Truro News

Liberals inherited ‘mistrust’ from previous government

- FREDERICTO­N

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his government inherited a “high degree of mistrust” from the previous Conservati­ve government that has left Canadians skeptical about consultati­ons on pipelines and environmen­tal protection.

Trudeau was asked about Energy East from a man at a town hall meeting in Fredericto­n, who wondered if public meetings will be held in affected communitie­s, and whether detailed maps of the pipeline route would be provided.

“One of the things we inherited from the previous government was a high degree of mistrust by Canadians,” Trudeau said as he continued his cross-country tour Tuesday.

“That’s why we turned around and enhanced the process for pipeline approvals to make sure there’s more public input, there’s more engagement, there’s more rigour, there’s more science, and there’s an approach that can reassure Canadians that instead of being a cheerleade­r or booster for pipelines, that you have a government that’s a referee.”

A National Energy Board review panel will examine the proposed 4,500-kilometre pipeline that would carry 1.1-million barrels of crude oil per day from Alberta and Saskatchew­an to refineries in Eastern Canada and a marine terminal in New Brunswick.

The same man, who said he was with the Council of Canadians, also won applause for saying he wished the opposition and media would leave Trudeau alone about his Christmas vacation on the Aga Khan’s private island in the Bahamas.

The crowd, smaller than the thousands who packed a Halifax-area arena for a town hall the previous night, was largely friendly even as Trudeau was pressed for answers on issues as diverse as electoral reform, a United Nations declaratio­n supporting indigenous rights, and what his daughter wants to be when she grows up.

The most pointed questions came from a woman who pressed him on whether he would scrap the troubled Phoenix pay system that has left thousands of government employees with either too much or no pay at all.

The woman, a seasonal contract worker at Canadian Forces Base Gagetown, called it the “Phoenix nightmare.”

Trudeau said a fix is underway at the Public Service Pay Centre in Miramichi, N.B.

“We are working extremely hard … the folks in Miramichi are working practicall­y around the clock,” he said. “Everyone deserves to get paid what they are owed.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau drops in on a card game at St. Margaret’s Church during a visit to Fredericto­n yesterday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau drops in on a card game at St. Margaret’s Church during a visit to Fredericto­n yesterday.

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