Lethbridge Herald

Fed. cabinet meets in B.C.

PM TO VISIT NORTHERN B.C. AS CABINET HOLDS RETREAT AMID WILDFIRE CRISIS

- Joan Bryden

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his newly shuffled cabinet gathered Tuesday for a retreat on Vancouver Island, under smoke-filled skies amid a province-wide wildfire emergency.

Ministers are to discuss plans for the fall sitting of Parliament, including proposals to beef up measures aimed at protecting Canadian elections from foreign interferen­ce.

But Trudeau’s first order of business was to meet with British Columbia Premier John Horgan, who had toured one of the hardest hit areas in the northern part of the province earlier in the day with federal Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

“I want to start by saying, obviously, our thoughts are with all the first responders, the firefighte­rs and the residents who are struggling through the wildfires that are raging across the province,” Trudeau said during a brief photo op at the start of his meeting with the premier.

Trudeau is planning to take time out from the cabinet retreat on Thursday morning to personally meet with firefighte­rs and evacuees in Prince George.

“As a born-and-raised Vancouver Islander, I was racking my brain trying to think of the last time a federal cabinet would have come to hold a meeting here and I can’t remember it ever happening,” Horgan said.

“So, it’s a delight to have the prime minister and his team here.”

Horgan also praised the federal government’s response to the wildfires. Seeing different levels of government working together on the crisis, “I think gives comfort to the public that federal, provincial, municipal, Indigenous leaders all coming together, speaking with one voice about the courage of our first responders and the tragedy that’s hitting families and people throughout British Columbia.”

He noted that this is the second consecutiv­e summer that B.C. has declared a state of emergency, an unpreceden­ted situation that “speaks to the challenges of climate change, which again are values that we share” with the federal government.

Multiple federal department­s and agencies, from Environmen­t Canada to the armed forces, are involved in helping B.C. cope with the crisis. And Trudeau has now created a special ad hoc committee of cabinet to ensure that all federal actors are pulling together in the same direction, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale said.

Trudeau said he and Horgan would also discuss how their two government­s are working together on infrastruc­ture projects, housing and protecting wild salmon, “something that is iconic and essential to B.C.’s culture and to B.C.’s economy.”

Neither he nor Horgan mentioned the one big issue on which their government­s vehemently disagree — the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project to carry Alberta bitumen to tidewater in Burnaby, B.C.

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