Parliament Launches into a Busy Spring
April 18, 2007
The House of Commons has launched into what is certain
to be a very busy couple of months. Hopefully, if the
opposition parties are cooperative and put the best interests
of Canadians first, it will also be a productive Spring
session.
We got off to a quick start this week by passing back-to-work
legislation pertaining to the labour dispute between CN
Rail and the United Transportation Union (UTU). No one
is ever eager to consider back-to-work legislation, yet
a disruption in rail service threatens widespread damage
to our nation’s economic well-being.
In the case of CN Rail, a strike doesn’t affect
only that company or its’ employees, but literally
tens of thousands of workers at mills, mines, grain elevators,
manufacturing and processing plants, transport facilities,
agricultural operations … the list of those Canadian
workers affected is endless.
As I stated in the House of Commons during debate on
this legislation, it was alarming how many workers and
their families here in Prince George-Peace River were
held captive by the first CN disruption in February.
A local mine nearly shut down. Mills, many also on the
verge of shutting down, curtailed their operations. With
no propane shipments by rail, the ability of residents
to heat their homes was even jeopardized. In the agriculture
industry, a shortage of rail cars due to the CN disruption
was actually felt a couple of weeks afterwards.
The local, regional and national economies were again
spiralling into peril just days into this current CN labour
dispute, which began on April 10th after UTU members rejected
a tentative agreement with CN.
I continue to hold concerns about the safety of CN workers
and about some of CN Rail’s business practises.
However, I am equally concerned about the welfare of thousands
of workers in this riding whose jobs are seriously threatened
by a rail disruption and with it their ability to pay
the bills and put food on their families’ tables.
One other item of business our Conservative Government
has completed this Spring is our proposal to extend for
another year the firearms amnesty we instituted. The amnesty
would give previously-licensed owners of non-restricted
firearms until May 16, 2008 to register their guns or
renew their licenses without threat of criminal prosecution.
The fee to renew a firearms license continues to be waived
until May 17, 2008.
Our legislation to scrap the long-gun registry remains
before the House with all three opposition parties vowing
to unite to defeat it as soon as they are given the opportunity.
Another major item on the agenda in the upcoming weeks
is our Government’s new legislation on emissions.
You can guarantee this legislation will be attacked from
all sides in the environmental debate. From industry,
claiming the measures are too harsh, and from environmentalists,
suggesting they are not aggressive enough. However, I
always welcome a vigourous yet productive national debate.
The only other guarantee? This Spring in Canada’s
Parliament will be hectic, tumultuous, and controversial.
The Conservative Government is ready to weather the storm
and continue to govern.
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