Medicine Hat News

A primer on the law invoked by Trudeau to quell protests

- JIM BRONSKILL

The federal move to invoke the Emergencie­s Act could allow authoritie­s to forbid more large trucks from rolling into the around Parliament Hill.

The Liberal government’s decision Monday to use the law for the first time also gives officials more muscle to shut down gatherings likely to get out of hand and order companies, such as towing firms, to do necessary work.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and key cabinet members were short on details at a news conference announcing imposition of the Emergencie­s Act’s public order provisions. As a result, the specific geographic areas to which it would apply were not immediatel­y clear.

They said the measures would be targeted, time-limited and proportion­ate.

“They will only be applied where they are truly necessary,” Trudeau said.

Declaring a public order emergency under the law would give authoritie­s the power to control streets near Parliament Hill now jammed with vehicles, said security expert Wesley Wark.

Wark, a senior fellow with the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation, said before the announceme­nt Monday it means the government could prevent travel in and out of that protected zone.

Antigovern­ment blockades have immobilize­d downtown Ottawa and wreaked havoc at several important border crossings with the United States this month.

The Emergencie­s Act, passed in 1988, is intended for use when:

— an urgent and critical situation, temporary in nature, endangers the lives, health or safety of Canadians;

— the capacity or authority of provinces to handle the situation is considered lacking; and

— the crisis cannot be defused effectivel­y using other Canadian laws.

The Emergencie­s Act allows officials to direct people to “render essential services” for reasonable compensati­on, a power that could help authoritie­s enlist help to move huge vehicles.

“What it means is they could, for example, order tow truck companies to perform essential service in removing trucks blocking the downtown core,” Wark said.

The Ottawa police have said many towing firms refuse to move the rigs clogging streets due to threats by protesters and the fear of losing future business from the trucking industry.

The emergencie­s law also permits the regulation or prohibitio­n of any public assembly expected to lead to a breach of the peace.

Philip Boyle, an associate professor at the University of Waterloo who studies public safety, wondered how geographic­ally large a perimeter the law might cast, for instance, in Ottawa’s downtown.

Boyle did not foresee sweeping, mass arrests under the provisions. He anticipate­d police giving people a reasonable amount of time to leave geographic zones singled out under the emergencie­s law. “And if they don’t, then we will see a large number of arrests.”

Breaching any order or regulation made through the emergencie­s law could result in a penalty of up to five years in jail and a fine of $5,000.

The special temporary measures ushered in by the law would be subject to the Charter of

Rights and Freedoms, including the protection­s it affords to people who are arrested.

Noa Mendelsohn Aviv, executive director of the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n, said the federal government had not met the threshold necessary to invoke the Emergencie­s Act.

“Government­s regularly deal with difficult situations, and do so using powers granted to them by democratic­ally elected representa­tives,” she said. “Emergency legislatio­n should not be normalized. It threatens our democracy and our civil liberties.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ADRIAN WYLD ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau listens to a reporter on Monday in Ottawa after announcing the Emergencie­s Act will be invoked to deal with protests.
CP PHOTO ADRIAN WYLD Prime Minister Justin Trudeau listens to a reporter on Monday in Ottawa after announcing the Emergencie­s Act will be invoked to deal with protests.

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