Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

PM To Visit Northern B.C. As Cabinet Holds Retreat Amid Wildfire Crisis

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Aug, 2018 01:20 PM

    NANAIMO, B.C. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his newly shuffled cabinet gathered Tuesday for a retreat on Vancouver Island, under smoke-filled skies amid a province-wide wildfire emergency.

     

    Ministers are to discuss plans for the fall sitting of Parliament, including proposals to beef up measures aimed at protecting Canadian elections from foreign interference.

     

    But Trudeau's first order of business was to meet with British Columbia Premier John Horgan, who had toured one of the hardest hit areas in the northern part of the province earlier in the day with federal Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

     

    "I want to start by saying, obviously, our thoughts are with all the first responders, the firefighters and the residents who are struggling through the wildfires that are raging across the province," Trudeau said during a brief photo op at the start of his meeting with the premier.

     

    Trudeau is planning to take time out from the cabinet retreat on Thursday morning to personally meet with firefighters and evacuees in Prince George.

     

    "As a born and raised Vancouver Islander, I was racking my brain trying to think of the last time a federal cabinet would have come to hold a meeting here and I can't remember it ever happening," Horgan said.

     

    "So, it's a delight to have the prime minister and his team here."

     

    Horgan also praised the federal government's response to the wildfires. Seeing different levels of government working together on the crisis, "I think gives comfort to the public that federal, provincial, municipal, Indigenous leaders all coming together, speaking with one voice about the courage of our first responders and the tragedy that's hitting families and people throughout British Columbia."

     
     

    He noted that this is the second consecutive summer that B.C. has declared a state of emergency, an unprecedented situation that "speaks to the challenges of climate change, which again are values that we share" with the federal government.

     

    Multiple federal departments and agencies, from Environment Canada to the armed forces, are involved in helping B.C. cope with the crisis. And Trudeau has now created a special ad hoc committee of cabinet to ensure that all federal actors are pulling together in the same direction, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said.

     

    Trudeau said he and Horgan would also discuss how their two governments are working together on infrastructure projects, housing and protecting wild salmon, "something that is iconic and essential to B.C.'s culture and to B.C.'s economy."

     

    Neither he nor Horgan mentioned the one big issue on which their governments vehemently disagree — the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project to carry Alberta bitumen to tidewater in Burnaby, B.C.

     

    The Trudeau government has decided to purchase the pipeline from Kinder Morgan, which backed out last spring, citing continued uncertainty that the project would ever go ahead given the B.C. government's determination to use every avenue possible to stop it.

     

    Dominic LeBlanc, appointed last month to the newly created portfolio of intergovernmental affairs, said the two leaders briefly discussed the pipeline during their private meeting. But he said they concentrated on issues on which the two governments are in agreement.

     

    The pipeline dispute could still come up Wednesday, when Horgan is to attend part of the cabinet retreat.

     
     

    Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould, meanwhile, confirmed that cabinet will consider proposals to strengthen Bill C-76, omnibus legislation governing election rules that was introduced last spring. In particular, she said the government is contemplating ways to ensure foreign money is not involved in trying to influence how Canadians vote.

     

    "We have to look very carefully at C-76," Gould said in an interview.

     

    "We're certainly thinking about is C-76 robust enough to deal with the issues that are confronting us. I would say that in many ways it is but there are some things that have been pointed out, that's what we're looking at.

     

    During the retreat, ministers are to hear from a number of experts in cyberthreats to elections.

     

    Ahead of the retreat, Conservative MP Ed Fast issued a statement accusing the Trudeau cabinet of ignoring the most pressing issues facing the country, focusing instead on "how they can further manipulate election rules to benefit the Liberal Party of Canada in the next election."

     

    But Gould noted that the Conservatives themselves have criticized C-76 for failing to do enough to cut off the use of foreign money in elections.

     

    "In direct response to some of the things the Conservatives have been talking about with regards to foreign funding in elections, we're taking a closer look at that to see if there are indeed any loopholes and what we could do to close those," she said.

     

    Gould dismissed Fast's contention that the Liberals are trying to rig the rules in their favour for next year's election.

     

    "I think all that you can say is that protecting our democracy is a non-partisan issue and that we should all be focused on making sure that we're doing what we can to ensure the integrity of the process and the integrity of the outcome," she said.

     

    Goodale indicated the government may also beef up Bill C-71, which would tighten Canada's firearms law with more stringent background checks and new mandatory record-keeping practices for vendors.

     

    Toronto city council has passed a motion calling for a ban on handgun sales in the city and Montreal's council has passed a motion calling for a nationwide ban on the possession of handguns and assault weapons.

     

    "We will examine that proposition very carefully, both in terms of effectiveness and fairness," Goodale said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lions Bay Mayor Karl Buhr Apologizes For Sharing 'Urban Myth' About Teen Vape Death

    Lions Bay Mayor Karl Buhr Apologizes For Sharing 'Urban Myth' About Teen Vape Death
    LIONS BAY, B.C. — A politician in British Columbia is apologizing for spreading a false story about a teenage boy who supposedly died from a drug overdose.

    Lions Bay Mayor Karl Buhr Apologizes For Sharing 'Urban Myth' About Teen Vape Death

    One Dead, One Critical, Two Seriously Hurt In Feb. 3 Crash On B.C. Highway

    MERRITT, B.C. — RCMP in British Columbia's southern Interior are releasing more details about a fatal crash Saturday between a transport truck and a SUV on the Coquihalla Highway south of Merritt.

    One Dead, One Critical, Two Seriously Hurt In Feb. 3 Crash On B.C. Highway

    B.C. To Allow Marijuana Use In Public, But It Won't Be Sold In Liquor Stores

    B.C. To Allow Marijuana Use In Public, But It Won't Be Sold In Liquor Stores
    VICTORIA — Pot and liquor sales won't mix in British Columbia, but adults will be allowed to toke in some public spaces once marijuana is legalized later this year.

    B.C. To Allow Marijuana Use In Public, But It Won't Be Sold In Liquor Stores

    Devon Paul Charged In Last July’s Incident Of Forcible Confinement In Surrey

    Devon Paul Charged In Last July’s Incident Of Forcible Confinement In Surrey
    One man has now been charged after a July 2017 incident where he allegedly held a woman against her will and threatened her with a weapon in Newton.

    Devon Paul Charged In Last July’s Incident Of Forcible Confinement In Surrey

    Langley Woman Wakes To Find Man In Her Walnut Grove Home

    Langley Woman Wakes To Find Man In Her Walnut Grove Home
    Police responded to a break-in to a residence in the Walnut Grove area in the early morning hours of February 1st.

    Langley Woman Wakes To Find Man In Her Walnut Grove Home

    4 In 10 Young Canadians Have Sent A Sext, 6 In 10 Have Received One

    4 In 10 Young Canadians Have Sent A Sext, 6 In 10 Have Received One
    About four in 10 young Canadians have sent a sext and more than six in 10 have received one, suggests a new report, which also puts a spotlight on the unauthorized sharing of sexual photographs among teens.

    4 In 10 Young Canadians Have Sent A Sext, 6 In 10 Have Received One