Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Liberals: YouTube Video Reveals John Horgan And North Island MLA Trevena Continue To Refuse To Help Forest Communities

05 Dec, 2019 08:34 PM

    A YouTube video of a closed-door meeting between North Island MLA Claire Trevena and frustrated constituents and representatives from struggling Vancouver Island logging communities surfaced today.


    The 30-minute video shows several heated exchanges between Minister Trevena and angry forestry sector workers in Campbell River who feel abandoned by the lack of action from John Horgan and the NDP government as the crisis continues to worsen.


    “I visited the North Island a little over a week ago and people are telling me their local MLA is missing in action while the provincial government does nothing to save the forest industry or jobs in their own communities,” says BC Liberal Opposition Forestry Critic John Rustad.


    “We are now entering the sixth month of the strike at Western Forest Products, and unless Premier John Horgan decides to finally act and end the dispute, we are going to see more trucks repossessed and more defaults on mortgages.”



    The YouTube video of a Campbell River meeting between Trevena and Vancouver Island forestry workers revealed a great deal of frustration and many question why their local MLA has been completely absent for the past five months. In the video, Trevena claims her duties as Minister of Transportation have kept her away from visiting her constituents.


    “The Mayor of Port McNeill is echoing the BC Liberals’ call for an industrial commission of inquiry so we can at least get a clear picture of what is needed to resolve the dispute at Western Forest Products,” adds Rustad. “There are plenty of things government can do, including adjustment to the way stumpage fees are calculated, that can help get the industry competitive again.”


    Yesterday’s announcement of the closure of Errington Cedar Products due to bankruptcy also reveals that Island and Coastal forestry workers are not eligible for the government’s $69 million early retirement program, or any other benefits available to forest workers in the interior.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Urgent And Primary Care Centre Opens In North Vancouver To Serve North Shore

    New Urgent And Primary Care Centre Opens In North Vancouver To Serve North Shore
    VANCOUVER - A new urgent and primary care centre has opened in North Vancouver as part of the province's strategy to deliver faster and better health care to people in the province.

    New Urgent And Primary Care Centre Opens In North Vancouver To Serve North Shore

    New Senate Group Forms To Push Regional Interests In A Fractured Parliament

    New Senate Group Forms To Push Regional Interests In A Fractured Parliament
    OTTAWA - Eleven Canadian senators are forming a new caucus that aims to make sure regional issues get their due in the upper chamber.    

    New Senate Group Forms To Push Regional Interests In A Fractured Parliament

    16 SeaBus Sailings Cancelled On Third Day Of Transit Worker Job Action

    VANCOUVER - TransLink says more SeaBus sailings between downtown Vancouver and the North Shore are being cancelled as a transit workers' job action enters its third day.

    16 SeaBus Sailings Cancelled On Third Day Of Transit Worker Job Action

    Vancouver Home Sales Surge 45.4 Per Cent In October To Top 10-year Average

    VANCOUVER - The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales surged 45.4 per cent in October from a year earlier as lower prices helped boost sales.

    Vancouver Home Sales Surge 45.4 Per Cent In October To Top 10-year Average

    Non-English Speaking Patients Need Equal Access To Interpreters, Doctor Says

    Waking up with worsening pain had Surjit Garcha worried, but the red blisters on her stomach were so alarming that she went to her neighbour's home to try and explain, in her limited English, that she needed help.

    Non-English Speaking Patients Need Equal Access To Interpreters, Doctor Says

    Elizabeth May Resigning As Green Party Leader, Names Jo-Ann Roberts Successor

    Elizabeth May has stepped down as the leader of the federal Green party.

    Elizabeth May Resigning As Green Party Leader, Names Jo-Ann Roberts Successor