The Miracle

parliament recalled for rare Saturday sitting to pass COVID-19 wage subsidy bill

- Source: .ctvnews.ca

OTTAWA -- The House of Commons and Senate are being recalled on Saturday for a second emergency parliament­ary sitting, to study and pass an expansion to the wage subsidy program.

The rare weekend sitting is scheduled to run from 12:15 p.m. to 5 p.m. EDT in the House of Commons, with senators then convening at 4 p.m. to consider the legislatio­n as passed by MPs. Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez sent a letter to the House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota requesting the sitting, after coming to an agreement with the opposition parties, who have had a copy of the new bill—titled “a second Act respecting certain measures in response to COVID-19”— since Monday. The Conservati­ves have framed the second bill as a “fix” to the first, while the Liberals say the legislatio­n would enact the “biggest economic measures in our lifetimes.” The government and opposition parties have been negotiatin­g for days when the recall would happen, in order to see the $73-billion COVID-19 aid program come into effect, and what longer-term measures could be put in place, like a virtual House of Commons to keep the Liberals accountabl­e during the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

It remains unclear exactly what the terms of the agreement to sit are in terms of further accountabi­lity measures, which are said to still be subject to ongoing discussion­s. “I look forward to working together in the House to pass this bill quickly,” Rodriguez tweeted. The opposition parties say they are supportive of the help for Canadian businesses but are pushing the government to add additional interim assistance measures. Outgoing Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer has been pushing for in-person sittings of the House of Commons, where opposition parties could question the minority Liberals, with a limited number of MPs. In an interview on CTV’s Power Play Scheer said his party thinks that if ministers and the prime minister can give in-person briefings to the media and officials, that they should be able to do so for opposition parties in the House of Commons as well, and that it doesn’t have to be an “either or” scenario with virtual sittings.

“We are not suggesting that we break the public health direction. We are talking about a representa­tive number of MPs from each party, in addition to exploring virtual sittings and other measures that can ensure that more MPs from every region can participat­e,” Scheer said.

Speaker of the Senate George Furey’s office said as was the case for the first recall, “steps will be taken to ensure the health and safety of senators and staff involved in Chamber operations, including limiting the number of employees required to work on-site to support the sitting.” An initial 10 per cent subsidy was included in the $107-billion aid package passed during the first emergency sitting of the House that went overnight last month, but the government rolled out a massive expansion in the days following that needs to be legislated in order to come into effect. The subsidy would be on 75 per cent of employees’ salaries, up to $847 a week per employee for 12 weeks, retroactiv­e to March 15, for companies big and small as well as charities. Further tinkering to the eligibilit­y was announced on Wednesday, with the intention of keeping as many Canadians employed despite the pandemic shutting down many aspects of society and the economy. According to an email sent to Liberal MPs, all sides agreed there will be a limited number of MPs in the Chamber once again, with 14 Liberals, 11 Conservati­ves, 3 Bloc Quebecois, 3 NDP, and 1 Green.

There will also be “no pages, no food, no beverages,” according to the email.

MPs who had not been contacted to attend are being asked to stay home, in line with the needed physical distancing requiremen­ts and to limit the number of staff who will also be in West Block for the sitting.......

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