April 26, 2018
HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY PROCEEDINGS
Vol. XLVIII No. 13
The
House met at 1:30 p.m.
MR. SPEAKER (Trimper):
Order, please!
Admit
strangers.
Statements by
Members
MR. SPEAKER:
Today we will hear statements
by the hon. Members for the Districts of St. John's Centre, Baie Verte - Green
Bay, Windsor Lake, Placentia - West Bellevue and Fogo Island - Cape Freels.
The hon.
the Member for St. John's Centre.
MS. ROGERS:
Mr. Speaker, last weekend
Government House was reclaimed by 27 First Peoples, indigenous artists from
around the province. Reclamation, curated by Mi'kmaq artist Jerry Evans, as part
of Eastern Edge's 15-day Identify: A Celebration of Indigenous Arts and Culture,
the exhibit was so well attended that the organized tours had to be abandoned so
the community could all squeeze in.
The
pieces, gathered from public and private art collections, were made from every
imaginable medium – Labradorite, caribou tufting, soapstone, bone, lithograph,
digital photo manipulation, mixed-media beach glass, antler, acrylic on canvas,
organic dye, beadwork, sterling silver, split spruce root, walnut and sweet
grass.
Jerry
point out, “there is so much more art and so many more artists who could/should
have been included!”
Jerry
Evans has spent his life creating art for and about his community. Curating this
extraordinary collection has been a gift to us all and I know that there is more
to come.
Wela'lin! Nakkumek! Tshinashkumitin!
Bravo,
Jerry Evans.
Thank
you.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Member for the
District of Baie Verte - Green Bay.
MR. WARR:
Mr. Speaker, I rise to
acknowledge the late Pearl Bailey, a well-known, respected businesswoman who
passed suddenly. Pearl was one of the founding business owners within of the
Town of Baie Verte and a faithful long-standing member of Trinity Pentecostal
Church.
Pearl
would tell you that her greatest accomplishment is her family. Instilling the
importance of a rich Christian heritage, she lived a life of integrity, honesty
and respect, and did so with grace and dignity.
Never
viewing other business owners as competitors but genuinely wanting everyone to
succeed, she stood shoulder to shoulder with the business community, especially
during the leaner times when two mines had closed on the eve of the cod
moratorium. Always believing Baie Verte would once again succeed, she proved it
by continuing to operate the family business.
Pearl
Bailey has left an incredible legacy to her family but also to the entire Baie
Verte Peninsula, and had a positive influence on the many lives she touched.
Baie Verte is blessed to have had an iconic businesswoman who graciously gifted
everyone with loyal friendship, rich humour and unending support.
I ask
all hon. Members to join me in offering condolences to the Bailey family and to
the community of Baie Verte.
Thank
you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Member for the
District of Windsor Lake.
MS. C BENNETT:
Mr. Speaker, this morning I had the pleasure of joining students, staff, guests
and volunteers for Mental Health Day at Holy Heart of Mary for their Minds @
Heart Conference. The day included an opening session for 500 of the school's
students, a lunchtime bbq with a special visit from some amazing therapy dogs,
as well as numerous breakout sessions that students participating in throughout
the day.
Classrooms were taken over by students and speakers to discuss issues relevant
to mental health. And over 50 per cent of the students chose to participate in
this year's event. A wide variety of topics was covered including drug use,
cyber-bullying and stress, just to name a few.
It was a
privilege to see so many young people, led by compassionate educators, dedicate
their time to learning, sharing and experiencing, all in the pursuit of
understanding and building resilience.
A
special thanks to Ms. Parsons for the invitation to attend. As a former alumnus
of Holy Heart, it was a pleasure to participate in the conference.
Thank you to all involved. You are setting an example for
our entire community and the province that mental health matters.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER: The
hon. the Member for the District of Placentia West - Bellevue.
MR. BROWNE: Mr.
Speaker, I rise today to recognize the many volunteers in my District of
Placentia West - Bellevue.
Last week, I had the privilege to attend the Sunnyside
Volunteer Appreciation Night. The event was organized by the town and showcased
not only the council's but the citizen's gratitude to the volunteers of the
community for the countless hours they put in to making Sunnyside a great and a
sunny place to live.
At this event, former Mayor Robert Snook was honoured for
his recent retirement after 16 years in municipal service. I wish him and his
wife the very best in their retirement.
Similar events were held in the many communities of
Placentia West - Bellevue, from Marystown to Long Harbour-Mount Arlington
Heights, recognizing the remarkable contributions volunteers make in our
communities. Mr. Speaker, my hat goes off to each and every one of them.
Mr. Speaker, I ask all hon. Members of this House to join
with me in recognizing and celebrating the volunteers of Newfoundland and
Labrador – the beating heart of each and every community.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER: The
hon. the Member for the District of Fogo Island - Cape Freels.
MR. BRAGG: Mr.
Speaker, on March 6, my hometown of Greenspond lost one of its most respected
gentlemen. Wilfred Carter had a smile for everyone and a story for every day.
Wilfred was good with his hands. For anyone familiar with
the show MacGyver, Wilfred was
MacGyver. Hollywood must have gotten their ideas from him. One time Wilfred made
a hacksaw handle out of an old toilet seat, and his prized three-horsepower
outboard had many ingenious parts to keep him going.
After the Causeway was built, he had no car or truck, so
Wilfred would often be seen walking with his axe and bucksaw, pushing his
homemade wood cart. Later that day, I remember him with his perfectly balanced
load crossing the drawbridge to his home.
His wood piles were legendary, the topic of everyone who
saw them. No level or square could have piled them so neatly. “Shucks” was his
favourite word and anything from Dixie Chicks were his favourite tunes.
He was a man among men and respected by all. Ship's Island
might never be the same, because his tradition of lowering the flag every day is
now gone.
Good bye, Wilfred; you will be missed.
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
Statements by Ministers.
Statements by Ministers
MR. SPEAKER: The
hon. the Minister of Health and Community Services.
MR. HAGGIE: I
rise today to remind residents throughout Newfoundland and Labrador that
Dial-a-Dietitian is a new service now available through the provincial
HealthLine.
Mr.
Speaker, the purpose is to encourage people to make healthier, more informed
food choices and to receive helpful information or tips on nutrition.
A
referral from a health care provider is not needed. Call 811 to speak to a
registered dietitian. They are available Monday to Friday. Questions can also be
sent using the Dial-a-Dietitian link on the
www.yourhealthline.ca website.
Expansion of the provincial HealthLine to include registered dietitian services
is an initiative under the provincial government's Chronic Disease Action Plan.
This plan contains a series of concrete initiatives focused on prevention,
self-management, treatment and care. It addresses key priorities outlined in
The Way Forward to increase awareness
and engage individuals to take action for healthy living.
Our
government recognizes that healthy eating is the cornerstone of good health.
Healthy living actions and targets, including healthy eating, have been
identified in The Way Forward. Proper
nutrition at any age can be life-changing. As Hippocrates said, “let thy food be
thy medicine.” Food can be the cause of, and remedy for, many health issues.
I
encourage everyone to use this service and reach out if you need advice. It's
now just a phone call or an email away.
Thank
you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Member for the
District of Conception Bay East - Bell Island.
MR. BRAZIL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I thank
the minister for the advance copy of his statement. Mr. Speaker, from a young
age we were all taught the old adage, that an apple a day keeps the doctor away.
While not exactly based on scientific evidence, this was our parents and
guardians' way of teaching us that healthy eating is a critical part to one's
overall health promotion and well-being.
I'm
pleased to see that the Dial-a-Dietitian is now available through the provincial
HealthLine by dialing 811 or going on the HealthLine's website. Because we live
in an age where there is so much information available, some of which isn't
accurate, it is comforting to know that the residents have an accessibility of
experts and sources in which they can direct their questions, whether it is
questions about calories, the balance of nutrition or food quality.
I
encourage all residents to use this free service to promote their own health and
well-being.
Thank
you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Third Party.
MS. ROGERS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I thank
the minister. This is a good step, but for most people the road to healthier
eating takes more than a phone call.
Many in
this province with chronic diseases such as diabetes cannot afford the healthy,
nutritious food needed to preserve their health. I hear it from my constituents
all the time, particularly those in receipt of Income Support and seniors on OAS
and GIS. Without solving this very serious, poverty problem this is meaningless
for many people in our province. Government must address the issues of poverty
and the need for nutritious food.
Thank
you very much, Mr. Speaker.
MR. SPEAKER:
Further statements by
ministers?
Oral
questions.
Oral Questions
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
On
Tuesday I asked the Premier, on Wednesday I asked the Premier again, and today I
ask the Premier again: If he stands by his comments that no one in his office,
or himself, were made aware of any complaints of harassment regarding any
minister in his government?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I've
answered those questions on both those days. Yes, I received a complaint
yesterday morning around 8:30 and we've made that publicly known. I immediately
– we met with caucus. We met with the media. Mr. Speaker, we disclosed that a
complaint came forward yesterday morning. And yes, that's when it was, yesterday
morning for the first time.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
I ask the Premier, if he can
outline exactly what the Member for Bay of Islands, or the Minister of Municipal
Affairs, is stepping aside from. What does that mean?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, we've asked many questions inside of this House of Assembly on this
particular issue. I made a decision, and working with the parties that were
involved, this would be with a review that we would begin with the comfort level
that would be required by the complainant. At this particular time, while a
review was completed, that the Member for Bay of Islands would step aside from
his ministerial roles.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Premier, just to be clear, the Member for Bay of Islands, the Minister of
Municipal Affairs, who has now stepped aside from that role, he is stepping
aside strictly as minister. He's still a full Member of caucus. Is that correct,
Premier?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, I think when you look at issues that we're dealing with and the
sensitivities, the number of people that would be impacted, we must let due
diligence – we must make allowance for a process that is detailed and thorough
as need be.
Mr.
Speaker, these issues, as I've said so many times, they are serious, serious
issues. Our objective is to make sure that the workplace for all of us that work
here on a daily basis is one that is a safe place to live.
The
decision was made to ask the minister to step out of his ministerial role. He
remains a Member of caucus, Mr. Speaker, but I think, first and foremost, it's
important that we allow this process to unfold and allow a thorough review to be
completed.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Just to
be clear, Premier, you got a complaint from a Member of your caucus regarding a
Member of your caucus, and you're allowing the Member who the complaints are
against to remain in caucus when potentially there could be other complainants,
as has been talked about in the House, and I'll refer to as we get through
Question Period.
So
you're allowing the person who the complaints are about to remain in caucus,
probably have an office on the fifth floor with other caucus Members.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
MR. P. DAVIS:
Is that the decision you've
made, Premier?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, based on the
information that has come forward to me, what I know at this particular point in
time is how we make decisions. At this particular point in time, with the
information that I have is when I make the decision on how that should all
unfold. We've made a decision that the minister would step out of the
ministerial roles. We've done that. Mr. Speaker, that is based on the
information we had. That's based on the information that we had when the
decision was made this morning.
This is
where we are, and as this whole process unfolds, I think it's important for all
of us to respect privacy, respect confidentiality, Mr. Speaker, and we will do
the necessary work that we need, that we all need to get us in a better place.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I'd
suggest to the Premier, a better place would be a safe and caring environment
where persons who may have a complaint or a concern or an issue to raise, can do
so without fear of further intimidation, harassment, by just the very person
being present in the same area, in the same caucus room, in the same offices. It
makes no sense, Mr. Speaker, that the Premier would leave the person who the
allegations are against in the same environment amongst the same people who may
be bringing further complaints for it.
AN HON. MEMBER:
(Inaudible.)
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
MR. P. DAVIS:
I know the Minister of
Education wants to speak here, but my question is for Premier: Do you think
that's appropriate to leave the person who the complaints are about right in the
same environment with people who have been expressing concerns for months?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, I understand the
concerns of the Member opposite, but what I find bewildering in all of this is
the fact that this is a Member who is making comments on the floor of this House
of Assembly today based on information that he's had. I've invited every Member
to come forward; telling every single Member in this House that if there's
information you have, bring it forward to me.
The
Member opposite stands here in Question Period day after day – which he has
every right to do, he has every right to do, Mr. Speaker, yet he has never once
reached out to have a discussion on this. I have information that has come to
me. I've met with many people over the last day or two. The complaint was made
to me yesterday. We've made a decision based on the information that we've had
to make sure that we put in place a good, thorough review on the issues that
have been brought forward to me.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
My
question was about leaving a person who's made a complaint, potentially other
people who may want to make a complaint – because there have been discussions.
He knows now, there have been issues for months about this particular minister,
maybe others, but certainly about this particular minister. And he's leaving
that particular minister in the Environment, having the ability to look and see
and be in the same room where the actual allegations – he said himself, they're
not sexual or physical; you've said that, so they must be intimidation and
harassment. And he's leaving the person there.
Now, Mr.
Speaker, just a few minutes ago, the very Member who the allegations are made
against, according to what I'm reading through CBC and on social media, has
identified people who are making complaints publicly.
And
you're okay with that, Premier?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, there's a lot of
information that comes forward. I made a decision to ask the minister to step
aside; that's been obvious. We did that earlier this morning. Right now, Mr.
Speaker, we deal with this as the information comes forward.
What we
know, Mr. Speaker, about all of this is making sure that the person will bring
the complaints forward – respecting privacy and confidentiality, Mr. Speaker, is
important for all of this. We've already said that. But, likewise, I think it's
important for all of us. We have a responsibility. If you have information, if
you have information on anyone where there's an allegation where there could be
someone that has been harassed, it's a responsibility on all of us to bring that
information forward.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Well,
I'll bring some information forward right now for the Premier.
Just a
few minutes ago, according to Twitter, the Minister of Municipal –
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Oh, oh!
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
MR. P. DAVIS:
– according to media reports
on Twitter, yes. The media reporting on Twitter, that the Minister of Municipal
Affairs, the Member for the Bay of Islands, who's sitting right here in this
House right now, named a person who's expressed concerns about him, publicly. He
publicly named a Member of this House of Assembly who has previously expressed
concerns about his conduct and his behaviour.
Premier,
what are you going to do about that?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, just like I've
done over the last 24 hours, I will make a decision.
The
Member asking the question just said nothing. The Member opposite just said
nothing, when I talked about this. This is the very person that sat on
information for over two weeks, and did not bring it forward, Mr. Speaker. It's
ridiculous. We have responded in the last 24 hours and the Member opposite who
had information says nothing?
That is
a shameful comment. Based on the decision that we've made and the work that
we've put into this, Mr. Speaker, engaging the person that brought the complaint
forward to me in a very respectful manner, we're putting in place a process to
make sure that this process comes out of this with the type of new workplace
that we rightfully deserve. When Members opposite make comments about doing
nothing in the last 24 hours, I would compare what I've done in 24 hours to what
his has done in the last two weeks.
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
I remind all Members, I will
not tolerate interruptions today – final warning.
The hon.
the Leader of the Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I
apologize for interrupting the Premier because I really try not to do that and
this is a serious matter; I'm not going to do it now.
MR. SPEAKER:
Thank you.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Mr. Speaker, the Premier says
that he's entered in a process. I told him yesterday and I said yesterday he
should remove the person. Well now, after the person has been named, he's taken
that action.
He
issued a statement talking about a process that the complainant and the minister
have agreed to. The minister has given him permission, he says. He says the
minister has agreed to step aside, he said. That's what he said. That's what he
has done. He's allowed the minister, if he wanted to, to do certain things, Mr.
Speaker.
Mr.
Speaker, they entered into an agreement between the complainant and the minister
and the Premier himself just talked about confidentiality. Your minister just
named a person with concerns about him publicly.
My
question, Premier, is: What are you going to do about it? That's terrible, Mr.
Speaker, absolutely terrible, unacceptable.
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
The hon.
the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
First of all, Mr. Speaker,
the permission was to use his name, the name of the minister, trying to make
sure that this whole process that we're dealing with, people would respect
privacy. So the permission was to release the name of the minister. We had to do
that as part of this process.
Secondly, Mr. Speaker, this is brand, new information – brand, new information –
that is just coming forward. Just like we made decisions based on the
information that we had this morning, we will make decisions based on the
information that comes forward as just a few minutes ago, as the Member
opposite.
We make
decisions based on the facts and the information as it comes forward, Mr.
Speaker. We're just not going to stand here on the fly. We need to find out what
happened; that's when those decisions will be made.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
The
priority of this government should have been to ensure a safe, secure
environment without threat of reprisals against anyone who has a complaint, a
concern or an issue, especially involving coming to harassment or intimidation
or bullying by a minister.
Now we
have, what I understand, is the minister has now – it's been alleged publicly
here – named two different complainants who have raised concerns about his
conduct, that he's publicly named and he's called out and publicly made known
two names, Mr. Speaker.
Premier,
you have a significant issue here unfolding rapidly. Please be a leader; remove
this person from his position in caucus, remove him as a minister, and do the
right thing, Premier.
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
The hon.
the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, I've been a leader.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
PREMIER BALL:
I have responded as information came to me. We proactively – we dealt with it in
the last 24 hours, Mr. Speaker. We have dealt with all the issues that have come
forward. When the information came to me, we started to work on establishing a
process. That's what leadership does. Leadership doesn't sit on information for
over two weeks and not bring that forward.
Mr.
Speaker, I would argue, too, that the Member opposite said that it's the role of
government to make sure that this is a safe workplace. Well, Mr. Speaker, I
would argue that this is the role of everyone in this House of Assembly to make
sure that this is safe workplace.
We will
make decisions based on the information that we have.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Mr. Speaker, I'm shocked.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. Member for Bonavista
need not rise in his chair again today because I will not recognize him.
Thank
you.
Please
proceed.
The hon.
the Leader of the Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I'm
absolutely shocked. The Member who allegations have been made against has
publicly told the media the name and identified the person who raised concerns
about his conduct in the past – totally unacceptable, Mr. Speaker.
Can the
Premier explain to me how that is conducive to an environment where people can
safely disclose issues and concerns in the workplace about one of his ministers?
Can the Premier please explain that to the people, how that's conducive to a
safe environment where people can raise concerns about his minister?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I think
all of us should take the necessary time to review the information as it
unfolds. This is brand, new information, Mr. Speaker. It is brand, new
information. We raise it here. We're taking the situation very seriously. We
will not sit on information; we will speak to all those who are involved and
make decisions based on the facts and the information as it comes forward.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Well, Mr. Speaker, here's the
information: For months, there have been complaints. He says he didn't know
about it. He says no one in his office knew about it. Even though, according to
CBC and Fred Hutton on CBC, his office knew about it. On two different
occasions, his office was made aware of it.
Are you
telling me, Premier, that is inaccurate reporting? Has CBC got it wrong?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
What I
said was this allegation or this complaint was brought to me yesterday, and
that's when it was brought to me, yesterday. These are the facts. I think the
Member opposite should maybe even look at social media and look at the reports
and look at where we are.
Mr.
Speaker, I think it's appropriate that everyone in this House of Assembly, all
leaders in this House of Assembly, would respect the sensitivities of what we're
dealing with here today. Let's not try and score political points out of this.
Let us deal with the situation and the sensitivities as it unfolds.
I would
invite the Member opposite, if he has information, please reach out.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I can
tell the Premier, the letter is being drafted as we speak and he should get that
sometime today.
Even
over the last couple of days, Mr. Speaker – so here we are today, we find out
now that the Minister of Municipal Affairs has publicly named the person who's
raised concerns about him. The understanding is, through social media, that he's
done it twice. One of his own Members has said that he's named her publicly as
well.
Yesterday, we had a circumstance where we found out that caucus Members were
being asked to pass over their cellphones in order to determine who leaked the
information. We now have a minister who won't be removed from caucus, even
though he's acting inappropriately.
I ask
the Premier: Why don't you focus on ensuring that complainants can come forward
without reprisal, instead of focusing on trying to find out who's responsible
for the leak (inaudible)?
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
The hon.
the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
What the
Member opposite is suggesting is that we should not take some time to review the
information as it unfolds. The Member opposite is saying that we should not make
an allowance for proper reviews to be done.
I would
suggest, in how I have responded to the information that has been brought
forward to me and comparing that to the information that the Leader of the
Opposition, who is now asking those questions, if you compare the two, just
compare the two, he's now writing a letter, and this is now day three since he's
been raising those issues. He openly said earlier this week that he's had it for
two weeks.
Mr.
Speaker, we have acted promptly and we will make sure that the confidentiality
is kept intact, and if people are comfortable in the process once it gets
finalized.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
The hon.
the Leader of the Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Some confidentiality, Mr.
Speaker, when the complainant is going to release the name publicly who is
making the complaint. Some confidentiality that is. That's some level of privacy
there. What a level of confidence and safety and security in an environment that
you can come forward and be rest assured, we're going to protect you and look
after you. That's a real good, confidential safe place, I say to the Premier.
One of
his own Members, according to CBC, said MHAs describe caucus meetings as a joke
and said people won't speak out because they're afraid of what will happen to
them. Well here's another example of it Premier, of what people are afraid of.
I want
to ask you Premier: How far reaching are these concerns and fears? Does it go
beyond the walls of your own caucus?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, as I said so
many times, the information that comes to me, the information that I get, we
make decisions based on the information that I have.
What the
Member is asking about is what would occur in his own caucus meetings. Mr.
Speaker, that happens. In our caucus meetings we have lots of conversations. We
openly encourage people to come forward on issues that affect them and the
people they represent. That's the way it works, Mr. Speaker.
We allow
for that process to unfold. These are caucus meetings, Mr. Speaker, and people
are openly free to discuss issues that they feel is important to them. I
encourage that. I encourage them to do so, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
The Premier said he didn't
know and the Premier said that his staff didn't know. Now we know that's not
true, Mr. Speaker. Based on information that has come forward, we know they knew
beforehand.
I ask
the Premier: Has he learned more information from his staff since this
discussion began on Tuesday?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Mr. Speaker, as I've said,
the complaint was brought to my attention yesterday morning. I've spoken with
staff. Mr. Speaker, no one is aware of any information that would have come
forward based on anything that should occur, based on harassment and those sorts
of things.
The
first time I was made aware of this was yesterday morning, and we started acting
on that immediately, Mr. Speaker. I would ask the Member opposite one more time,
if he has information come forward with it, have the discussion. We need to
ensure that all Members, staff included, can work in a safe workplace.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
It is
reported by CBC, there were similar complaints regarding the Minister of
Municipal Affairs brought to the attention of the Premier's own senior advisor,
as well as the Minister of Justice and Public Safety who sits directly next to
the Premier here in the House.
I ask
the Premier: How is it that after two days, three days now we're in here asking
questions about this, that the minister just didn't whisper in your ear and say,
by the way, I do know of a matter? How come you haven't been made aware of that
before now?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Minister of
Justice and Public Safety.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I will
certainly speak to this, given that my name has been brought up.
I was
asked by the media about an email that was leaked to them by a person that made
a complaint to me. The email didn't come from me, so it obviously came from the
person that sent the email. I don't want to get into a situation here where we
discuss this on the floor of the House, because it would defeat the whole
purpose of the conversation that we're having here today.
What I
can say is there was no talk about harassment, specifically in that letter. In
fact, the person that wrote the letter thanked me for the discussion that we
had, thanked me for my time and attention and said they would keep me posted on
how things turned out.
If
there's an issue, I would suggest the same thing that we're all saying here,
bring forward a complaint and let's do it independently with proper people
rather than on the floor of the House of Assembly.
Thank
you.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
In an
email that was sent to the minister in October of 2017, the MHA said he's
trusting that he will ensure that all Members of the Crown treat all MHAs with
decency and respect as per the Code of Conduct.
What did
you do about that, Minister?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Again, the Leader of the
Opposition wants me to not talk about privacy and not out complainants, but
wants to know specifics about it, which it's hard for me to do without talking
about the complainant. I don't want to engage in that.
What I
can say from the conversation that was had, there was no talk – it was talk
about a certain issue. Again, I find myself in a conundrum, Mr. Speaker. I don't
want to out somebody, but I received an email. I was told not to do anything in
the email, that I would be kept posted on this. I'd love to read the email here.
I can say that in this case there was no direction provided to do anything
further, but I would be happy to comply with any request to do an investigation
to ensure that everyone's safety was met here.
Again,
if the Member wants to keep doing this on the floor of the House, I don't know
what to do here.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I'll
simplify it for the minister then. Why didn't you lean over, Minister, and
whisper in the ear of the Premier and tell him you're aware of concerns from
some months ago?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Well, Mr. Speaker, I actually
told the Member that they should talk to the Leader of their party or to other
individuals if they have an issue. I also said you may want to reach out to
other people.
But I
remind the Member, I'm not going to engage in a political process here; if
there's a significant issue here, I would be open to, again, releasing this
email with the consent of the complainant, or without the consent, engaging in
any process to ensure that nothing was done wrong here.
I
certainly was not accused of any wrongdoing. I tried to provide advice in that
meeting, because at the end of the day, we are all 40 people that are elected
here to represent people. Again, I would always have a conversation with anyone
that wants to talk.
Thank
you.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I ask
the minister: Did he respond to the email in October of last year?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
The second line of the email
– and again, the Member opposite talks about privacy, and security, and
protecting complainants, yet wants to talk about this situation on the floor, in
the public, in the gallery.
I will
say, if we want to talk about the email – and again, I'm in a difficult spot. I
will release the email, I have no problem but I don't want to do so without the
consent of the complainant, who I do not want to identify and perpetuate the
situation that we're facing.
But I
will say that the complainant in this case – and it wasn't a complainant, it was
Member emailing another said I'll keep you posted and let you know if you need
to do anything else.
Thank
you.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I ask
the Premier if he's spoken to his senior advisor to confirm that information
regarding concerns about the conduct of the Minister of Municipal Affairs was
brought to his attention.
Did he
speak to the senior advisor yet, and did the senior advisor confirm he's
received such information and concerns in the past?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Yes, I
did, I spoke with my executive assistant on this issue. And we went through the
information that was provided, Mr. Speaker. But likewise, no different than
where we are, with the consent of the individuals, we are more than willing to
have a public discussion on this if this is where the Leader of the Opposition
wants to go with this. First of all I think before we have this open discussion,
this public discussion, we would need the consent in respect to the privacy and
the confidentiality of those involved.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Third Party.
MS. ROGERS:
Mr. Speaker, as a woman and
as an elected Member of the House, I am appalled at the behaviour of the Member
for Humber - Bay of Islands to publicly name those who have complained of
harassment by him, further victimizing them. This vengeful tactic is not at all
acceptable, and I am furious at this Member for Humber - Bay of Islands and his
total disrespect for this House, for our MHAs and for the people of the
province.
I ask
the Premier what is he going to do about it immediately while this Member is
sitting in the House.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Well
first of all, I want to put in context of the time frame that we're talking
about. The information that the Member opposite is discussing and talking about
today is information that has actually come forward since we've been on the
floor of the House of Assembly. I think the Member would acknowledge that.
What I
will do is when this Question Period is finished, when the day's deliberations
are finished, we'll look at this information, take a look at it and, Mr.
Speaker, we will make decisions based on the information that we have.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Third Party.
MS. ROGERS:
Mr. Speaker, this recent
harassment incident is a clear illustration of the urgent need to reform the way
this House of Assembly operates. We are a province of only 520,000 people with
serious challenges facing us. The people of the province want us to work
together. They continue to tell us that.
In their
2015 election platform, government promised an all-party committee on democratic
reform. The Minister of Justice said this committee will be created this spring,
at the latest.
I ask
the Premier: When will he strike his promised all-party committee on democratic
reform?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I'm
happy to stand up here and speak to this issue. One thing I would point out is
that certainly there was a mandate to bring in an all-party committee on
democratic reform. There has been work done on that, but what I would point out
in the meantime is that committee was talked about two years ago. We're talking
about a different issue here, the context.
We have
Standing Orders Committee meetings regularly, Management Commission meetings
regularly and there's always an opportunity to discuss any issue the affects
this House, its Members or the conduct. There are processes and procedures to
deal with that now. In fact, many were laid out in the Green report of 2007.
If there
are concerns, we should discuss them now.
Thank
you.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Third Party.
MS. ROGERS:
Mr. Speaker, we have heard
nothing of the minister's all-party committee on democratic reform and
democratic reform is more than simply changing campaign financing rules. It's
about doing politics differently and better.
I ask
the Premier: Will he ensure that the terms of reference for his all-party
committee will include a review of and changing the culture of the way we do
politics to ensure a more collaborative, respectful and constructive way of
working together for the benefit of the people?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Again, I
think we've shown that we're open to changing how we do business in this House.
We've made more changes to the Standing Orders in this House in the last two
years than in the two decades before. I don't think I've ever turned down a
meeting to discuss any issue that pertains to this House.
There
have been times when Members have tried to do things differently. The Minister
of Finance offered an invitation for Members opposite to sit down and discuss
the budget, and the Members opposite turned him down and didn't want to be a
part of that.
So what
I would say is if we're going to talk about truly working together, we all have
to mean it.
Thank
you, Mr. Speaker.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Member for the
District of St. John's East - Quidi Vidi.
MS. MICHAEL:
Thank you very much, Mr.
Speaker.
I have
to say to the minister that we're still waiting for the appointment that the
Premier promised us. We've been weeks now waiting for that, but what I want to
say now, based on everything that has happened here in the last 40 minutes or so
I'm asking the Premier: What is he going to do to help the women in this House
sitting here feel safe in our workplace right now at this moment?
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Premier.
PREMIER BALL:
First of all, Mr. Speaker,
the statement that led off to this question, we do take this very seriously. I
want to acknowledge and at least the Member opposite should acknowledge the fact
when you make those comments, you must understand that we've reached out to your
office on multiple times. As a matter of fact –
AN HON. MEMBER:
(Inaudible.)
PREMIER BALL:
Well, we have, Mr. Speaker. I
don't want to get into a debate, but we have reached out to your office and we
are now waiting.
Mr.
Speaker, this is about tariffs. I offered the meeting and we've reached out to
their office on a couple of occasions, waiting for a response. We are more than
willing to sit down. She's shaking her head, Mr. Speaker, but I will guarantee
you we have reached out to your office and we will get the dates for the Member
opposite.
Mr.
Speaker, when we look at and the Member opposite makes mention of the safety of
women in this House of Assembly, I will guarantee you this is something that we
take and we will make sure that the workplace environment in this House is a
safe place for all, all our female MHAs.
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Hear, hear!
MR. SPEAKER:
The time for Oral Questions
has ended.
Presenting Reports by Standing –
The hon.
the Leader of the Third Party.
MS. ROGERS:
Mr. Speaker, given what has
transpired here in the last 40 minutes, particularly on the basis of the
vengeful tactics of the minister from Humber - Bay of Islands, I ask for a
recess for this issue to be resolved in terms of where we are right now in the
House, before any further House business.
MR. SPEAKER:
I feel the only way I could
grant such is if I had leave from all Members.
The hon.
the Government House Leader, I recognize first.
MR. A. PARSONS:
I will defer to the Leader of
the Opposition.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Mr. Speaker, I support the
request by the Member. Since we sat here today, there's been information in the
news breaking that's relevant to this very serious matter while we're all
sitting here in the House, including the Members that are subject to the
discussion here today.
There's
a lot of uneasiness in the benches here in the House right now and I think it
would be appropriate if the government would agree to a short recess so we can
take some time to sort out exactly what's taken place since the House sat and an
appropriate way to respond to that.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
Again,
not having seen the stuff that Members have mentioned here, we're going on
basically Twitter accounts and media online. I have not seen that.
What I
would suggest is there's a possibility here that leaders of the party have every
right to get together outside of this House if they wish to have a conversation
and make sure they chat about this important issue, but we also have work that
needs to continue. I don't think – both cannot happen at same time. So certainly
I have no issue making sure we continue on with debate and that we can discuss
this, but what we won't have is – I think there's an expectation that there will
be an immediate decision made by a Premier and by a team on information for
which has not fully been received.
What I
would suggest is the Premier has shown by his actions that as he gets
information that he is willing to take it and act immediately. We've seen that.
I have no doubt that our Premier, based on questions that have been asked here
in the House and information that becomes publicly available, will act on the
information that comes to him and he will be able to do so even with this House
still proceeding.
So I
would insist that we continue on, but I still think there's a procedure by which
party Members and leaders can have this important conversation.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Leader of the
Official Opposition.
MR. P. DAVIS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I
appreciate the comments from colleagues in the House; however, I think it's
important to reflect on the fact that this is a matter involving allegations of
intimidation, of pressure, harassment and so on, when all of the parties on both
sides are right here in this House of Assembly right now. I think the priority
is to take a breath for a few minutes, for everyone to consider what the
circumstances and the facts are now, so that you, Mr. Speaker, can ensure we
have a respectful workplace and a respectful environment existing and continuing
to exist right here in this House of Assembly this afternoon.
I think
it would be prudent to take a recess for a few minutes. We're certainly not
going to object to it. We certainly support it. It would give us as a caucus as
well, Mr. Speaker, a few minutes to meet and to discuss the most recent
information and then we can formulate what we also think is an appropriate way
forward. And then maybe if we wanted to talk to other Members, which sometimes
happens outside the House –
MR. SPEAKER:
Order, please!
MR. P. DAVIS:
– that can happen as well.
MR. SPEAKER:
The hon. the Government House
Leader for final comment.
MR. A. PARSONS:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I would
move, seconded by the Premier, that the House do now adjourn.
MR. SPEAKER:
It has been moved and
seconded this House do now adjourn.
All
those in favour, 'aye.'
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Aye.
MR. SPEAKER:
All those against, 'nay.'
SOME HON. MEMBERS:
Nay.
MR. SPEAKER:
This House stands adjourned
until –
MR. P. DAVIS:
Division, Mr. Speaker.
MR. SPEAKER:
Division has been called.
Government House Leaders and Whips, please call in your Members, if they're not
here.
Division
MR. SPEAKER:
I would ask all Members who
are in favour of the motion to adjourn, to please rise.
CLERK (Barnes):
Mr. Ball, Mr. Andrew Parsons, Ms. Coady, Mr. Haggie, Ms. Dempster, Mr. Hawkins,
Mr. Crocker, Mr. Kirby, Mr. Mitchelmore, Mr. Warr, Mr. Bernard Davis, Ms.
Gambin-Walsh, Mr. Edmunds, Ms. Haley, Mr. Letto, Mr. Browne, Mr. Bragg, Mr.
Joyce, Mr. Derek Bennett, Ms. Cathy Bennett, Mr. Finn, Mr. Reid, Ms. Parsley,
Mr. King, Mr. Dean, Ms. Pam Parsons, Mr. Holloway.
MR. SPEAKER:
I would ask all Members who
are against the motion to adjourn, to please rise.
CLERK:
Mr. Paul Davis, Mr.
Hutchings, Mr. Brazil, Ms. Perry, Mr. Kevin Parsons, Mr. Petten, Mr. Lester, Ms.
Rogers, Ms. Michael, Mr. Lane.
Mr.
Speaker, the ayes, 27, the nays, 10.
MR. SPEAKER:
The motion is approved.
This
House stands adjourned until tomorrow, Monday, at 1:30 o'clock.
On
motion, the House at its rising adjourned until tomorrow, Monday, at 1:30 p.m.