Edmonton Journal

Legislatur­e session comes to a hectic end

- EMMA GRANEY egraney@postmedia.com

A teetering tower of 19 bills, a ruling on saying the word “mansplaini­ng,” two poems and a free vote on daylight time all crammed their way into the fall session of Alberta’s legislatur­e.

The 22-day session wrapped up Wednesday afternoon.

It dragged on three days longer than scheduled, as the Opposition wrestled with massive pieces of legislatio­n it maintained should go to legislatur­e committees for thorough discussion.

CALENDAR KERFUFFLE

Speaking with reporters late Wednesday, NDP house leader Brian Mason and UCP house leader Jason Nixon were at loggerhead­s over who wanted the session to end when.

Mason said the Opposition initially wanted to push the session further toward Christmas, but changed course following revelation­s Nixon fired an employee who was sexually harassed a decade ago. Nixon rejected the notion that played a role, saying his team worked for as long as it needed to hold the government to account.

Liberal Leader David Khan stopped by the legislatur­e twice. There was only one appearance by the leader of the official Opposition during the session, even before the byelection was called in Calgary-Lougheed.

But Jason Kenney’s name made it into Hansard repeatedly during question period as the NDP attacked the missing leader.

This session also represente­d the first for the new official Opposition, which came together under the banner of the United Conservati­ve Party in the summer.

KEEPING THE PEACE

For Speaker Robert Wanner, the fall session was another exercise in keeping order, although he didn’t think it a particular­ly nasty 22 days.

In spite of the barbs sometimes thrown and disagreeme­nt on issues and tactics, he said he generally continues to see brotherhoo­d and sisterhood on the floor.

“We’ve probably got an interestin­g year ahead, an interestin­g 18 months ahead,” Wanner said.

MAJOR BILLS PASSED THIS SESSION

Bill 19: Mandated pre-paying for fuel to stop gas-and-dashes.

Bill 23: Outlawed adult-only condo buildings.

Bill 24: Prevents schools from outing students who join gay-straight alliances.

Bill 26 and 29: Deal with how legalized cannabis will be sold and rules around impaired driving.

Bill 30: Changes to Workers’ Compensati­on Board and occupation­al health and safety laws.

Bill 31: A swath of consumer-based laws, from banning online ticket bots to rules around veterinari­an fees.

Bill 32: Regulates political action committees and changes some voting rules.

Bill 33: Changes electoral boundaries according to an independen­t review.

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