The Province

BCGEU demands wide-ranging inquiry

Public sector union wants answers on crime, money laundering, drugs and real estate

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The union representi­ng thousands of workers in B.C. says the provincial government must hold a public inquiry to examine organized crime, the opioid crisis, money laundering and its connection to real estate.

The B.C. Government and Service Employees Union says in a news release that an inquiry is the best way to learn the truth about a crisis that has claimed thousands of lives and made B.C. the most unaffordab­le province to live in Canada.

The demand for an inquiry follows a decision late last year to drop criminal charges after a two-year RCMP investigat­ion into money laundering.

Union officials say Premier John Horgan and Attorney-General David Eby haven’t ruled out the possibilit­y of a public inquiry and the union wants support for its petition campaign to prod the government to act.

Union president Stephanie Smith says the effects of the multi-layered crisis of drugs, crime and money laundering impact the BCGEU’s 72,000 members in many ways.

“The links between organized crime, fentanyl and money-laundering leading to skyrocketi­ng real estate prices in B.C. cannot go unexamined,” she says in the release.

“British Columbians deserve answers so that those responsibl­e can be held accountabl­e.”

Members from librarians to deputy sheriffs and correction officers have been thrust into first-responder roles because of the opioid crisis, the union says, while also pointing to multiple resolution­s on housing affordabil­ity passed at the union’s 2017 convention.

 ??  ?? STEPHANIE SMITH
STEPHANIE SMITH

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