Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C.'s NDP-Green Agreement Required Reading Ahead Of Likely Minority Government

The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2017 11:41 AM
    VICTORIA — The recently signed New Democrat and Green party manifesto to form what is likely to result in British Columbia's first minority government in sixty-five years has become required reading for business, social and labour groups.
     
    The leaders of B.C.'s business council and federation of labour said they have been reviewing the 10-page document signed last week by NDP Leader John Horgan and Green Leader Andrew Weaver in preparation for what could be momentous political change.
     
    Prof. Michael Prince, a social policy expert at the University of Victoria, said Tuesday that social services organizations are examining the document, paying particular attention to plans to establish a provincial poverty reduction strategy and conduct a test project on providing basic incomes to fight poverty.
     
    "Different groups are poring over the agreement for what it may say and what it may not say," he said. "This is much fuller than we've seen in recent throne speeches."
     
    Greg D'Avignon, of the B.C. Business Council, said he supports plans to form an emerging economy task force and establish an innovation commission for business development in the technology sector, but he's wary of proposed increases to the carbon tax.
     
     
    B.C. businesses pay millions a year in carbon taxes while trade partners, competitors and possible customers in Canada and other jurisdictions are not paying a similar tax, and talk of raising the tax is causing concern, he said.
     
    "We don't have an issue with the carbon tax going up as a business council," said D'Avignon. "We have an issue with the carbon tax going up just in B.C. Some of my members pay as much as $50 million a year in carbon tax that no one else in North America pays."
     
    The NDP-Green agreement plans to increase the carbon tax on carbon emissions by $5-per-tonne each year, starting next April. B.C.'s carbon tax is currently at $30-per-tonne.
     
    The federal government said it will impose a carbon tax plan at a minimum of $50 a tonne by 2022.
     
    D'Avignon said business groups are already far ahead of governments, including the proposed NDP-Green alliance, when it comes to embracing the emerging economy and supporting innovation in the technology sector.
     
     
    "They are thinking about it, which is great," he said. "We've been having this innovation conversation here for five years, at least."
     
    Irene Lanzinger, of the B.C. Federation of Labour, said the commitment to increase the minimum wage to $15-an-hour validates more than two years of lobby efforts by her organization.
     
    The political agreement calls for the formation of a Fair Wages Commission to bring in the $15 minimum wage. The document did not include a timeline for implementing the increase.
     
    Lanzinger said the federation wants to see a set times for the introducing of the higher wage that will keep pace with planned increases in other provinces.
     
    "Alberta will be there in October 2018," she said. "Ontario has just announced they will be there in January 2019."
     
     
    The combined seats of 41 New Democrats and three Greens gives the two parties a one-seat majority over the Liberals in B.C.'s 87-seat legislature.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    NANAIMO, B.C. — British Columbia's political party leaders have been frantically crisscrossing the province, making their final appeals to voters who might still be swayed before casting their ballots Tuesday.

    Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint
    The woman, Meenakshi, 28, had in June 2010 filed a complaint alleging she was gangraped by a Rohtak resident and his two brother-in-laws after they gave her lift in their car.

    28-Yr-Old Rohtak Woman Gets 7-year Jail For False Gangrape Complaint

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek
    CACHE CREEK, B.C. — The RCMP says the fire chief of Cache Creek in British Columbia's Interior is missing and may have been swept away in a swollen creek.

    Search On For B.C. Fire Chief Who May Have Been Swept Away In Swollen Creek

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies
    Police say he was one of three people hurt in two separate collisions on 64th Avenue on Wednesday night.

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows
    Surrey RCMP advises that multiple search warrants were executed in mid-April at properties alleged to be involved in the street level drug trade. 

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation
    Justice Gary Weatherill ruled Gerry Taft defamed Devin Kazakoff when he called him a convicted felon who had extreme positions on animal rights issues on a website based in Cranbrook, B.C.

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation