Close X
Monday, February 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

New Democrat's Taxi-Driver Dad Should Prompt Committee Resignation, Say Liberals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Feb, 2019 08:57 PM

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's Opposition Liberals are calling for New Democrat Ravi Kahlon to resign from an all-party committee reviewing ride hailing for the province because his dad holds a taxi licence.

     

    Richmond Liberal Jas Johal said Wednesday the member from North Delta should quit the select standing committee on Crown corporations, which is currently holding meetings and accepting submissions from representatives from the taxi and ride-hailing industries.

     

    The committee is preparing a report that would examine and make recommendations on the implementation of ride hailing, and Johal said there's a perception of conflict of interest with Kahlon on the committee.

     
     

    "You are making recommendations to the minister that could directly impact taxi licences and the prices of those taxi licences, which would mean his father's taxi licence," Johal said. "I think that doesn't pass the smell test in regards to a conflict. He should recuse himself."

     

    The Liberals have not taken their concerns to B.C.'s conflict of interest commissioner, said Johal.

     
     

    Kahlon said his father, Navroop Singh Kahlon, has held a taxi licence in Victoria for almost 30 years, but that should not force him to quit the committee. He said his father is preparing to retire within the next two months.

     

    Kahlon said he did not tell Transportation Minister Claire Trevena his father was in the taxi business when he was appointed to the committee last year.

     

    Johal said he was not aware until recently that Kahlon had family ties to the taxi industry.

     

    Adam Olsen, the Green party's committee representative, also said he did not know Kahlon's father held a taxi licence.

     

    Kahlon said he has an open mind toward ride hailing.

     
     

    "I don't know what the rules will be in the end," he said. "Our committee is listening to all recommendations, in fact, we've been having good conversations in the committee. Again, at the end of the day, the decision is made by the minister and cabinet."

     

    Johal said ride hailing's introduction to B.C. is moving slowly as the government launches ongoing reviews despite overwhelming public support for the services such as Uber and Lyft.

     

    Trevena rejected Liberal suggestions that family ties could impact the review process, saying she makes final decisions not members of the committee.

     

    "The buck stops with me," she said in the legislature. "It does not stop with the committee members."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cop Who Arrested McArthur In 2016 Accused Of Breaching Police Policy: Lawyer

    Cop Who Arrested McArthur In 2016 Accused Of Breaching Police Policy: Lawyer
    Lawrence Gridin says it's also alleged Gauthier failed to take photos of the man's injuries within 72 hours

    Cop Who Arrested McArthur In 2016 Accused Of Breaching Police Policy: Lawyer

    Impact Of Ice Sheet Retreat On Canadian Weather Being Underestimated: Study

    Impact Of Ice Sheet Retreat On Canadian Weather Being Underestimated: Study
    Newly published research suggests the accelerating disappearance of ice caps in Greenland and Antarctica will have a major and underestimated effect on extreme weather in Canada.

    Impact Of Ice Sheet Retreat On Canadian Weather Being Underestimated: Study

    Smoke From Wildfire Is Like A 'Chemical Soup,' Says Fire Researcher

    Smoke From Wildfire Is Like A 'Chemical Soup,' Says Fire Researcher
    Inhaling smoke from a wildfire can be equal to smoking a couple of packs of cigarettes a day depending on its thickness, says a researcher studying wildfires in Western Canada.  

    Smoke From Wildfire Is Like A 'Chemical Soup,' Says Fire Researcher

    New Video Shows Late Activist Pleading For Change To Assisted Dying Rules

    Audrey Parker died with medical assistance on Nov. 1, two years after she had been diagnosed with terminal breast cancer.

    New Video Shows Late Activist Pleading For Change To Assisted Dying Rules

    Federal Bill Would Make Sept. 30 Holiday For Indigenous Reconciliation

    OTTAWA — Sept. 30 might become a new statutory holiday commemorating victims of residential schools.

    Federal Bill Would Make Sept. 30 Holiday For Indigenous Reconciliation

    Girl In Quebec Elementary School Stabbed By Boy

    Girl In Quebec Elementary School Stabbed By Boy
    ALMA, Que. — Provincial police say a girl in a Quebec elementary school was stabbed Tuesday afternoon during a dispute with a schoolmate.

    Girl In Quebec Elementary School Stabbed By Boy