demonstrate that there is a conspiracy out there and that I was participating in it. The public record has been corrected and that has now been confirmed again.

 

* (16:20)

 

Mr. Loewen: Well, I would just indicate to the minister that the Web site has not been corrected. I think somebody in his position with the Province of Manitoba should take the necessary steps to ensure that the Web site is corrected and corrected immediately. It does reflect poorly on the Province that someone is putting themselves out as a senior advisor to the Minister of Finance, when, in fact, the minister has indicated on the public record that they are. As the minister decided, since he raised it, I guess I will ask him again. Was the minister made aware at any time–well, maybe, he can just tell us when he was first made aware there was a crisis at Crocus and the fund was facing serious problems with valuations.

 

Mr. Selinger: I have answered those questions before. I understood the purpose of today was to discuss Treasury Estimates. Anything related to Treasury and Crocus, the members ask questions, we are giving him the answers to our best ability. I do not believe we are back in global. We spent at least 10 hours on global discussion. I am here to discuss the Treasury Branch right now. That is the topic under discussion.

 

Mr. Loewen: That is the topic under discussion. That is why I am asking questions about warrants that apparently the minister knew nothing about and has allowed his Premier to make misleading statements in the House. It is interesting that the Minister of Industry (Mr. Rondeau), is here because maybe he will catch on to it as well. I mean, the arrogance this government is showing to the 33 000 Manitobans that have lost a lot of money, let alone the taxpayers who have seen $60 million disappear, is disappointing.

 

      I will just ask the minister one more time. It is a relevant question. He is responsible for the Treasury. He has an individual who has put himself out as an advisor to him. Can he tell us when he first learned there was a problem with valuations of shares at Crocus Investments?

 

Mr. Selinger: I have answered that question previously. I am ready for new questions with respect to the Treasury.

 

Mr. Loewen: The minister has not answered the question. Like other ministers, he continues to refuse to answer. So I will give him the same advice that I have given other ministers. Sir, keep your notes because one day you may be asked that question in a forum where you cannot duck it, where you have to actually live by rules of evidence and tell the public, with full and complete knowledge, exactly what you knew and when you knew it and provide them with an explanation of how your government could have sat there while $60 million of their money was fleeced out of their pockets. I hope at some point you will live up to your responsibility for that. I hope at some point you will answer questions.

Mr. Hawranik: I have some questions with regard to Treasury as well. It indicates in the Departmental Expenditure Estimates that during 2005-2006 the government is expected to borrow about $2.5 billion during this budget year. Can the minister indicate how much he is planning to borrow from inter­national markets out of that $2.5 billion and which countries he is intending to borrow from?

 

Mr. Selinger: In answer to the member's question. The way we borrow money through Treasury, we do not have a preconceived proportion of money we are planning to borrow from international markets. At the time we need the cash for the specific purposes required, we look and scan all the markets globally, and we make the best deal we can in whatever market is available to us at that time. If, for example, we were doing a borrowing today, it would likely be in Canadian dollars, in Canadian markets, because that is where we can get the best deal today. A few months ago that might have been different. We might have borrowed in the American market and swapped it back to Canadian dollars because that is where we could get the best bargain for Manitobans, its Crowns or the organizations we are borrowing for. It is a bit like playing football with audibles, not with a preconceived game plan. You do the best play or deal at the time that you need the cash given what is available in the marketplace.

 

Mr. Hawranik: With respect to past borrowings of the government, can the minister indicate how much has been borrowed from international markets, and which countries?

 

Mr. Selinger: I will try to get the specifics, but I just want to explain to the member that, when it comes to non-Hydro borrowings, we have no foreign expo­sure. All of our borrowings are translated through swaps back into Canadian dollars, so we have no foreign currency exposure with respect to govern­ment borrowings. There is some currency exposure in foreign currencies for Hydro, usually in U.S. borrowings, which is offset by revenues that are received from the U.S. market by Hydro itself. So they are hedged, in effect, one against the other.

 

Mr. Hawranik: Yes, and further on in the same book, page 46, it indicates in 2005-2006 the direct de