Vancouver Sun

Lake back to fight for Liberal climate plan

- HINA ALAM

The Liberal party’s plan to tackle climate change has brought Terry Lake out of political retirement.

At his nomination event Tuesday night for the riding of Kamloops-Thompson-Cariboo, Lake, a former B.C. health minister, described to the prime minister the conditions the area faces every summer with the wildfires.

“It is like a war zone here, prime minister, in the summer,” he said. “People leave so they can breathe clean air.”

Lake said locals are worried because they suffer physically and mentally due to the raging wildfires.

“And that’s what brought me off the sidelines,” he said.

“It was your and your government’s commitment on taking action on climate change.”

With B.C. expected to be a key battlegrou­nd in October’s federal election, Lake is considered a high-profile candidate for the Liberals in the province.

He called climate change a “ballot question” and a “threat to our communitie­s and our families.”

The October federal election is going to come down to a “stark choice” between the Conservati­ves and the Liberal party, he said.

Lake didn’t seek re-election for the B.C. Liberals in the last provincial election after serving three terms in the legislatur­e.

He has spent the past two years as vice-president of corporate and social responsibi­lity at Quebec-based marijuana company Hydropothe­cary Corp.

He said he’ll take a leave of absence beginning in the early fall.

Nearly three-quarters of the riding ’s population is centred in Kamloops, where Lake, a veterinari­an, also served as a city councillor and later mayor before jumping into provincial politics in 2009.

As the province’s health minister, Lake oversaw the declaratio­n of a public health emergency amid the deadly fentanyl crisis. He has been urging more research on the effects of marijuana on opioid addictions. Before he was appointed health minister, he served as minister of the environmen­t.

Lake also touched on the fentanyl overdose crisis that’s affecting the country.

While the situation in B.C. is improving, he said it’s getting worse in Ontario, where the Conservati­ve government cut public health funds and closed down overdose protection sites.

“The thing that concerns me most about the possibilit­y of an Andrew Scheer government is the complete abdication of responsibi­lities such as action on climate change and helping Canadians deal with the opioid epidemic,” he said. “They somehow think that is personal responsibi­lity. They don’t understand the challenges that people face.”

Trudeau told the crowd of supporters that the Liberal government has given Canadians confidence to face the future by investing in education, skills training and families.

“The reality is, in 2015 we put forward a very different vision than the Conservati­ve government had for this country,” the PM said.

“We said the way to grow the economy, the way to help people is not to give tax benefits and advantages to the wealthiest in the hope that it trickles down.”

Lake said the Liberal party has the pulse of the people and stands for things they need such as action on climate change, while developing the economy in a way that doesn’t strand the resources.

“That gets us to a lower carbon future,” he said. “That’s pragmatic and that makes sense to me.”

 ?? MURRaY MITCHELL/CP ?? Terry Lake says climate change threatens communitie­s and families.
MURRaY MITCHELL/CP Terry Lake says climate change threatens communitie­s and families.

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