LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

Tuesday, March 1, 2022


The House met at 10 a.m.

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

      Welcome back, everybody. Would you please remain standing.

House Business

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Government House Leader): Could you please canvass the House for leave to include an Indigenous land acknowledgement as part of our daily proceedings immediately follow­ing the prayer, with this practice to remain in place by leave until it is adopted as part of the rules of the House?

      And please note for all members that the land acknowledgement will use the wording that has been previously agreed to by all parties.

Madam Speaker: Is there leave to include an Indigenous land acknowledgement as part of our daily proceedings immediately following the prayer, with this practice to remain in place by leave until it is adopted as part of the rules of the House?

      Note that the land acknowledgement will use wording agreed to by all parties.

      Is there leave? [Agreed]

* * *

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

      Please be seated.

      For the information of the House, on February 25th, 2022, I received a letter signed by the two House leaders and the member for River Heights (Mr. Gerrard). The letter announced that the Sessional Order enabling our hybrid virtual sittings, passed by the House on October 7, 2020, and subsequently amended on December 3rd, 2020, May 18, 2021, November 19, 2020, and December 1st, 2021, has been extended by agreement from March 10th, 2022, to April 4th, 2022.

      This means that until April 4th, 2022, members may still participate in sittings of the House and committees virtually, as well as in person.

House Business

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

      I have multi‑part leave request for the House.

      Could you please canvass the House for leave to: (a) set aside private members' business this morning, as well as routine proceedings and government business this afternoon; (b) to allow the House to consider the following business today, in this order: (1) a motion to appoint the Deputy Speaker and Chairperson of the Committees of the Whole House; (2) a motion to appoint a Deputy Chairperson of the Committees of the Whole House; (3) condolence motions for former MLAs in the following order: Danielle Adams, Bonnie Korzeniowski, Kenneth George Dillen, with the understanding that during these tributes members will each be able to speak for up to 20 minutes; and (c) for the House to sit today from 10 a.m. until it recesses at 12:30 p.m., then resume sitting at 1:30 p.m., and for the House to rise only after all members wishing to speak to the condolence motions have done so.

Madam Speaker: Is there leave to: (a) to set aside private members' business this morning, as well as routine proceedings and government business this afternoon; (b) to allow the House to consider the following business today, in this order: (1) a motion to appoint the Deputy Speaker and Chairperson of Committees of the Whole; (2) a motion to appoint a Deputy Chairperson of the Committees of the Whole; (3) condolence motions for former MLAs in the fol­lowing order: Danielle Adams, Bonnie Korzeniowski, Kenneth George Dillen, with the understanding that during these tributes members will each be able to speak for up to 20 minutes; and (c) for the House to sit today from 10 a.m. until it recesses at 12:30 p.m., then resume sitting at 1:30 p.m., and then to rise when all members wishing to speak to the condolence motions have done so.

      Is there leave? [Agreed]

Government Motions

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Government House Leader): I move, seconded by the First Minister, that Andrew Micklefield, member for the electoral district–division of Rossmere, be Deputy Speaker and Chairperson of the Com­mit­tees of the Whole House.

Motion agreed to.

Mr. Goertzen: Madam Speaker, I move, seconded by the First Minister, that Brad Michaleski, member for the electoral division for Dauphin, be Deputy Chairperson of the Com­mit­tees of the Whole House.

Motion agreed to.

Motions of con­dol­ence

Madam Speaker: We will move now to con­dol­ence motions.

Danielle Adams

Hon. Heather Stefanson (Premier): I move, seconded by the Leader of the Op­posi­tion, this House convey to the family of the late Danielle Lynn Adams, who served as a Member of the Legis­lative Assembly of Manitoba, its sincere sympathy in their bereave­ment and its ap­pre­cia­tion of her devotion to the duty in a useful life of active com­mu­nity and public service, and that Madam Speaker be requested to forward a copy of this reso­lu­tion to the family.

Motion presented.

* (10:10)

Mrs. Stefanson: Madam Speaker, today we pay tribute to our colleague and friend, Danielle Adams, a wife, a mother, a strong advocate for northern Manitoba, who was taken from us far too soon. On behalf of our gov­ern­ment and the entire Progressive Conservative caucus, I wish to extend our heartfelt con­dol­ences to Danielle's husband, Bill, sons Nic and Joe, and her entire family during this very difficult time. Our thoughts and prayers are with you today and always.

      To the Leader of the Op­posi­tion and the entire NDP caucus, I want to express our deepest sympathies to each and every one of you. Friends in politics can often feel like extended family, and I know that Danielle was a dear friend to many of our NDP colleagues through­out Manitoba.

      Danielle Adams was a young woman who cared deeply about her com­mu­nity. After moving to Thompson at age 11 with her mother and young brother, she quickly adopted northern Manitoba as her home, developing lifelong friendships and a passion for her com­mu­nity. She worked hard at various jobs in Thompson, including at McDonald's and The Burntwood Hotel, before becoming the assist­ant to Member of Parliament Niki Ashton in 2008. Like so many aspiring MLAs, Danielle felt a call to political service because of her passion for Thompson and its citizens.

      For years she served on the boards of the Thompson Children's World Daycare, the Thompson Ski Club, and the Thompson Labour Committee, learning about the issues that matter to northern Manitobans. After many years of com­mu­nity involve­ment and political advocacy, Danielle made history in 2019 by becoming the first woman to represent Thompson in the Manitoba Legis­lative Assembly. Over the last two years as an MLA, Danielle brought her wealth of com­mu­nity ex­per­ience to her role as critic for child care, housing, dis­abil­ity and poverty issues.

      Madam Speaker, I was the Minister of Families during Danielle's first year as MLA and critic. During that year, I spent many hours fielding her questions in the House and answering her letters advocating for her con­stit­uents and for others in Manitoba on those very issues. Danielle and I may not have agreed on every­thing to do with policy, but I always admired her unwavering dedi­cation to the people of Thompson. I also knew that we shared the same goal: safe, healthy and prosperous com­mu­nities for northern Manitoba families.

      Madam Speaker, we all know why we do this job as an MLA. We do this job so we can make a difference in the lives of Manitobans. During her life, Danielle made a profound difference in the lives of Manitobans in Thompson and through­out northern Manitoba. She leaves behind a lasting legacy we can all admire.

      On behalf of the entire gov­ern­ment and the Progressive Conservative caucus, I want to again extend my sincere con­dol­ences to Danielle's family and friends and the entire NDP caucus during this very difficult time.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Mr. Wab Kinew (Leader of the Official Opposition): I want to begin by acknowl­edging Danielle's family, who is here with us today. Her mom, Jody, and her partner John; dad, Don; and stepmom, Stacey; her brother Tim and his wife Candace; and her lifelong friend Lori and Lori's family; and, of course, the ones who would make Danielle's face light up every single time she spoke about them, Bill and Nic and, of course, Joe, following along at home.

      I want to send my con­dol­ence to you all and to our colleagues who bear this loss, and I also want to thank you. I want to thank you for sharing Dani with us during her time here on earth because we are all better for it. And I want to say the same to my colleagues.

You know, there's many sides to Danielle that I would like to share at this time.

      There was a young Danielle, just a kid at a federal campaign rally in 1988 where she was pulled up on stage by the NDP leaders' tour, and not only did they bring her up on stage but they put a microphone in her hand. And so the four‑ or five-year-old Danielle got on the mic and told the thousands of Albertans in attendance: You need to vote for Ed Broadbent.

      There was a Danielle who loved Halloween costumes, and I'm not just talking about Halloween costumes for herself. I mean, Danielle got themed costumes together for all of her friends, and for Bill to go out dressed up together. One year it might be Marvel comic characters, another year it's Disney princesses and Danielle was Snow White.

      In fact, I'm told that her and Bill even dressed up in costumes to go to their wedding social together. They went as Link and Zelda.

And there was a Danielle who was an organizer for Niki Ashton in the 2015 federal election campaign and, even at nine months pregnant, would still go out and canvass six hours a day 'til finally the campaign manager ordered–had to order her–to stop. Sure enough, Danielle gave birth, or she went into labour on E-day and gave birth the following day.

And it is true that she raised her kids on the campaign trail. Nic was brought by Danielle on the train to Churchill in the 2019 election campaign to go canvassing with her, and I know that was a fond, fond memory for Danielle.

      I had a chance to visit Danielle's husband Bill and many of their long-time friends after the service in Thompson in December. There were many laughs and fond memories being shared. It was really quite strik-ing. At one point in the evening, I asked the assembled people if they knew that Danielle would be an MLA when they were growing up, and they shouted to interrupt me to say: Yes. If anyone in their crew at R.D. Parker Collegiate was going to grow up to be an MLA, they knew that it would have been Danielle.

      But I can also share that her road to becoming an MLA was not without its hiccups. In the lead-up to the 2019 prov­incial election campaign, I went to Thompson to have her campaign office launch, to launch her prov­incial campaign. And so we're doing the office christening, if you will, and there was some cooking going on inside, and I'm not going to say who was cooking. But just as Danielle and I were giving our big rah-rah speeches, the smoke detectors went off and the fire alarms started going, like–so loud you can't even think, right? These fire alarms were just screaming.

      And so the big rah-rah speeches get interrupted. All the volunteers and supporters pour out onto the sidewalk. We've got dozens of people on this Thompson sidewalk outside of this office, and then what happens next? Well, of course, it starts to rain. So there must have been, like, a little rain cloud just over top of us there. And the fire trucks pull up, and, you know, now the sirens are blasting out over top of the fire alarms. So Danielle and I, we just quietly moved away, and I think Dani said, why don't we go knock on some doors right now?

      But Danielle had a good sense of humour like that and she had, like, a built-in sense of optimism. Because when people would tease her about that office opening and, you know, just try and have a chuckle about it, Danielle would say: Well, it was better that way; it meant that more people came to my office launch. And that's what she was like, right, always positive, always with a good sense of humour.

      That led to her election night 2019 victory which was, I'm sure, a high point for Dani. She celebrated it with many of the people who are here in the gallery today with her supporters, with her friends, with her family.

* (10:20)

      But I want to tell you that that victory was beyond a personal win for Danielle. It meant some­thing bigger. And I say that because Danielle grew up facing many challenges and barriers, and what inspir­ed me about her career–one of the many things that inspired me about Danielle–is that she came from those beginnings, and became an MLA, so that as an MLA she could go back and talk to little girls and boys and children in the same situations that she was in when she was younger and tell them: I did it, so can you. You can reach your dreams. You want to be an MLA? I came from you are–from where you are, and I accom­plished it. So don't let anything hold you back.

      And that means some­thing, and that's some­thing we should always be proud of about Danielle.

      We all know that Danielle was a dedi­cated con­stit­uency politician. I talked about the canvassing. Canvassing wasn't just in Thompson. She knocked on doors in Nisichawayasihk, in Wabowden and many other areas in the con­stit­uency as an MLA, with her CAs and long-time friends, Clayton and Destiny.

      She always reached out and advocated for her com­mu­nities, com­mu­nities like York Factory and Tataskweyak. Late night calls and emails, she's always raising issues with me. And at so many caucus meeting and party conventions, she would speak up and she would ask: What about the North? What about child care? What about my con­stit­uents?

      In fact, whenever we'd have a caucus retreat, Danielle would book an extra day before and an extra day after so she could set up meetings with more child-care centres in the area, with more anti-poverty organi­zations, with more local housing initiatives.

      Of course, she did all the fundraising, member­ship sales, con­stit­uency association work that all of us have to do, but I think her favourite part of being an MLA might have been the school visits as part of I Love to Read Month, when she'd get to spend some time reading to the children. I'll explain why that's so sig­ni­fi­cant in a second. But I think I just want to pause here to say that there was no part of the job of being MLA that Danielle didn't excel at, because of her hard work and deter­min­ation and her drive to succeed, and I'm sure anyone watching her politically would have seen that.

      But do you know how hard she pushed herself to be able to do those things? Now, I'm not sure how many people know this, but Danielle had a learning dis­abil­ity, and it's something that she struggled with since she was in elementary school. You may have heard her speak in the Chamber here, you may have heard her tear a strip off the gov­ern­ment out there in the hallway, but do you know about the hours she spent practising her questions for QP?

      Do you know about the countless drafts that she worked and reworked and reworked before she ever stood up in this Chamber? Do you know about the endless experiments with font size and spacing and layout on a page until she finally found a formula that worked for her speaking notes?

      Do you know about the face call–FaceTime calls with her mom Jody after every single speech or statement or question or even petition here in the Chamber where they would dissect her performance so that she could improve the next time she stood up in this hallowed hall? And do you know why she set a goal to improve at speaking in this Chamber?

      And she talked about this, it wasn't because she was worried about embarrassing herself or about her ego or about her pride. She worked so hard at speaking in this Chamber because she wanted to make damn sure that the people she represented had their stories come through clearly in this Chamber. That's how dedi­cated Danielle was to the people of Manitoba, and she exemplified it in her work and actions.

      Danielle had many plans for the future. She wanted to bring a bill on child care to the Chamber. She and Bill had just bought a new house this past summer. She wanted to take Nic and Joe to Disneyland. And yes, she was apparently already planning next year's Halloween costumes, and that's why this is so tragic.

      Danielle was taken from us before she could do many of those things, and as I've thought about her loss, I've reflected on this: we all know that Danielle could have been the MLA for Thompson for 30 years if she wanted to, and she never had the op­por­tun­ity to do so.

      But did she show us how great her potential was? Did we get to see how bright her future could have become? Did that little girl from humble beginnings who overcame barriers to become a strong woman and leader make the most of her time here on earth? Yes. Absolutely, yes, she did. She made the most of her time here on earth by raising a family, by serving the people of Manitoba and by taking a seat right here in the Legislature. And here in the Legislature is a place where Danielle's name and her words will live on forever in the permanent record of our great province.

And so to close, I want to share some of Dani's  words from that record. These are from the inaugural speech, the first speech that she ever gave here in this Chamber. And I quote: I was shown from an early age that if some­thing isn't right and people aren't being treated fairly just because of who they are, you have a duty to stand up and help fight to change it. These early lessons shaped who I was and helped me become the adult and the parent I am today. I'd like to thank my family, my husband William Morris who encour­ages and believes in me, my two sons who inspire and drive me to help make Manitoba the best province it can be. I want all children to be able to be their best selves. End quote.

      Danielle Adams, you left us far too soon, but while you were with us you did show us your best self.

Hon. Kelvin Goertzen (Minister of Justice and Attorney General): I want to begin, as others have, by offering my sincere sympathy to the family of Danielle Adams and all of her friends.

There are memories that you always remember, that you can never forget, and I will always remember, sadly, the call that I received from the member for St. Johns (Ms. Fontaine). I was pulling off the grounds of the Legislature and I could hear the emo­tion in her voice, and I pulled over and said to her, whatever it is you need to tell me, just take whatever time you need. And she told me the tragic news, and I could tell from that discussion what a loss it was, not only for the member for St. Johns, but for the entire NDP caucus and for this Assembly.

Madam Speaker, I am grateful that you helped ac­com­modate the family to be here today. Thank you for your office–for allowing that to happen.

In this place, unfor­tunately, people often see when they see us on TV or when they're hearing us speak in other forums, they just hear the discord that happens between us. They hear the arguments that happen between MLAs. What they never see, and I've been witness to in the 19 years I've been able to be in this Assembly, is the times when we celebrate the births of children between other members; when we pray for each other; when we hear about an illness or a cancer diagnosis; and tragically, but thankfully not often, when we have a sitting member who leaves us.

I remember, as a younger MLA, when Oscar Lathlin passed away and how this Assembly came together, and now, today, we do it again.

Danielle and I, in some ways, shared a bit of a similar path in that we were both political staffers before we made the jump into elected office. And that has–that's not an unusual path. There's others in this Assembly who've done the same thing. But it does give you a unique perspective, and often when that is the path it's some­thing that, you know, you've had an interest in for the majority of your life.

      And I ap­pre­ciate the Leader of the Op­posi­tion sharing some of those remembrances for Danielle and how she was engaged early in her life in political activities. You often come with a certain level of spirit and partisanship when you've come out of the political staff world into elected life.

* (10:30)

      I remember after my first question–which, in my mind, I thought was a strong question, but probably was filled with hyperbole and other things–Gary Doer walking across the House and coming over to speak to me in the seat that Danielle–that we memorialize today, but that I sat in at one point in my political career–and saying that that was a very spirited question, and it's good to see that sort of energy in the House. And I remember that after Danielle's question–first question–and I had the op­por­tun­ity to go over to her and say words that were very similar. It was a very spirited question, and it's great to see that energy in the House.

      COVID robbed us of a lot of things, Madam Speaker, over the last couple of years. And one of the things it had robbed us as MLAs of is the op­por­tun­ity to be together. This is the first time in almost two years when all MLAs are able to come into this House, but because we weren't able to over the last couple of years, we weren't able to get to know each other, or to be together in the way that we often were before, and for new MLAs, it robbed us of some of that interaction.

      We saw a lot of them virtually, but didn't get a chance to see them all personally, and that is, I think, a loss for all of us because again, even though we often have disagreements and discord, some of the best moments are when we have the op­por­tun­ity to speak to each other as individuals and not as politicians to learn about each other.

      The member for St. Johns did share for me–share with me at one point some of the issues that the member–the Leader of the Op­posi­tion raised regarding some of the challenges that Danielle had, and it actually surprised me when I learned it because she was so good at asking questions. And now I hear some of the back­ground and she did such a good job, but it only speaks to how seriously she took her job and how well she wanted to represent her con­stit­uents, Madam Speaker.

      Her words will always be on the record. Her name will always be part of this Assembly. It is one of the great things of this Legislature, in that you stay on in history long after you move on to another place, either on this world or off this world. And her children should be very proud of that. That legacy will live on.

      I know that northern MLAs–and I've learnt this in my time in the Legislature–face a special challenge. Not only in repre­sen­ting their vast con­stit­uency and con­stit­uents who are often in really small com­mu­nities distant from each other, but they face the travel require­ments of coming down to Winnipeg, which can be as daunting as going to Ottawa if you're a Member of Parliament.

      For those of us who don't live in the city, but are closer by, we don't face those same challenges, and I always have a very special ap­pre­cia­tion for those MLAs from the North on all sides of the House who take that on, and take that on with such passion, as obviously Danielle did.

      And it takes a special kind of passion when you have a young family. I know that, raising my son through the entire time of politics, but I didn't face the same challenges of the distance that Danielle and other northern MLAs do, and it's–great admiration for that. And it speaks to how clearly they saw the importance of their job.

      But all of those things will live on in her family and in her children: the memory of the work that she has done here; the passion that she demon­strated for her con­stit­uents and for politics. So today, I think we all speak as–not as New Democrats or as Liberals, not even as MLAs, but as human beings when we say that we come together as a family, as one united family to support the family of Danielle and her friends.

      And we put aside every­thing else because nothing else matters at this moment. This Assembly is better for Danielle having been here and Manitoba is less for her not being here any longer.

Mr. Tom Lindsey (Flin Flon): Certainly, today is an emotional day for many of us in this Chamber, as it is for Danielle's family. Danielle was only with us in the Chamber for a short period, but she left a mark on each and every one of us.

      And certainly, I think I can speak for all our northern MLAs when–she was more than just a colleague. She became like a sister to us all. The first time I think I really got to know Danielle was I was up in Thompson on my way further north, and she knew I was going to come so she said: Well, let's meet at the restaurant and have supper and we can talk about plans and how we're going to interact. So I said, sure.

      She brought Nic and Joe, because as a young mother, doing this job already took so much time away from her family. So she brought them to supper with us, and it was really quite an amazing thing to see Nic interact with his mother and with his brother so that we could talk busi­ness while he looked after his brother, basically. That really speaks to a level of parenting that Danielle and Bill should be commended for. Lots of kids these days don't seem to have that sense of family and sense of looking out for each other.

      I believe Danielle probably developed that sense from her parents, because I understand her mother was heavily involved, once upon a time. But to get a sense of Danielle, look at the people that responded at her very untimely death. There was leaders of Indigenous com­mu­nities that she had an impact on their lives, and they knew that she was there to represent everyone in her con­stit­uency.

      While she may have been the first female MLA to come from the Thompson con­stit­uency, she worked for 10 years prior to being elected herself with Niki Ashton and already had that reputation in a lot of those com­mu­nities, that she was there to represent them, that she would speak for them, that she would do whatever she could to be the person they needed to represent them.

      And Wab has spoken about the work that she put in, in this Chamber, to be prepared for question period and to be prepared for giving speeches. And it was a level of work and dedi­cation that really should have shamed some of the rest of us that didn't put that level into–that we didn't have to. We could speak. She made it look natural by the amount of work she put in.

      One of the first places that I really saw Danielle shine as Danielle was when we were in Estimates together for the first time. She didn't like getting non-answers to her questions because her questions were im­por­tant questions for the people of her constituency. And she would push to make sure she got an answer, even if it was an answer she didn't like. But she certainly didn't stand for non-answers. And she was able to do that because she knew what she wanted to talk about. She knew what she believed in. She knew what the people she represented needed to hear, needed to have asked and wanted to have answers. So, for me, that was really where she shone–was Danielle Adams fighting for her con­stit­uents.

Others probably knew her longer and perhaps knew her better than I did. But certainly, from our northern caucus colleagues, she was a spark that ignited the rest of us. Wab talked about getting messages. We would get late-night messages: Hey, we should write a letter. Hey, what do you think about setting up a meeting? We should meet with such-and-such a minister to discuss this issue.

      Because many of the issues that she fought about in her constituency were the same issues that the rest of us in the North were fighting for and about. And I can tell you that we certainly miss that spark with our northern caucus right now, because we don't send each other those messages at any time of the day or night, when an idea pops into us. And maybe we need to, just for nothing else than to honour her memory.

* (10:40)

      I'd spoke to some people in Thompson that knew Danielle much longer than me, particularly in the political end of things, people like Niki Ashton and the great respect that she had for Danielle and Danielle's ability. Dr. Gordon Landriault, her–who worked with Niki as well but who's famous for being out on the campaign trails, and the respect that he had for Danielle and her abilities.

      Rod Murphy told me that the first time he campaigned with her, in Wabowden, Danielle had a unique ability to connect with people. It wasn't just a politician showing up on the door, it was someone that was there to listen, and people imme­diately under­stood that she approached this differently than many other politicians. It was that connection to people and their issues that really got her elected, and would have continued to get her elected for as long as she wanted to be.

      I can't imagine how she managed to balance family and politics coming from the North. The amount of time that she had to spend away from family, parti­cularly with young children, but somehow between her, Bill, they managed to make it work. And it's a tribute to Danielle but also to Bill and also to Nic and Joe that they managed to make it work. They figured out how to make it work.

      They figured out how they could share her with us so that she could be the voice that she became, and we really owe them a debt of gratitude, because while Danielle made sacrifices to be here, so did they, and we certainly ap­pre­ciate that and thank you.

      Danielle will be missed by everyone in this Chamber, parti­cularly people that became close friends with her during her short time here. I mean, she only got elected in 2019, and certainly it was a different time to be in politics, to be in this Chamber, that restricted, really, how much interaction people had with each other.

      But through all of that, Danielle managed to stand out in the crowd and be someone that we could all know and respect.

      I want to really thank, again, family for being here with us today to share this time with us, and really, hopefully, some solace, knowing the effect that Danielle had on all of us here, but also on the people of Manitoba. So, thank you.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Hon. Rochelle Squires (Minister of Families): I would like to join the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson), the Leader of the Official Op­posi­tion (Mr. Kinew) and all members of this House in the con­dol­ence motion for Danielle Adams, and share a few words in regards to the loss of our former colleague, a woman who will, among other things, go down in the history books and always be remembered as the first MLA–the first woman MLA for the city of Thompson.

      Madam Speaker, we all come to this place carrying different perspectives, different roles and different functions to carry out. But first and foremost, we come to this place as people. We come here as men, as women, as non-binary individuals. We come as wives and husbands, mothers, fathers, friends and com­mu­nity members.

      We come here, fun­da­mentally, because we be­lieve in building a better com­mu­nity and we are led by a passion to serve–admittedly, I never had the op­por­tun­ity of getting to know Danielle well, and with her and I being placed in the roles that are by their very nature adversarial. But in the short time that I did work with Danielle, I know that she exemplified all the qualities the public is right to look for when choosing their repre­sen­tative.

      She had an exemplary passion for her work and her com­mu­nity, and was deeply committed to advancing, among many other things but not least of all, access to child care, making it more affordable and ac­ces­si­ble for all families in our province, not just in her com­mu­nity of Thompson, but everywhere in this wonderful province.

      The passion she demon­strated for children was undoubtedly strengthened and nurtured by her–the love she had for her own children, Nic and Joe, and to them I want to express my deepest sympathies for the loss of your wonderful mother.

      I would also like to express my sympathies to her husband Bill and to all her family that are here today. Thank you for being here today to share this moment with us and thank you more im­por­tantly for sharing your beloved wife, mother, daughter, sister and loved one with the province of Manitoba. The province is undoubtedly enriched because of her con­tri­bu­tions.

      Danielle Adams will be remembered as someone who firmly stood for what she believed in, and for all her work as the first woman MLA of Thompson.

      In closing, I would also like to offer my con­dol­ences to my friends across the way. Being in a caucus is a very exclusive privilege, one that forms bonds and ties people together in very unique and extra­ordin­ary ways, and I have no doubt that Danielle touched every person in that caucus and not only became a colleague, but a friend.

      And to those of you who are mourning her loss today, I express my deepest con­dol­ences. Danielle's work and her legacy will live on, and the con­tri­bu­tions that she made to our wonderful province will be remembered forever.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Mr. Dougald Lamont (St. Boniface): In this pandemic there have been so many losses, and it never gets easier. There's no getting used to it.

      And Danielle's death came as a terrible shock. I have to say, I've been haunted by her loss because one moment she was there sitting next to me in the Legislature and the next moment she was gone. And that is the cruelty and fragility of life: that one moment someone who is so vibrant and so alive is suddenly gone and leaves so many behind to grieve for her. And it's said that grief is a kind of love for the people we've lost, and heartache is not just an expression, it's real pain.

      And this pandemic has made these losses harder, and losses hurt more because we can't be with the ones we love, and the connections to care for one another have been frayed by every­thing from divisions to the fact that we can't be together and look each other in the eye, or provide comfort through a simple embrace, or have someone wipe away the tear from our cheek. And we spent most of the time for the last year separated and away from one another, and because the stress and fear and anxiety of never knowing what comes next, it's made every­thing that much more difficult.

      And the others have mentioned a lot of the time we spend in this Chamber is spent theatrically. There's an artifice to what we do. We put on a face to meet the faces that we meet, but Danielle was not like that. She was open. She was authentic. She didn't put on airs. She was humble. She believed what she believed and she stood up for it, and she wore her heart on her sleeve.

      And the memory I have of her isn't from this Chamber. We were standing in line at the Dairy Queen on St. Anne's Road. It might have been after the election in 2019. It was a hot day in summer, or maybe fall, I guess, warmer than usual and my kids were hungry for ice cream. And I had my head in the clouds, and Danielle turned around and said hi, she was standing right in front of me. She was casual. She was open. She was friendly. We talked about our families.

* (10:50)

      We talked a little about Thompson and the North. And she was there with her friend that lived nearby, who she was staying with, which is just another example of her humility. And it was one of those perfect Winnipeg fall evenings, when the sky is clear like crystal, and the warm is air and sweet and we were just another couple of Manitoba parents, eating ice cream with some kids in tow.

      And Danielle was so young. She had so much more life ahead of her. And if grief is another kind of love, then it may be that the grief we feel is in proportion to the time we've lost with our loved one, the time we won't have. And that's the pain of it: the pain of carrying on with loss.

      But it is never loss alone because what Danielle–what defined Danielle was not her loss, but her life. And her life, like any life, was defined by who and what she loved, the space she filled, the love she put out into the world; her love for her family, her friends, her com­mu­nity, her colleagues and her cause. There are losses that seem unfathomable, and on behalf of the Manitoba Liberals, our hearts go out to her husband, her children, her family, her NDP col­leagues, and all who knew her. And we hope that we can lighten the burden of your grief by sharing it.

      To Danielle, wherever you are, may your heart and spirit be at rest.

Mr. Brad Michaleski (Dauphin): Again, I'll be–like others, I'd like to join and add my con­dol­ences to the family of Danielle Adams. And I know she–I didn't have a–I didn't know her very well, but I most certainly can relate to what it's like to be a repre­sen­tative in this House and having to travel the distances that she had to.

And I think it was mentioned here, earlier, how difficult it is to hold, really, essentially, a double life. And, where you have your family and friends, your com­mu­nity and all your support networks in one area of the province, and you come to this place, and you have a whole completely different political family. You just don't have the same–there's a disconnection. And in that regard, Danielle, she made that commit­ment. And I will say, as much as she did to represent Thompson, it is very much–and I don't mean this in a bad way–but it's really about Team Adams and Team Danielle.

And I ap­pre­ciate the family being here because this is an extra­ordin­ary tragedy for a young woman who came into this place to represent that region, and I know it's a tre­men­dous commit­ment for the family and her friends, and what I witnessed in the short time that she was here, she was tenacious. She was scrappy, and that's what, you know, Thompson–that's what I recall from the MLA from Thompson who most certainly, you know, fought for her con­stit­uency, fought in her critic roles, and you could see that she was extremely passionate about a number of issues that affected the North and across Manitoba.

But, you know, it is a unique–it's unique when you get outside of this place and you get further north, there's extra­ordin­ary challenges in that area of the province. And I can–again, I can attest to that. When you're four hours away, five hours away, six hours away, it is an extremely hard and lonely job. And it's difficult to come into this place and have your say. Because, again, it's a large area. And, again, Danielle would have done a lot of door knocking and, by all accounts, you know, she was very active in the com­mu­nity, very active with her family, and it's difficult to–and I think the word was used, balance. And how do you balance that?

      And, obviously, Danielle was a remark­able young lady and she served her com­mu­nity very well, and her family should be extra­ordin­arily proud of the accom­plish­ment of being elected to this House, and, again, she served with honour, from what I know, and it was a difficult and not an easy job, but she handled it extremely, extremely well.

      Thank you very much.

Ms. Amanda Lathlin (The Pas-Kameesak): I first met Danielle when she was the CA for Niki Ashton. The one thing that stood out for me the most, if anyone in this room knows Gordon Landriault, Mr. NDP in The Pas, her patience dealing with him.

      He was hard of hearing or didn't listen at all. And we would be on the campaign trail in the truck, and Gord would be like, what? huh?–you know, and Danielle would calmly, every time, repeat herself. And I would listen and go, wow, how can she do that? So that was the one thing that stood out.

      Even before I met her in person, I knew her voice over that damn speakerphone all the time while we were on the trail, and she was looking after things at home in the con­stit­uency office for Niki Ashton.

      And another time we would hang out, of course, would be on that campaign trail. We were in Fisher River Cree Nation. All of us gathered in the parking lot and Danielle came out of her vehicle. And it was a hot summer day–or it was warm, anyway. She came up to me and she was wearing shorts, dressed for the summer, and I looked down and I started smiling because she was wearing dark green socks with sandals, and I was smiling and I was thinking, gee, I thought my dad was the only one who wore socks with sandals.

      So aside from this fashion faux pas, I was smiling at her socks. It was an endearing moment, and then I looked up; and there's Danielle still strategizing serious and barking orders at me and I looked up at her–oh, okay, okay, we're serious. We're serious, you know. And her seriousness was some­thing that her and I always laughed about. She was always on–always on–like, I swear to goodness that she would probably be advocating in her sleep, too, as well.

      She–even just sitting around having a beer, or just sitting in caucus sharing lunch, or in each other's office, it was always work, work, work, busi­ness, busi­ness, busi­ness. And I think we were in a caucus retreat in Dauphin trying to have a meal with her. She was the first person I called when I got into town: Where are you? Let's meet up. We met downstairs, and again, work, work, work. I was trying to enjoy a beer and I was like, pushed her beer in front of her, and I said, you know, let's enjoy, let's chill. You know, and she was like, oh, okay, all right. You know, and that was her way of chilling, you know, just talking about her family. And that's what–one thing we always talked about, was our families.

      When she was elected as an MLA, I was so proud of her. It was like a natural move for her to do. It was natural. I worked with her a lot with casework. She was very knowledgeable in the justice system. I thought it was pretty cool that she came from a back­ground of Legal Aid. I thought that was pretty cool, and she was always there.

* (11:00)

      Okay. So when she made her natural transition to politics, she may have been a rookie being elected, but she was no rookie when it came to terms of knowing our issues in northern Manitoba. She was no rookie in knowing the hardships that us northerners have to do without–I mean, have to cope with. And she showed me pictures of her house. She showed me pictures of the house, even though she–before she bought it. And I think we were planning a two-day housewarming party. Told her to get my room ready for me.

      Like I said, she was always available. Late night talks, late night texts. Even if she wasn't available, it's because she was busy tending to her lovely sons, but she would call me later on in the night. She was a true friend, always made time for me, truly knew what was going on in my life. She accepted me. I will miss her as a sister. I will miss her as a friend. I'll miss her checking up on me when I would disappear for a while. She'll probably be the only person I would take the call from.

      So, with this, I just want to thank Bill and her sons, Nic and Joe, for lending us your mom. Her work is done here. And we're going to continue on your mother's work and her advocacy. I just want to say kinanâskomitin, thank you for sharing your mother with us and being so generous. Your mother was a good woman.

      Miigwech.

Mr. James Teitsma (Radisson): First, I want to extend con­dol­ences to the family of Danielle Adams. I'm grateful that so many of them could join us today, that they could be here in person. I can imagine it's very difficult to again remember so poignantly the loss of Danielle, but I also believe that these kinds of days can be healing as part of the grieving process.

      It's my prayer that Danielle's family will be sustained, that they will receive grace from their rest of their family, from friends, from neighbours, from everybody who know them. That her sons, Joe and Nic, will always be confident that Danielle loved them–that their mom loved them very much and was very proud of them. So my prayer is also for Joe and Nic, that they can grow up, that they can be the best kind of persons that they can be.

      I want to extend con­dol­ences to all of Danielle's friends, also, and that includes many of our colleagues here in this House, especially my NDP colleagues, and I offer my con­dol­ences to all of you.

      It isn't supposed to be like this. Danielle's passing was much sooner than anyone could expect. And her passing, I think, reminds us that life is short, it's fragile, and it's precious. Every day is a gift. Danielle's passing reminds us to live our own lives knowing that each day could, in fact, be our last. We don't often get to know in advance when our time on this earth is up.

      So, like Danielle, we need to be dedi­cated to building strong relationships, to reaching out to friends and families–members to make sure that they know that we love them, and that they know and they're confident that we'd be there for them and want what's best for them. And from what I'm hearing today, I'm confident that Bill and Joe and Nic and all the rest of her family knew that about Danielle. They knew that she was kind. They knew that she cared about them. We need to do that so that when our own life ends and when our days are complete, a final assessment is: well done. Well done.

      So we're here, today, commemorating Danielle's life because she served in this House as an MLA. I think that is important. In that way, her legacy will continue. We'll remember her strength. We'll remem­ber her passion. We'll remember her advocacy for Manitobans dealing with dis­abil­ities. We remember her advocacy for Manitobans looking for child care for their children. We'll remember her advocacy for the North and for Thompson.

      So like all of us here in this Chamber, she was an MLA. But she was so much more than that. And I would go so far as to say that being an MLA was certainly not the most im­por­tant thing in her life. I think more im­por­tant than that was that she was wife to her husband, Bill; that she was mother to her sons Joe and Nic; and that she was daughter to her mom, Jody, and John; that she was daughter to her dad, Don, and Stacey; that she was sister to her brother Tim–Candace–that she was friend to so, so many people. And that I'm just grateful that we all got to ex­per­ience some time with her here.

      As her colleague, I am personally grateful to have known her and I'm proud of her record in this Chamber. I'm proud of her accom­plish­ments and her achieve­ments.

      And, once again, I'll end with con­dol­ences to the family, and with hope for the future that they can go forward confident in Danielle's legacy, in her love, that they can take comfort in that and that they can receive grace.

      Thank you.

Mr. Ian Bushie (Keewatinook): It gives me great honour and great pleasure to be able to say a few words about my colleague, my co-worker, and most im­por­tantly, my friend, Danielle.

We shared an office bank, and her office was directly next to mine, and on a regular basis when we would come in there would always be the opening comment in the morning, a closing comment at the end of the day, and then we'd have those discussions through­out the day. And one of the things that really stood out–because we both got elected to this Chamber at the same time, but we're also both not new to politics–one of the things that we realized, and I talked with Danielle about, was being in this role. It's a lifestyle. It's not so much a job, it's a lifestyle, and it's some­thing that you bring forth every day.

      And becoming an MLA–and you shouldn't be somebody else's definition of an MLA. You shouldn't be somebody else's definition of who you are. Be yourself and truly define who you are. And Danielle did that. Danielle did that in the most respectful way possible. She brought forth exactly what she wanted to do with a respectful way, to everybody. And sometimes that got to be very difficult.

      I'd like to thank members opposite, also, that joined us while we did this. And when we did that I shared the word innocent, now, in describing Danielle because she brought an innocence to this role. She brought an innocence to the idea of what she wanted to do. And that's a fantastic trait to have. Sometimes, it was just simply about asking the question, why can't we do this? And then try and figure out all kinds of ways to get things done to best serve her family, her con­stit­uents and the people of northern Manitoba and Thompson. And that was some­thing I absolutely admired from Danielle.

* (11:10)

      It was very difficult sometimes to look past the frustrations and feel like you can't get anywhere, but Danielle always had that fight. When COVID came and we switched a lot of members to Zoom, it was mentioned earlier that she was very cognizant about a learning dis­abil­ity. And until she said that, I didn't even realize she had one like that. Because that's just how natural she was, and how passionate she was about issues she had.

      So she would regularly ask, and I'm sure her mom can attest, she regularly asked us, she regularly asked me, how did that look? How did my question look? How did my speech look? And I just kept telling her it looked fantastic. And you could see the comfort level–and she was more comfortable on Zoom some days–it was just going through and hammering the questions, including to members opposite and to the ministers that she directed her questions to, she was getting more and more comfortable.

      And when she talked about learning dis­abil­ity, I just said, I don't see that. And it was some­thing that was in her mind, but she was very good and very passionate about–I don't want to say hiding that, but overcoming that and dealing with that, to make herself a better person.

      And sometimes that's a very difficult thing, when you have to be able to admit potential shortcomings or potential issues that you have, and it makes you very self-conscious. But she overcame all of that, and I was very pressed–very impressed by what she brought to this table.

      So I'm not here to mourn her loss, and I don't think we should all mourn her loss; we should celebrate her life and her con­tri­bu­tions that she brought forth to all of us.

      When–I truly believe, when somebody passes away and they leave this world, they continue on in a spirit world and they're forever remembered. And they'll always be remembered, until the last person ever speaks their name. And Danielle's name will forever be spoken, so she will never be forgotten. She will always be remembered.

      And including–and I say this to her family, to her partner, Nic, her son–I mean, her partner Bill, her sons Nic, Joe, to be able to do what you bring to this table, and what you have–your mother and your partner are going to be remembered. And you'll see that for gen­era­tions to come. When her sons grow up to have their own children, you will see those comments, and you'll say, that's just like your mom. That's just like your grandmother, that's just like your great-granny. And that's the repre­sen­tation and that's the influence that you'll see in Danielle.

      While her time here on earth may have been short, it was very influential. And she was able to have that influence over all of us and over everybody. And it's a rare thing. It's a rare thing to be able to have that kind of influence and that kind of impact on people's lives, and it's people all over, all walks of life.

      We're very diverse here in Manitoba, and Danielle was very good at repre­sen­ting and advo­cating for that diversity that we have. As an Indigenous person, and my con­stit­uency is largely Indigenous, it's–sometimes it's difficult for a non-Indigenous person to go into those com­mu­nities and have that kind of back-and-forth and be able to say: Yes, I'm here for you. I want to be with you. I want to stand with you, not beside you–not in front of you, but beside you.

      So Danielle had that ability. The con­stit­uency of Thompson also has a large Indigenous repre­sen­tation, and Danielle had that ability to get in there and talk to the com­mu­nities and talk to the people about the issues that are arising, in wherever it may be in that vast riding. So that's a gift, one of many gifts that she shared.

      There's a lot of things and a lot of–when I say innocence that she brought to this, and it was mentioned about Danielle and Halloween and special events and special days and things like that too, and if I can just kind of make light of some­thing, I still–and I will now make an effort to watch Harry Potter, because she kept talking about that so much. So I will do that, and I pledge that to my friend to be able to do that.

      But those are the kind of things that she talked about, and to her sons, and to her partner, many, many con­ver­sa­tions and many instances that came up. No matter what the issue may have been, a lot of the reference were these two words that I'll always remember that she would say: my boys. My boys this, my boys that. And that just shows the kind of family and the kind of person that she was.

      And it was mentioned earlier too about being able to travel across the province to represent a northern con­stit­uency and the sacrifice that is made, so I thank you, I thank her partner and her children and her extended family for the sacrifices you made to be able to allow Danielle to come with us, to share Danielle with us. That has made me, personally, and I know it's made everyone in this room, a better person.

      I had the privilege to travel to Thompson, which Danielle would have loved. Danielle would've loved for all of us to travel to Thompson, and that was a goal that she had: I want to have meetings in Thompson, I want to have assemblies in Thompson, I want everybody to come up there and see exactly what life is like in the North, and what life is like in Thompson.

      So I've been there a couple times, including for her service, and I was privileged and honoured on behalf of not only myself, but my family, my com­mu­nity and Indigenous people, to be able to present the family with a star blanket. When Danielle had passed, that's some­thing that just resonated with me imme­diately to be able to do. And I've been privileged and honoured in my life to be gifted with a number of star blankets over my time, including being able to now share those with other people, with other families, and the comfort that you only have to ex­per­ience to go through.

      So we had that quilt made, and that blanket was made by an elder in my com­mu­nity, and it was made in these colours–it was made in these colours because we all know those are Danielle's favourite colours. So that gift that I presented, at the time we presented it to her mother, and now it's being passed on to her children. Take comfort in that. When you feel that you're so lonesome you can't stand it, cover yourself in that blanket. Think about your mother, your partner, your sister, your daughter and know that she's with you. I know she's with us here right now today. I know she's with us in spirit, and she'll be with us forever. Her influence will be felt all the time.

      As I said earlier, that influence that Danielle has will go on forever. And time–they say time heals all wounds, but over time it just creates a different kind of love. So when I say you'll see that influence of Danielle over time, you will see that. And you will take that with a–with laughter. When Danielle's grandchildren and her great-grandchildren are there, and one of them does some­thing that imme­diately reminds you of Danielle, and you'll take that with laughter, and you'll know that she's there.

      So, in my final words, I would again just like to thank her partner, her children, her family, for sharing Danielle with all of us. For me, personally, knowing Danielle has made me a better person, and I'll always be grateful for that.

      Miigwech.

Mrs. Cathy Cox (Kildonan-River East): It is with deep and profound sadness that I rise today to remem­ber, recog­nize and celebrate the life of our friend and colleague Danielle Adams, who was tragically taken from her family, her friends and this world much too soon.

      I want to extend my personal and heartfelt con­dol­ences to Danielle's family who are joining us today in the gallery. There are no words that any of us can say that will ease your suffering, but I want to share with you from the bottom of my heart how much we respected and ap­pre­ciated Danielle, not only as a colleague, but also as a friend.

      To Nic and Joe, you were the world to your mom. You were the centre of her life, and she was so proud of both of you. There is nothing greater or stronger than a mother's love, and I know that you will hold that love in your hearts forever.

      Bill, all of us in the Chamber grieve the loss of Danielle with you. She left this world much too soon, but will always be remembered as a mom, a daughter, a friend and a strong advocate for her com­mu­nity.

* (11:20)

      Yesterday I reached out to Niki Ashton to learn more of Danielle's life. She told me of the lifelong friendship that she and Danielle shared, a friendship that started out as two child­hood friends who grew up together in Thompson and later developed into political colleagues. Niki described Danielle as vibrant, positive and outgoing. She remembered her as someone who loved being and working for people and helping people. And like many of us here in the Chamber, Danielle gained valuable political ex­per­ience while working as an assist­ant to Niki Ashton for nearly 10 years.

      Danielle was passionate about helping others, and so it was inevitable that she had aspirations to serve her com­mu­nity in an even greater capacity as an MLA. And with the roles reversed, Niki helped Danielle with her nomination, and then rolled up her sleeves to help Danielle become the very first female Member of the Legis­lative Assembly in history to represent the con­stit­uency of Thompson.

      Madam Speaker, Dani, as she was affectionately known in Thompson, was the firm believer that women belonged in leadership roles, and so it is so fitting that Danielle was the very first MLA to represent Thompson.

      I understand that Danielle had a huge heart, and that was obvious from listening to her speak in the Chamber, that she was so passionate about serving her con­stit­uency and her con­stit­uents. She took such pride in her com­mu­nity and was an enormous advocate for women, child care, housing issues and believed so strongly in gender equality. I understand that she even served as the chair of the local daycare long before she even had children of her own.

      And while her time here as a Member of the Manitoba Legis­lative Assembly was unfor­tunately much too short, Danielle will always be remembered by all of her colleagues and the family she represented as a strong and dedi­cated advocate who devoted her life to helping others.

      Heaven has welcomed another angel, Madam Speaker. Soar high, and soar proud, Danielle, until we meet again.

Ms. Cindy Lamoureux (Tyndall Park): Madam Speaker, I didn't have the op­por­tun­ity to get to know Danielle as much as I would have liked to because of the pandemic and working from home as much as we have over the last couple of years, but after hearing so much about her political upbringing, her need for organi­zation and her love of Harry Potter, I suspect that we would have had a lot in common and enjoyed each other's company.

      What I do know is Danielle was an in­cred­ibly passionate woman who fought tooth and nail for her con­stit­uents and who loved those around her very much. I'm inspired by how dedi­cated she was as a mother because politics does not always make this easy. I greatly admire the balance that she constantly sought to have to be able to carry that political side of her as well as that family side of her.

      Madam Speaker, Danielle was not afraid to come into these Chambers and share what her con­stit­uents were relaying to her. She shared this infor­ma­tion with this gov­ern­ment, and when the gov­ern­ment disagreed, I think this is where Danielle shone the brightest. She fought back. She was scrappy and tenacious. Danielle never folded or caved. She stood up informed and proud, provi­ding facts and repre­sen­tation of the con­stit­uents of Thompson.

      Danielle and I had the op­por­tun­ity to work together in holding this gov­ern­ment accountable with child care. When I reflect on this portfolio, two specific nights of online late-night com­mit­tees that were sitting 'til midnight come to mind. And together, Danielle and I had the op­por­tun­ity to ask questions and talk with many child-care workers and parents who have children in child care.

      It was evident that Danielle was in­cred­ibly passionate and motivated to make a difference, and I  believe that she did. I think Danielle had a huge impact in many lives in many different, positive ways in politics and beyond.

      You know, Madam Speaker, I remember I was at home when I found out the news that Danielle had tragically passed away. That evening, I got together with a friend of mine who also knew her, and we were both in complete shock of what had happened. We sort of just sat there digesting the news.

      For days that followed, I was having many re­flections of her. Spe­cific­ally, for some reason, I kept imagining every morning, when I was getting ready for work, that she would have been doing the same. The loss of Danielle came as such a shock, and feels really close to home, because all of us here have some­thing in common with her, with respect to being one 57 MLAs here in Manitoba.

      And this tragedy really puts into perspective that we never know what is going to happen. And it's a reminder for all of us here, through share with each other, and I'm speaking personally, Madam Speaker, of how much I respect and admire everyone in these Chambers, for the roles that they play and the service that they provide for Manitobans and our province.

      Madam Speaker, Danielle still has–had so much life to live. And what I do know is she left a legacy. And I want to extend my sincerest con­dol­ences to her friends and colleagues and to her family. She was an amazing mom, partner, daughter, sister, and she left a wonderful impact on this earth.

      Thank you.

Mrs. Bernadette Smith (Point Douglas): Danielle meant many different things to many different people. To everyone who knew her, she was a fiercely prin­cipled person who had so much love. She always did every­thing she could to make life better for those in need.

      When Danielle and I were in Tataskweyak this past summer at a youth gathering, it was evident how much respect Danielle had from that com­mu­nity and the other chiefs that were there supporting, as there was a suicide crisis going on. She was so nervous. She had shared that this was one of the first times that she would be up speaking in front of them, and she asked if we could talk outside a little bit. When she went up, it was so natural for her. And after, we had a little giggle and told her, nobody knew you were nervous. She nailed it, and she was like, I was so nervous. But she was such a great speaker, and I'm going to miss her.

      I had the pleasure of meeting her wonderful husband as I was going up to Tataskweyak. Bill was waiting in the driveway of their new home, ready to load my car with water that Danielle had purchased, to help with the youth gathering. And that's the kind of person Danielle was. She gave of herself. Her family that she came from taught her that value, and it was evident that she was also instilling it in her children.

      It was clear for anyone to see how much Danielle loved her com­mu­nity. I'd gone up for the powwow as well, and Danielle, you know, came out. And those roads weren't the nicest roads. When I went up, there was lots of potholes. It was very mucky. I was actually scared driving on those roads, and she had drove those roads many times, and I was so nervous when I got there. Like, I was just white-knuckling it the whole time. It had been raining, and we were laughing because she said, I drive those roads all the time.

      And, you know, it was natural for her to–and such a, you know, hard road. I thought, man, I don't know how she does this all the time, to go and visit all of these different com­mu­nities. But that's who she was. She wanted to make sure that she connected with the com­mu­nities that she represented, that she brought their voices forward, and that the youth knew that they could aspire to be in the Manitoba Legislature, just like she did.

      Tataskweyak Cree Nation Chief Doreen Spence shared the last message Danielle had sent to her was asking how the com­mu­nity was doing. There was so much crisis going up–going on up there. They had so many suicides. They had a COVID outbreak, and the youth were struggling, and she always made time to check up on them. That's one of the special qualities Danielle had that made her such a loving mother, such a loving person, and such a loving friend: that same quality as a powerful and tireless advocate that she had for her com­mu­nities, for those who were vul­ner­able and for the people that she had never even met.

* (11:30)

      Danielle was genuine. Danielle was a leader. Danielle was on your side when you needed her. You could tell from talking to her that she got involved in politics for the right reasons, because she wanted to make a difference. She wanted to make sure that the things that she had gone through no other person would have to go through, and she brought that fierce voice here.

      Danielle was never ambitious for any kind of per­sonal gain through politics. She became an MLA for one reason, and that was to make a positive difference, and to inspire others from the North to actually come and be a politician, and know that they could make a difference, and that they could also do it.

      She cared so much about affordable child care. She knew how hard it was for her mom to raise her and her brother, and she knew that parents deserve the support and the resources that they needed to get their kids into daycare. Danielle was strongly motivated by the thought of children and families in need of support that wasn't there for them, but could be created, and she certainly was fighting for that each and every day that she was in here.

      She was passionate about building up and im­proving our emergency shelter system. Danielle knew how im­por­tant it was, no matter who or where a person is from, or what their circum­stances are, they should have a barrier-free, safe place to live.

      She also knew how im­por­tant it was that vul­ner­able people could access the shelter system, that they have detailed and com­pre­hen­sive support so that they too could find permanent housing once leaving the shelter system.

      As a vocal and unapologetic feminist, Danielle felt just as strongly about fighting on behalf of other women and gender diverse people against the violence and injustice they so often faced. The harder points in her life led her to be an advocate for others, and she used her position and her voice to speak for those who could not.

      Danielle felt so strongly about these things be­cause she ex­per­ienced real hardship in her life. She was raised by a single mother and relied on the shelter system at one point in her own life. She was humble, intelligent, hard-working, fierce. She started working–her working life at McDonald's and The Burntwood Hotel in Thompson. All of this provided such a powerful variety of perspective and foun­dational life ex­per­ience that made her such an exceptional MLA, and truly an advocate and leader for her con­stit­uency that was so needed.

      To me, Danielle was a respected colleague, a powerful ally. She was fighting for those who didn't have a voice, and she was a dear friend. She and I shared a pride in where we came from. We also shared many similar experiences and challenges in our life. That's a great part of why we came such fast friends.

      Our offices in the Legislature were right across each other, and often she would come into my office and go over questions with me or ask me to read her speeches. I, too, never knew she had a learning dis­abil­ity because she was such a natural, and coming from, you know, the political world, I remember being on executive with her and just how, you know, passionate she was for politics, and always asking the hard questions, and not–never being afraid to ask them and to push for better for all people in Manitoba.

      She will live a legacy–or she will leave a legacy in this place, and I am better to have been a friend–to have been her friend. To Danielle's family who are here today with us, I offer you my deepest and my con­dol­ences. I also promise you that I will carry on her advocacy and bring that strong voice and continue to work for what Danielle stood for and standing up for those who couldn't.

      I want to say rest in power to Danielle. Until we meet again, miigwech, and thank you so much to her family for sharing her with us. Such a great, you know, sacrifice in politics and being away from your family, so we thank you for sharing Danielle with us, and she'll always be in our hearts and she'll have a legacy here.

      Miigwech.

MLA Malaya Marcelino (Notre Dame): It's a true honour to be able to speak about the life and con­tri­bu­tions of my dear friend Danielle Adams today.

      After only a handful of months as a newly elected NDP MLA, Danielle said to me over the phone one time, you know, Malaya, you're my MLA bestie. An MLA bestie–I laughed. I don't think those two words have ever been put together like that perhaps across the whole Commonwealth of parliamentarians.

      What do you mean, I asked. She explained that her best friends up in Thompson, her child­hood friends, had asked her what her co-workers would like–were like, and who do you get along with down there? And she said that everyone in caucus was awesome, but that I was her MLA bestie, that I was awesome and that she could relate to me easily, and that we prioritized fighting for so many of the same things for the com­mu­nities that we represent.

      We both were new MLAs and both moms to two young boys. We even have sons the same age, her youngest and my oldest, and that both of them liked Ninjago, and all the things that little boys dream of and concern them­selves with.

      How that one funny turn of phrase, MLA bestie, that Danielle used to describe me, it meant a lot to me then. And since she's passed on, it's meant to me–meant even more to me now. That one memory has caused me great comfort these past few months that I've been ex­per­iencing grief.

      And that openness with her feelings was one of the best things about Danielle. She let the folks that she loved and cared about know exactly how she felt about them and how and why she ap­pre­ciated them. There was nothing left unsaid. Her heart was full to bursting with friendship, generosity and concern for the welfare of others, whether it was a lifelong friend, her family, a new co-worker like me, or a con­stit­uent or other com­mu­nity members that needed help with an issue.

      Danielle made time for you, she never made you feel rushed and she would listen to what you had to say. She had a way about her that made folks feel cared for because she was never in a hurry and took all the time you needed to listen.

      Losing Danielle this way has hit our NDP family hard. You see, Danielle has been an active part of the NDP for most of her life. Danielle had many roles in the party. She was a mainstay at NDP prov­incial council for years, on executive council, and she was heading a working group looking into barriers for women and gender non-conforming folks running for office, and she served on the party's finance com­mit­tee.

      Long before she was an MLA, long before she was a con­stit­uency assist­ant for 10 years for the feder­al riding of Churchill-Keewatinook Aski, she was an NDP campaign volunteer since she was 15 years old. Long-time Thompson NDP activist Blair Hudson said that he never knew of a more committed teenager for the party. She could always be counted on to work elections, from office work, photocopying, stapling, to delivering flyers and then eventually canvassing.

      For a long time Danielle worked as a waitress at The Burntwood Hotel in Thompson. This was hard work. She was on her feet all day and all night, but she never missed on working on elections and was considered a lucky charm to campaigns because her candidate would always win. Blair Hudson recalled the pure joy and happiness that Danielle felt every time her candidate would win. But all the work that she did for the NDP was never for her own glory. It was always for the bigger picture goals. Blair Hudson would go on to eventually be Danielle's 2019 election campaign manager.

* (11:40)

      What she was most proud of during the nomin­ation and campaign was that she made it out to every outlying com­mu­nity in the Thompson con­stit­uency multiple times, save for one: Nelson House, Anishinaasik [phonetic]; Split Lake, Tataskweyak; York Landing; Gillam; Wabowden; Fox Lake; War Lake; Churchill; Thicket Portage; Pikwitonei.

This was a difficult feat. There had been no NDP presence here for four years, and she had to re-esta­blish those ties. These com­mu­nities are not easy to get to. Depending on the com­mu­nity, Danielle had to travel by boat, by ferry or by rail. For many years as a federal MP assist­ant, she was known as the face of the federal NDP because there were many meetings and speeches, in many com­mu­nities, that she had to represent MP Ashton. But since Danielle's own election, over the two years, despite the limitations brought on by the pandemic, Danielle really grew into that job and was a fierce repre­sen­tative and advocate for her communities. Her imme­diate con­stit­uency priorities were to esta­blish and strengthen ties to outlying com­mu­nities and fight for paved roads, and weather roads.

All who knew her know of her passion and exper­tise on the subject matter of ac­ces­si­ble, affordable and quality non-profit child care. She was so committed to child care for her com­mu­nity that one time, Danielle volunteered to serve as surety to the bank for a loan that the local child-care centre needed. She was so committed to seeing uni­ver­sal, ac­ces­si­ble, affordable, quality non-profit child care across the province that during the early days of the COVID pandemic, she spearheaded an NDP child-care caucus policy project to confer with child-care directors across the province that consulted the nation's top economist and child‑care experts–including Pierre Fortin, Gordon Cleveland, Susan Prentice, Jane Beach and Kathleen Flanagan–to deliver a fully costed plan, a five-year plan that identified the weaknesses and strengths of our current Manitoba child-care system, what pitfalls to avoid of the much-lauded Quebec expansion, and the infra­structure dollars needed, the training dollars needed and the wage sector increases that are needed to get this child-care rollout done right.

And that was all done even before there was even a promise of federal funding. Danielle was pushing to do it anyway, with or without federal funding. Danielle was pushing to do it because it was the right thing to do for women, for children, for families facing poverty and for the economy.

Another policy area close to her heart was the fight for a living minimum wage. Danielle did not have an easy life. She knew what it meant to work all day and all night on your feet and then not have much to live on at the end of the day. From child-care assistants to serving personnel, Danielle was fighting for women like her to have a decent shot at getting through life.

One of her recent policy research areas involved im­prove­ments to EIA that would allow clients to make meaningful steps towards working or taking on part-time work, and not to be penalized for these earnest efforts.

Danielle was a smart lady. I remember one time when we were at a caucus retreat in Dauphin and I was part of a small caucus group that toured com­mu­nity non-profit organi­zations with Danielle. We were there to check in with these groups and to hear their concerns, and over the next two days, we visited the Dauphin adult learning centre staff, we met with intimate partner violence counsellors, child-care directors, housing shelter co-ordinators.

Danielle listened to all their questions and griev­ances, and one by one, she had responses and sug­ges­tions that these folks sincerely ap­pre­ciated. All the while, in comparison, I was just struggling to get up to speed, to even try to understand their concerns. I remember one of the adult educators said, this is the first time that they'd actually ever learned some­thing or heard some­thing they could actually use from a visiting politician. Now, that was Danielle: whip-smart, ex­per­ienced, realistic and a real people person.

      I think that I will carry with me for a very long time that sense of loss and regret that she was not able to carry out these goals that she worked so hard for, when she could have seen these researched ideas imple­mented, because she was so young, so energetic, so com­pas­sion­ate and talented. But that regret and loss that I carry is but a pale shadow of grief that I know that you carry, that Danielle's family carries.

      To Danielle's family, I feel like I know you be­cause of how much she spoke of you, and because of how much she integrated her family life with her work life. I've lost count of how many times that, during Zoom meetings with the nation's top economists, Danielle would abruptly interject, no, Joe, you cannot have another frozen yogurt tube. You've already had three and it's not even lunchtime. I was like, what is a frozen yogurt tube?

      Or how she'd check her calendar for an availability for our next meeting, but that she would have to work around Nic's band performance, or Nic's orthodontist ap­point­ments, and how she'd always tell me all the stories about Nic's best friend.

      She would tell me that her mother-in-law, Pearl [phonetic], was her saviour, a goddess, a rock star, the best mother-in-law in the history of all mother-in-laws. Pearl [phonetic], if you're listening on TV, she told me how selfless you are, how smart and loving you are, how you would kill her if she ever included you in the MLA annual family photo. How well you took–take care of Nic and Joe, how there was no way on God's green earth that she could've ever done this job and left the kids for weeks at a time without you.

      She shared with me stories about her dad, Don, how it wasn't always this way, but that all is well now, and that she trusted you with her sons and looked forward to those visits.

      She told me stories of her brother, Tim, growing up in Thompson, and about your work life in Alberta.

      One of the last–very last con­ver­sa­tions we had was about Bill and how grateful she was to be in such a loving and healthy relationship with you.

      And Jody, Danielle's mom, you were like a touchstone for her. She adored you, and the easy relationship that you had was one of the best things in her life. She relied on your judgment and on your support. She looked up to you and was so proud of the path that your life took. You were the single biggest role model in her life. She watched and learned how you overcame adversity and how you gave back to the com­mu­nity. She told us all, once, in a caucus meeting, that watching and learning from you, how you overcame adversity to then get educated, get a law degree, and give back to the com­mu­nity, was the single biggest inspiration to her to help others who were down, because she knows that with a little bit of support, these same folks can also overcome serious obstacles and give back to the com­mu­nity that once helped them.

      There, I told you, even though I've never met you, I feel like I've known you because I've seen you through Danielle's eyes. I am very sorry for your irreplaceable loss, for our irreplaceable loss, but she didn't leave us with nothing. She left us with wonderful, loving memories because of how she made us feel so ap­pre­ciated while she was here. For me, and for the rest of the caucus, she left us with a 'verable'–veritable, very im­por­tant to-do list and priorities. And, most im­por­tantly, she taught us how to see these issues and priorities through a northerner's eyes.

      The very first few times I had met her, I saw her in caucus meetings when we first got elected, and she had this way of interjecting and making space in a friendly way with her elbows. Without any kind of back­ground explanation, she would just launch into these names of these northern com­mu­nities and northern personalities in whatever discussion we were having. Com­mu­nities I had never heard of due to my ongoing, untreated perimeteritis, Danielle would bring up every time. Names like Colleen and Helga would come up in con­ver­sa­tion, and later I learned that Colleen was the Thompson mayor, Colleen Smook, and that Helga was Helga Bryant, the chief executive officer of the northern health author­ity region.

* (11:50)

      In gov­ern­ment or in op­posi­tion, when we see that there's a crisis in health-care staffing, in soaring 'intirmate' partner violence rates, in housing shortages, in insufficient mental health supports, adult illiteracy–you name it–you can bet your bet your bottom dollar that these shortages and crises are far more entrenched and far more pronounced in the North, in rural and remote areas that don't hardly get any attention. Danielle taught me to look to these regions first and not last–or worse, not at all–when planning stake­holder meetings and crafting solutions for these pressing issues.

      Danielle taught me to ap­pre­ciate the differences in the North and to account for those differences. And, of course, with the way that she died, I read that as an indictment itself on the neglect that northern, rural and remote areas have faced for a long time when it comes to health care, emergency supports, infra­structure and infra­structure maintenance, among other things. And if our caucus has been quiet up to date on these issues, it's been out of grief and not because we don't plan on doing anything about it. We will not be able to turn our eyes away from it now or ever again.

      For the stories and infor­ma­tion I have shared today about Danielle, I'd like to thank Tim Johnson, NDP party secretary; Angela Reeves, NDP director of legis­lative affairs; and Blair Hudson, long-time Thompson NDP activist and union repre­sen­tative, for taking the time to discuss Danielle's con­tri­bu­tions with me to the NDP, to our caucus's legis­lative agenda and Thompson con­stit­uency priorities.

      Thank you to Danielle's family for coming all the way to share this special day remembering this irreplaceable friend of ours, and thank you to Madam Speaker, and to your office for making these very im­por­tant travel arrangements to ensure that Danielle's family can travel safely.

      Thank you.

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Madam Speaker, a wave of shock and disbelief swept over me when I heard of Danielle's death. It was tragic, on Highway 6 between Thompson and Grand Rapids. It's a stretch of highway that I have travelled on many, many times, often twice a year going up to Thompson when I was the Leader of the Liberal Party. She died far too young, leaving behind her husband Bill and two boys, Nic and Joe, and many, many other family and friends.

      Though we were not in the same party, I admired and respected Danielle. She spoke with passion on early learning and child care, on poverty, on behalf of those with dis­abil­ities and on housing issues. These are issues on which I have personally been deeply concerned with during the period I've been elected, both as a Member of Parliament and as a member of this Legislature. They're issues to which we need better answers than we have achieved to date. Danielle is owed recog­nition for standing for those in need in Manitoba and, parti­cularly, for those who live in the North.

      I didn't know until today that Danielle had a learning dis­abil­ity. She did remark­ably, con­sid­ering what she had to overcome to be an MLA and to do well as an MLA as she did.

      Many years ago, I learned an im­por­tant lesson from a mentor of mine. I was studying and doing research in London, England, and my supervisor, a Professor Soothill, was a well-known and internation­ally recog­nized scientist. He had dyslexia, a learning dis­abil­ity. He explained to me when I arrived how it was almost impossible for him to read words in a book and that he had got through school, including medical school, by paying very close attention when his teachers taught in class. That was essentially the only way he could learn. He could never read quickly enough. It was onerous, laborious and very, very slow when he read. He couldn't read quickly enough to keep up.

      Interestingly, he had done so well that he was appointed to be on the admissions selection com­mit­tee for Oxford Uni­ver­sity. And each time the selection com­mit­tee took in student applications and he was involved reviewing them, he scanned the applications very carefully searching for students with learning dis­abil­ities because he knew that if they had made it that far to apply to Oxford Uni­ver­sity, that they'd overcome extra­ordin­ary obstacles and that they deserved unreservedly to be admitted to Oxford Univer­sity to study. It was an im­por­tant lesson that people with dis­abil­ities–in this case learning dis­abil­ities–can often do extra­ordin­ary things and come over extraordinary obstacles. We have to thank Danielle, especially, for her con­tri­bu­tions and showing us what can be done even when you have a learning dis­abil­ity.

      It is a sad and inadequately recog­nized fact that one of the risks of being a Member of Parliament or a member of a prov­incial legislature is a car accident. As elected individuals we tend to travel a lot to reach and meet with people all over the province. For those who represent rural and remote areas the risks are greater, for the time spent travelling is sub­stan­tial.

      When I was a Member of Parliament, within the first year that I was there, in 1994, Gaston Péloquin, a Member of Parliament for Brome-Missisquoi, died in a car accident travelling between Ottawa and his con­stit­uency. It was a shock and a forceful reminder then of the hazards of the open roads to elected members of parliament or legislatures. Danielle's death is a shocking reminder of this.

      Since the 1990s, the hours we're in the Legislature have improved, but the weather is no better and many of the roads are no less dangerous. It is im­por­tant, I believe, in Danielle's legacy, that there is a careful look at how we can make Manitoba's roads safer, whether it is the roads them­selves or the clearing of roads, or the alerts we are able to give drivers travelling on roads when con­di­tions are difficult.

      As a person who has travelled many kilometres on Manitoba roads, I can see areas where im­prove­ments in the notification of driving con­di­tions on roads could be a sig­ni­fi­cant help. On a recent visit to Onanole, Brandon and Killarney, for example, there was much that was good on the prov­incial website, but I think it could be improved. Perhaps we can find a change or an im­prove­ment that could possibly prevent the death of people like Danielle in the future. We need to do this.

      Perhaps, even as another example, the recent multi-vehicle accident on Highway 1 west of Brandon involv­ing as many as 25 large trucks and cars could have been prevented. We were in Brandon the day before. The highway was extremely slick and icy after a freezing rain and it left a layer of ice on the road.

      I hope that all of us as MLAs can put an effort into making our roads safer. It would be good not only to save lives, to save the damage and destruction of vehicles and, interestingly, to reduce the cost of vehicle insurance. Let us work together to do this in the memory of Danielle.

      I offer con­dol­ences to family and friends, from myself and my wife Naomi, and to the members of the NDP caucus who have suffered a tragic loss of a close friend. Together in the Chamber we have lost someone very special and we will always remember this loss.

* (12:00)

      Thank you for the op­por­tun­ity to speak and say a few words.

      Merci. Miigwech.

Ms. Nahanni Fontaine (Official Opposition House Leader): I'm seeking leave of the House not to recess until all the con­dol­ence motions are completed for our colleague, Danielle Adams.

Madam Speaker: Is there leave to not see the clock until all of the con­dol­ence comments for Danielle Adams have been heard? [Agreed]

Mr. Nello Altomare (Transcona): Thank you, Madam Speaker, for allowing me to put a few words on the record for my dear colleague, Danielle Adams.

      I want to thank her family for being here today. It's an emotional day; an emotional day because it's just not part of the natural order of things. I will tell you, I want to thank every member and every member that will speak going forward for your words that you've put on the record. These are im­por­tant words because we know as MLAs our jobs become perilous.

      I remember the first time I came back to the House, Madam Speaker, I ran into the member from Spruce Woods. We were both speechless–didn't say very much to each other because we know that the passion that we put into our work repre­sen­ting our com­mu­nities has a cost. And I can tell you each and every person in this Chamber knows that that cost is family time, but boy do we ever get the returns when people in our com­mu­nity are very ap­pre­cia­tive of what we do here in this House. Danielle exemplified that every minute she was here.

      I want to tell her mom and dad, on behalf on the people of Transcona, who have a lot in common with the people from Thompson–scrappy part of town, working class, have to scratch and claw for every little bit to make it–that Danielle and I, we kind of were attracted to each other because of our back­grounds. I will say that Danielle would use me to be her heckler. She would say, member from Transcona, let them know this–right in my ear–and so, of course, I would do that.

      But that was Danielle. Took every possible op­por­tun­ity to make sure that her point got across, not only for the people she represented but for the causes that she was passionate about that we heard from the member from Notre Dame, the member from Flin Flon, the member from The Pas-Kameesak, the member from Keewatinook, who put words on the record that really exemplified exactly what Danielle was about.

      We served on com­mit­tees together, and now that service, just like the member from Notre Dame said, will carry us forward in the im­por­tant work that we do as MLAs in this House, not only to represent our con­stit­uents, but to represent each and every one–each and every Manitoban.

      As I wrap up my comments, I just want to say to Danielle's family that this emotional day is part of the healing process. It is my sincere hope that we've added to your healing process. I encourage you to continue to reach out to us when needed.

      And I would just want to leave you with these few words from Richard Hall that have been ringing in my head since the fateful day in early December: that one of these mornings, it won't be very long, you will look for me and I will be there.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Mr. Jamie Moses (St. Vital): Well, Danielle, we miss you. I miss you. You're a friend to me; you're a friend to all of my colleagues in caucus, a friend to this Legislature, and I miss you; we all miss you. We miss you as part of our team. We miss your advocacy. And I know the family–your family–misses you even more than any of us.

      One of the things that really gets to me about the tragic loss of Danielle, my friend, is that my youngest and–my oldest and Danielle's youngest are the same age; they're both in grade 1, and for me to think about that, think about how I go home to my kids every night and to think about that loss for Danielle and her family is almost too much to bear.

      So, my heartfelt con­dol­ences on behalf of myself, my family, my caucus, goes out to you, family. My love, the same love that Danielle would bring home every night to you, I'm now giving to you on behalf of myself, my family, my caucus.

      What I want to talk about is my friend Danielle, the Danielle that I got to know before either of us were elected, when we spent time volunteering with the party, with the NDP. And as we were in meetings, working together side by side, I got to understand some qualities of Danielle that I'd like to share.

      First, I'd like to talk about Danielle's curiosity and her optimism with dealing with situations. I cannot count the number of times that I heard Danielle say, well, can we try this, or, can we try that? Maybe this would work for us in the North. It could be different than you guys in Winnipeg.

And that curiosity, that optimism, is some­thing that carried–it was a quality that Danielle carried on in every aspect of her life, in every aspect that she was working on. And I was so fond of hearing about that curiosity, hearing about that optimism that she brought to every situation.

      And that curiosity, that optimism, is what fed into her and allowed her to be such a passionate advocate for her com­mu­nity. There wasn't a day or a meeting that would go by without Danielle bringing up how does this affect the North, how does this affect and help the people of Thompson, how does this help to make their lives better, people that I–that she represented. And that not only showed that she went into this busi­ness of becoming a politician, becoming an MLA, not for herself, but for her com­mu­nity, for her family, for her neighbourhood, for Thompson and for the North. And I am so proud and consider myself lucky to have worked with a person like Danielle who could always find ways to put herself last and her com­mu­nity and her con­stit­uents first.

      I often looked to her when I was thinking and con­sid­ering plans of how–of talking to her and would reach to her and say, how would this work in the North? This idea might work in the city, but how would it work in the North for your con­stit­uents? And she was a wonderful person to bounce ideas off of because she would always be able to provide that perspective of the North–the voices of the North, and that's one of the things that we all, in this Legislature, miss today is that strong voice for the North.

      The last quality I want to talk about Danielle is her brilliant humour that many of us and our colleagues in caucus know about. Whether it's us in the Chamber here and Danielle making a crack about some science fiction book or a quote from a fantasy movie or novel that she had written–read, whether it was making some reference to Hitchhikers' Guide to the Galaxy or Harry Potter or some­thing else, Danielle always found a way, no matter what situation it was or tense con­ver­sa­tion or debate, to find a narrow little window there to lighten the mood, to add some humour into a situation.

* (12:10)

      Whether it was a heated debate in the Legislature here, and she would just lean over and make a little crack that would just kind of put a smile on your face and remember that we're all here to make the lives of ourselves, of our friends and colleagues, but most im­por­tantly, of all Manitobans, better. Danielle found a way to do that in small ways, with each one of us as individuals, but she also found ways to do that as an MLA, to make Manitoba, to make her part of Manitoba and Thompson, a better place. She did that in small ways and in big ways. Not only am I better for this, not only is our–my team better for this, but we're all in Manitoba better for having Danielle in our lives. I consider myself lucky for have had knowing her.

      And I'll just finish by saying that that unbridled optimism and curiosity that Danielle had, that humour that she brought into situations and that advocacy, that passionate advocacy that she had for her com­mu­nity, are not gone with Danielle. All of us here today who are hearing this, who are witnesses to this, who are a witness to her life and every­thing she–that she brought to it, and all of you, her family and friends, are now carrying this with us in our lives ahead. And we don't carry this with us just in our memory. We also carry this through our action, and our caucus is committed to acting and being advocates the same way Danielle was, for her com­mu­nity, for the North and for the people of Manitoba. We will carry this with us in our hearts, in our memories, and we will carry this forward in our actions.

      Thank you so much to the family of Danielle for sharing her, in her life, with all of us.

Mr. Matt Wiebe (Concordia): I'd like to offer my con­dol­ences to the family. I want to thank you for making the difficult journey to come here today to join us. I know it's a difficult day for you, but I also think it's an im­por­tant day for you but also for us as colleagues of Danielle to have this time to recog­nize her, her accom­plish­ments, her dreams, her concerns, her advocacy here in this House, but also just to remember her and to have some time to put some words on the record for this place and for all time about what she meant to so many of us. So thank you for putting yourselves out there to come here and to join us.

      I also want to extend my con­dol­ences to the people of Thompson and to the people of the North who are feeling this very acutely, as well, right now. This is a loss for them, as well, for an advocate and for a daughter of the North, of somebody who cared very deeply for the place she was from and believed very much in that place. And likewise to our northern caucus, our members of the Legislature who represent the North, simply because I know that their love and passion for the North was met–matched by Danielle, and as we've heard many times, there were many times that they would come together to talk about those issues, advocate together, and so, for them, I know this is a loss as well.

      We lost an amazing advocate for the North, somebody who I've known, come to know and heard many times from so many people, somebody who had tenacity, who was unafraid and fearless in her advo­cacy, never wanted to give up a moment, if she could–that she could take to represent her con­stit­uency and the issues of the North, and also somebody, of course, who had so much potential, that was just getting started, just begin­ning to see her potential through. And I know how difficult that is, as a new MLA, as a young MLA, to come here and to give so much of yourself. But she did that, and she was willing to do that all the time.

      She was also such a unique voice in this House. It's been mentioned that she was the first MLA–female MLA from Thompson, but she was also a young woman and a family person, so somebody who was bringing that voice as a young mother to this Legislature, and a young mother from the North.

      I think that was her strength. I think that was her drive. You know, I found most connection with Danielle when we were talking about our families. It's been mentioned: Harry Potter. I was reading Harry Potter to my kids and I could turn to her to be the–she would always give me sort of the expanded lore. But she–it was that family focus, that family first that I think it was a true indication of who she was at heart: somebody who cared about her family and cared about her con­stit­uents' families.

      You know, we–she spent so much time talking about the stories of the people of the North and advocating for them, and so now we can tell her story and we can use her story to advocate for the North. And, you know, I just spent some time up in Thompson. I drove those roads. I spent some time with the people who knew her, and you know, amazing salt-of-the-earth people. That's who Danielle was, a salt-of-the-earth person. And, you know, we want to continue to advocate for her.

      So I just want to thank the family for going–taking this journey with us today. As I said, I know how difficult it can be–or I can only imagine, I should say–how difficult it is. But I think it's im­por­tant that all of us have this op­por­tun­ity.

      So thank you for being here. Thank you for sharing Danielle with us, and we will continue her legacy in this place, as we go forward.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Mr. Diljeet Brar (Burrows): We are gathered here today to pay tribute to our colleague, Danielle Adams.

      Danielle Adams was a hard-working, sincere, honest, daring, bold, energetic person with values and vision. She always stood strong for her con­stit­uents and every­thing they deserve. She left us physic­ally and left a void that can never be filled.

      However, she also left so many thoughts and dreams to make Manitoba better. It's our moral duty to make those dreams come true. Even today, I can hear her voice and energy on display during the question period in this Chamber, and I'm sure you all can. I feel her here, right now not physically, but spiritually, motivating all of us to do our job to the full potential.

      I have witnessed her looking at issues and op­por­tun­ities with her northern lens. She was passionate to make northern Manitoba's–Manitobans' lives better. I remember, she wanted me to visit Thompson to meet her con­stit­uents of East Indian origin along with her so she can understand their issues better. COVID‑19 didn't let us make that happen. Sorry, Danielle.

      Danielle was one of a few fortunate people who get an op­por­tun­ity to serve Manitobans in this Legislature. Danielle was a common Manitoban who started her career as a team member at McDonald's in Thompson. She walked through a few other jobs, including con­stit­uency assist­ant to MP Niki Ashton. That's where she got a chance to understand social-political needs of the people she worked with.

      Within just 11 years in this role, she made it to Manitoba Legislature in 2019. Her victory created history and she became the first female MLA in the region. Although Danielle didn't get a chance to serve too long in the Legislature, she made a big difference in a short time. She spoke loud and clear to address poverty, child-care issues and issues related to families.

      Apart from her pro­fes­sional life she was a loving daughter, wife and mom. I want to say thanks to her mom, Jody, and dad, Donald, to raise such a wonderful daughter.

* (12:20)

      Family and friends Tim, Bill, Nic and Joe, you are blessed to have her for all those years before she left for her heavenly abode. I feel your pain. My thoughts and prayers are with you. Please accept my deepest con­dol­ences. Danielle will live in our thoughts forever. RIP, Sister Dani.

      Thank you, Madam Speaker.

Ms. Lisa Naylor (Wolseley): Danielle Lynn Adams was born on September 24th, 1983, and died far too young, on December 9th, 2021. She celebrated her 38th birthday with us at a caucus retreat in Brandon. I have a photo of Danielle grinning ear to ear that afternoon when we surprised her with a bright orange–NDP orange–birthday cake. And that smile is how I will always remember her.

      It is my honour to speak about her today as part of this day of con­dol­ence motions.

      Danielle was elected as the Thompson MLA on September 10th, 2019, making history–as we've heard–as the first female MLA elected in the region. She was sworn in on September 27th, 2019.

      In the first few months after being elected, Danielle stood in the Legislature or spoke in com­mit­tee addressing many of the issues which Thompson elected–for which Thompson elected her. She pursued affordable housing for northern Manitoba and quality, ac­ces­si­ble child-care across the province. She went after reduced child-care subsidies and compliance for licensing, asking the gov­ern­ment how frequently child-care centres were inspected and addressing de­part­mental vacancies. She addressed issues for people with dis­abil­ities, parti­cularly the increases in abuse and cases of abuse and neglect. She spoke about the impact on northern residents when the dialysis machine was removed from Flin Flon and high­lighted ad­di­tional health-care needs in northern Manitoba, including physician recruitment. She asked for an inquiry into the death of the northern resident who had to wait 12 hours for Lifeflight, and she expressed concern that priva­tizing of services had cost someone's life.

      This is just a glimpse into the work Danielle did here in the Legislature on behalf of her con­stit­uency and all Manitobans, during our very short first session, imme­diately after she was sworn in. When we returned for the start of the second session of the 42nd Legislature, Danielle made her first speech in response to the Throne Speech. On that day, November 26th, 2019, Danielle started her speech with land acknowl­edgements, both of Treaty 1 territory where the Legislature is located and Treaty 5 territory where she lived and served. She came in here and she recog­nized the traditional land of the Nisichawayasihk Cree Nation, Tataskweyak Cree Nation, War Lake Cree nation, Fox Lake Cree nation and York Factory Cree nation. She also thanked all of the people from Churchill, Fox Lake, Gillam, Pikwitonei, War Lake, Ilford, York Landing, Split Lake, Nelson House, Thompson, Wabowden and Thicket Portage, who sent her here to represent them.

      She thanked her election team and her extended family and her husband, Bill, and her sons, Nic and Joe. And I remember she mentioned that Nicholas had travelled with her to Churchill by train during the campaign. And I remember that because I was listening to her speech and thinking how I could walk the circumference of my entire urban con­stit­uency in about two and a half hours on an ambitious day. But I was wondering how many hours Danielle had to travel to ensure that she spent time meeting people and hearing their needs in every corner of her con­stit­uency. I loved that that was im­por­tant to her and how seriously she took her respon­si­bilities.

      I didn't know Danielle personally before we were elected together, but I do remember listening to her on that day and feeling like she was going to be an amazing MLA. Danielle shared with this House what it meant for her to grow up with a single mother who was motivated to upgrade her edu­ca­tion to make a good life for Danielle and her brother. She also shared her observations and learnings from her mom about privilege and who had access to services. She explained how people sometimes helped her mom access programs and made sure she had the support she needed, but her mom noticed that not everyone got the same support, so she began to address those inequities in her own work and activism and made sure her children saw the world the way she had observed it.

      Danielle had a powerful role model in her mom and shared with us that she had been taught it was her duty to stand up for anyone not being treated fairly and to work for change. We all saw her live out that sense of duty with passion every day that she served as an MLA.

      Listening to Danielle's first speech, I remember being inspired and knowing that this was someone I was looking forward to knowing better. I'm going to read some of her words into the record again, taken from her speech that day.

      I am a proud socialist. I believe that gov­ern­ments need to be leaders. I believe that no one should be punished for being poor. I believe housing, food, health care and edu­ca­tion are human rights and should be treated as such. These seem like such simple and straight forward ideas, values of equity and human rights that everyone should be able to get behind. But, sadly, that is not the case and Danielle never ceased fighting for these values until the last day she served.

      When it came to the pandemic response, Danielle had no shortage of work as the official op­posi­tion critic for child care, housing, dis­abil­ity and poverty matters. Outside of health care these were some of the most critical issues for Manitobans over the past two years. Danielle did her research, listened to con­stit­uents, consulted with colleagues and subject area experts. She advocated for child-care worker PPE, dis­abil­ity supports, public transit costs for EIA recipients, rapid testing for northern teachers and vaccine ac­ces­si­bility.

      During the Third Session of the 42nd Legislature, Danielle frequently spoke about the gaps in northern health care, including nurse vacancy rates, funding cuts to home care and the need for safe con­sump­tion sites.

      I didn't get to know Danielle as much as I might have if the pandemic hadn't sent us all home, and there were much fewer op­por­tun­ities to meet in person over the next many months. We were also usually paired with each other as the House team member, so if Danielle had to be out to take a call or speak to media that she was–would check that I was in the House, even on Zoom and vice versa.

      Our text exchanges mostly focused on scheduling needs and then filling each other in on im­por­tant missed moments along with a few opinionated observations of things that had happened when the other was out of the House, and quite a few little laughing emojis along the way.

      I so wish we had spent more time together in the same room, but I am grateful that we did hang out a lot at our caucus retreat last fall. Danielle made me laugh and we've had–Amanda's talked about this today–but the rest of us are kicking back, relaxing after a long day of meetings. Danielle still just wanted to talk policy, identify which problems we needed to focus on next, and the only way I could get her to talk about anything besides how to change the world was to ask about her family or her latest board game obsession.

      And Danielle worked hard, but she had so much joy for living, too. The last time I saw her was on a Zoom screen as she helped to plan our caucus holiday party. True to form, Danielle thought it would be super fun to bring a bunch of her board games down to the city for a full afternoon of game playing and she was overruled by maybe one person on the com­mit­tee, but we all shared a good laugh at her enthusiasm and with more time, I am certain, she would have recruited all of us into one of her favourite pastimes.

      In closing, I want to say to Danielle's family, thank you for sharing her with us. Nothing can make you feel better about her being gone, so I'm not going to try. But I do want you to know that even though I didn't know her as well as some of my colleagues did, even I knew that the most im­por­tant part of her life was her time with Bill and Joe and Nic. I know she loved all of her family greatly and that her ability to love so openly and honestly translated into genuine love for her con­stit­uency and love of the work of trying to make things better for people every single day. Her con­tri­bu­tions to our team and to this province will be felt and missed for years to come.

      Thank you.

Mr. Adrien Sala (St. James): I'm grateful to have an op­por­tun­ity today to share some words in honour of our good friend and colleague, Danielle Adams.

* (12:30)

      I still think about the day we learned about the tragic accident. We received a call. Wab let us know about what had happened. And I remember sitting in a parking lot and speaking with colleagues and learning–talking about the news and going quite numb thinking about what her loss meant, not only for us as a caucus but of course, more im­por­tantly, to her family and those that loved her.

      And it took a long time to have that numbness go away. And it took probably a solid month until I was able to really think about Danielle without, frankly, losing it. And that's because we developed some really close–a really close connection in our time together here in the Leg.

      A lot's already been said today about Danielle, and I've been grateful to hear some amazing stories about her, a lot of stories I hadn't heard. It's also been wonderful to hear folks across the way share their perspectives on Danielle and to hear us celebrate her in the way we have.

      As I said, I was lucky to get to know her pretty well, thanks to us being seatmates right there as newly elected MLAs. And we were both brand new, of course, and were very encouraging to each other. Danielle was in­cred­ibly caring. She knew as a new MLA–she could feel my anxiety when we'd get up in QP or delivering a speech, and she always was there to provide encouraging words, to show that caring side. And we supported each other and that support extended far beyond our time as seatmates and went right until the end, until she left us.

      She had a–and I learned when I was sitting beside her that she was not only caring, she also had a very serious side, as some have commented on–a very, serious competitive side to her. And it was so clear to me from the moment that I met her about–that she really loved politics in the way many can't even understand. She was so deeply passionate about this political world we're in and I know that–I could just feel just how happy she was to have become an MLA. She made it. This was where she wanted to be. She really, really was just so in­cred­ibly happy to be here and to be doing what she loved.

      She had an in­cred­ible personality. Danielle loved to laugh. She loved to make people laugh. And I'll really miss that about her. She also had–my colleague from Keewatinook described an innocence to her, and I'd say that that came through to me as a purity. Danielle was always seeing things much more clearly than it seemed others could. She understood what was im­por­tant and was always able to cut right through to what we really should be focused on and what we should really be concerned about. And that was often about social justice, human rights, when ensuring people had what they needed to live good lives.

      As many shared today, she was brave. Danielle came in here with a learning dis­abil­ity, and I know from sitting beside her that she did struggle in those initial–that initial time when we came in here in this Chamber. But I saw her work through that and I saw her find strategies, develop ways of getting better and I saw her improve day after day. And I was just so in­cred­ibly blown away by that tenacity that she showed and that willingness to take that challenge on, and to ultimately become very, very good at the job she was here to do.

      Danielle wore her values on her sleeve. She wore her values on her sleeve. She was always focused on justice for those who couldn't get access to it. She was always focused on fairness, making sure that people were treated fairly. She fought for equity and she fought for inclusion. She always wore those values on her sleeve and always, always would be fighting for those values day in and day out.

      And you know, as many know here, Danielle cared very deeply about working families, and I think that stemmed from her own experiences as somebody who had faced the challenges that working families face. She understood those challenges and she cared in a way that many can't because she understood those dif­fi­cul­ties that working families face in this province.

      And that passion for working families came through in many ways. It not only came through here in QP and in debate, but it also came through in the policies she was focused on. Others have spoken a bit about, you know, her policy interests, but she took that very seriously. She spent an inordinate amount of time studying child-care policy. She was deeply interested in housing policy, in ensuring that Manitobans who couldn't afford to access the housing they need were able to access it and under­standing the policy instruments that we needed to look at changing in order for that housing to be provided.

      She was also deeply interested in EIA reform and identifying the problems that we currently have in our system, and identifying the barriers that are preventing people from being able to go on and lift them­selves up, and she was very focused in thinking about how we can improve that system to better serve Manitobans.

      And, of course, as I've mentioned, she was deeply invested in child-care policy work. I was very fortunate to be part of our child-care policy caucus with others on our team here. Danielle was our leader and she really helped to lead us through an in­cred­ible process of digging into child-care policy and engaging experts, and working, ultimately, to the dev­elop­ment of a policy that we can all be really proud of, that we can hopefully see realized at some point.

      I will also want to mention that, you know, relating to her advocacy for child care, that when Danielle passed, we had a lot of relationships with people in our child-care sector here in Manitoba. And I heard from a wide number of child-care pro­fes­sionals in this province who reached out to say how devastated they were to know, to have learned that they'd lost such a champion. They knew that Danielle cared in ways that many others hadn't. They knew that Danielle showed up here every single day to fight for their interests, to fight for a better child-care system in Manitoba, and she made them proud and I think she reminded them of the best qualities that we can expect to see in MLAs and people that come into this building.

      Another big priority for Danielle, and this has been mentioned today already by others, was ensuring that she did every­thing possible to elevate the voices and perspectives of Indigenous people in this province. We know that she worked hard to develop relationships in the com­mu­nities around Thompson, to connect with Indigenous people, and she was in­cred­ibly proud of those relationships. And I know that those–that work that she did, that she was in­cred­ibly proud of it, and that's some­thing that she really focused on and really cared about.

      And most of all when I think of Danielle, I think about her love for her family, for her kids. I heard a lot of stories about Nic and Joe, and their successes and the dreams they had as a family. I heard about her plans to take her family to Disney World, how she'd been saving up for that. That was the goal of theirs that they'd hoped to achieve, and that she was finally able to deliver on that goal. The same with her house. She was just so in­cred­ibly proud to have been able to purchase her first house.

      Life was really just taking off for Danielle when she left us, and I can't imagine the grief that her family feels at her loss. I can't begin to imagine it. But her loss is all of our loss, and we stand with you in thinking of Danielle and remembering her. And we will continue to work in her name and make sure that the policies she cared about, that the things she cared about continue to be a focus, and we'll continue to work in her honour and remember here–her here in this building.

      I thank you, Madam Speaker.

      And I would like to, before I finish, thank the family for all the sacrifices you made in sharing Danielle with us here in this building.

      Thank you very much.

Mr. Mintu Sandhu (The Maples): I would like to add a few words to those that have already been spoken about the late Danielle Adams, who only–who I only met she first became a member of this House.

      Danielle was born in Edmonton, Alberta, on 20–September 24th, 1983, to mom Jody Levy and father Donald Adams. She was also a big sister to her brother Tim Adams.

      In 2006, Danielle met the love of her life, Bill Morris, and got married on August 4th, 2013.

* (12:40)

      Danielle Adams was a loving wife, mother, daughter and an in­cred­ible, strong, wise [inaudible]. When I said an in­cred­ible, it means it.

      Every time we in the caucus room, we [inaudible] meetings, she always said what about the North? As so many other speakers have said, it may work in Winnipeg but what about the North? So, every single time she was talking about the North. And also, the day before she passed away we had a due meeting, edu­ca­tion due meeting. Same thing, questions were: What about the North?

      Danielle was devoted mother to her two boys, Nic and Joe. Madam Speaker, thinking of Joe, parents were a little hesitant about getting COVID‑19 vaccine for their kids. It was Danielle who got Joe vaccinated and using her social media to encourage other parents to get their kids vaccinated so we can get out of this COVID‑19 pandemic.

      Madam Speaker, I also remember, because she was sitting next to me, she asked her first question on October 2nd, 2019. She was parti­cularly committed to advocating on behalf of child-care sector and parents pushing for child care that was affordable, ac­ces­si­ble, reliable across the province. So it wasn't just in the North, everywhere in Manitoba.

      Danielle called things like she saw them. She fought hard for parents and against increasing nursery fees, frozen funding for the centre, but increased priva­tiza­tions. She advocated for solutions to help get people out of poverty, such as calling for more social and affordable housing and better support for those on EIA. During the pandemic, Danielle fought for the North to have 'equirtable' access to vaccine and testing capacity, as well as paid sick leave to keep people safe.

      Danielle was a lifelong New Democrat who worked tirelessly for equal access to health care, edu­ca­tion and good jobs in Manitoba north's com­mu­nities. Danielle was a supporter of many charities and organi­zations and served on many boards of directors and com­mit­tees, including the Thompson Children's World Daycare, Thompson Ski Club and Thompson Labour Com­mit­tee. Her time served on Thompson Children's World Daycare helped inform her commit­ment to advocating on behalf of early child-care edu­ca­tion, parents and family in the Legislature.

      Anyone that knew Danielle understood what a huge heart she had and how quick she was able to join in a cause. Danielle was the first one to show up to support her family and friends in their times of need and celebration.

      I want to pass on my deepest con­dol­ences to her husband, her entire family and the people of Thompson. Danielle, my friend, someday, somewhere we will meet again.

      Thank you.

MLA Uzoma Asagwara (Union Station): Madam Speaker, I'm saddened and heartbroken for Danielle's family. I'm grateful to have the opportunity to share a little bit about my experiences with Danielle and the profound impact she's made on many people, certainly our province as a whole.

      Science tells us–and there are varying opinions on this–that within the first moment of meeting a person, one 10th of a second–two-to-three seconds, 30 seconds, 60 seconds–within the first moment of meeting a person, you get a sense for who they are. You know pretty much right away the kind of person they are, if you're going to get along. I knew upon meeting Danielle, imme­diately, that she was a good person, a kind person, an integral person. That never wavered, thereafter.

      And the reality of it is that had it not been for politics–we were both elected, newly elected at the same time, like many of my colleagues–I probably never would have met or known Danielle. And life is funny, so maybe our paths would've crossed, but really and truly, had it not been for politics we likely never would've been able to be friends. And I'm very grateful that we were able to become friends.

      For all of the ways that Danielle and I were different, we had many things in common, lots of similarities. Our birthdays are one year and one day apart. Our first jobs were both at McDonald's–shout-out to Mickey D's. It's our first job. And we both have an immense pride and respect and adoration for the strong mothers who raised us and rooted us in values around com­mu­nity and public service, and standing up in the face of injustice.

      Danielle had this in­cred­ible ability to see people. This place can make you feel as though you've got to walk through the halls and in this Chamber with armour. It can make you feel at times as though you've got to really protect yourself. And the thing that I absolutely ap­pre­ciated about Danielle was that when she looked at you, when she looked at people in general she saw them and she gave you the space to just be. And that, to me, is where the best of us comes from, and how we're most able to shine and impact our com­mu­nities, and impact the world, and make a difference from a place of our values is when we're given permission to just be. Danielle gave that to people.

      She was intense; intense in her humour and her kindness, in her commit­ment to account­ability. She was an accountable person. That was a value very im­por­tant to her and she pursued that tirelessly from those who were in positions to affect the lives of others.

      I remember, recently, in Estimates, I was follow­ing Danielle. I was coming later. And I'd been think­ing for days: how–what's my strategy going to be going into Estimates? Like, how am I going to approach this? I really am hoping, maybe one time I'll get answers, finally, asking these questions. And I'm thinking about, like, how I have to strategize and my tone, and every­thing else. And I went into Estimates, virtually, and Danielle is just straight up, what are you going to do about children in the North? What about this? Not mincing words, demanding account­ability, that was what she did. And, imme­diately, I was just at ease, anxiety gone.

      Like, that's the reminder that we all need, right? To be unapologetic about demanding account­ability, raising the standards for people who affect people's lives, Danielle encouraged all of us to raise the bar. Her bar was in­cred­ibly high, and I ap­pre­ciated on a daily basis the way that she exemplified what it means to set the bar high and to con­sistently work to maintain that.

      One of the things that I really ap­pre­ciated about Danielle was the way she made the effort to not only see people but she recog­nized that in order to be a strong advocate, you had to work hard to understand people's experiences, experiences that you maybe haven't navigated or lived yourself. She worked really hard to be a student of people's experiences, to learn respectfully where they were coming from, what their needs were and why.

* (12:50)

      She often asked me questions about the 2SLGBTQIA+ com­mu­nity and terminology and language. She made a point of reaching out to me, looking toward Black History Month, and asked if I knew of Black authors that she could support and purchase their books and share in her com­mu­nity.

      She talked a lot about how those values of seeing people and ap­pre­cia­ting them and respecting and celebrating them for who they are was a value that she was instilling in her children, and she was in­cred­ibly proud of the fact that she would see her boys, Nic and Joe, engaging with their peers from that same place, respecting their peers and their identities and being curious from a place of care and ap­pre­cia­tion. She was very proud of that.

      Danielle is a reminder to all of us of the import­ance of walking in this world with kindness, of not making anyone feel less than or small, and in not playing small yourself, recog­nizing that standing in your truth and leading with your values gives other people the space and permission and ability to do the same.

      I am in­cred­ibly sorry for your loss. I am grateful that we've had the op­por­tun­ity to work alongside Danielle and learn the lessons that she shared with us by just being Danielle. My con­dol­ences to you Nic, Joe, Bill, Jody, the entire family. We'll continue to do the work that she inspired us to do from that place of authenticity moving forward.

Ms. Nahanni Fontaine (St. Johns): First and foremost, I just want to say my deepest con­dol­ences to the family that are here today with us. Miigwech for coming down, for making the trip. We are all honour­ed that you're here today with us, and to hear our words that we're putting on the record in respect of your beloved Danielle.

      Our colleagues have said so many beautiful words and tributes of your beloved Danielle, all of them true, all of them one hundred per cent accurate and all of them the experiences that each and every one of us in this caucus had the op­por­tun­ity to ex­per­ience. And, as my colleagues have said, we are all better just for knowing and working with Danielle.

      I don't need to get up in this Chamber and tell you how kind and generous and caring and funny and loving Danielle was–obviously, you know it even more than any of us can even ever have the op­por­tun­ity to–but she was. She was all of those things, and she brought that to our caucus. And I think that's why it's so im­por­tant for our caucus to say those words in this Chamber, because she was the living embodiment of all of those things. Every­thing that was good, every­thing that was innocent, Danielle was.

      We connected in respect of our boys. Almost every single caucus member has stood up and talked about how she always talked about her two sons, and she absolutely loved her sons. She was so proud of her boys, and we bonded. My boys are older–26 and 20–and I would talk about, well, what it's like when they're going to get older. And the one thing that Danielle and I always talked about was how amazing it is to raise boys. We love–we loved talking about our boys, what gave us joy, some of the little frustrations. But she loved, loved her sons, and she had–that she shared with us how much she loved her partner and her husband.

      And I remember she shared with me when she was recently–or, newly elected–how her and Bill were never apart, and I thought that was really beautiful how she loved being in a marriage and a part­ner­ship with you, Bill. And we're so blessed to hear those stories; we're so blessed that she felt that she could trust us enough to share that love and that caring that she had for her family.

      It's been mentioned a couple of times that Danielle was a true ally of Indigenous people. There are folks who will often say that they support Indigenous people or they support Black people and yet when it comes down to those moments when non-Indigenous or non-Black people should stand up, where they should stand up for Indigenous people and Black people, often they're not there to be found. But Danielle was. Danielle lived it every day in her work, when she went into the com­mu­nities that many of my colleagues have spoken about and she lived it in this Chamber. She would often speak out in respect of anti-Indigenous racism or anti-Black racism.

      As my colleague for Union Station, this place often makes you wear armour and this place can be a tough place to work. And she never hesitated to reach out to me personally: I have your back, are you okay, I love you. Those are moments that I will always cherish.

      My last time that I saw Danielle–your mom, your wife–I was raising donations for menstrual products and hygiene products. And I know that Danielle didn't have a lot and she said to me, I have some­thing for you and she gave me $40 cash to be able to contribute to that donation drive that we were doing in St. Johns. And that's just how generous she was.

      And so again, my deepest con­dol­ences. Our colleagues here in the NDP caucus have all said that we will continue to do her work, including bills that she had asked be drafted. We will continue to put forward those bills and that work on her behalf. My deepest con­dol­ences to Jody and to all the family. You are so loved and you are in our thoughts always.

      And then, just a brief miigwech to each and every member in the Chamber here today, including my colleague, the Gov­ern­ment House Leader (Mr. Goertzen), and to the Speaker and to the Liberal House leader, as well. There's been an enormous amount of–outpouring of love and co‑operation to allow today to happen. So I say miigwech to each and every one of you.

      Miigwech.

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

      Would the hon­our­able members please rise and remain standing to indicate their support for the motion.

A moment of silence was observed.

* (13:00)

      I would ask the members to remain standing while the Sergeant-at-Arms prepares the flag, photo and white rose which I will present to the family in my office. The bouquet honouring our colleague will remain on her desk for the rest of this week.

      The hour being past 12:30 p.m., this House is recessed and stands recessed until 1:30 p.m.


 


 

LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

Tuesday, March 1, 2022

CONTENTS


Vol. 15a

Government Motions

Goertzen  306

Motions of condolence

Danielle Adams

Stefanson  306

Kinew   307

Goertzen  309

Lindsey  310

Squires 311

Lamont 312

Michaleski 313

Lathlin  313

Teitsma  314

Bushie  315

Cox  317

Lamoureux  317

B. Smith  318

Marcelino  319

Gerrard  322

Altomare  323

Moses 324

Wiebe  325

Brar 326

Naylor 326

Sala  328

Sandhu  329

Asagwara  330

Fontaine  331