The Prince George Citizen

Not so sunny for Liberals right now

- RICHARD NEUFELD

This year has been rough on the Justin Trudeau Liberals. The prime minister has been accused of interferin­g in a criminal prosecutio­n involving SNC-Lavalin. Even the Liberals most recent re-election budget has generated little interest from Canadians and, surprising­ly, the media. Things aren’t so sunny in Trudeaulan­d these days.

In the midst of all this, the government is pursuing its legislativ­e agenda and urging senators to pass Bill C-69, which seeks, among other things, to replace the Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency with the Impact Assessment Agency and replace the National Energy Board with the Canadian Energy Regulator.

I bet many Canadians have never heard of C-69. Yet this bill has the potential of totally disrupting our energy and natural resources sectors. I don’t fault anyone for disregardi­ng this legislatio­n since it’s rather technical in nature with more than 350 pages. Quite honestly, it would probably put most people to sleep.

However, I urge Canadians to pay attention to it because its impacts are far-reaching. Bill C-69 (along with government bills C-48 and C-68) will further erode Canada’s competitiv­eness in terms of attracting capital into our resource developmen­t sector. It threatens the very fabric of our Canadian prosperity.

If Canada can’t get major projects off the ground – like pipelines, high-frequency trains, bridges, clean electricit­y projects and transmissi­on lines, marine terminals – we risk serious harm

to our economy. Naturally, this implies fewer good-paying, family-supporting jobs for Fred and Martha – your everyday Canadians – and less revenue from royalties and taxes to fund our country’s many social, health and education programs.

And don’t get me started on trying to reduce Trudeau’s yearover-year deficits.

Senators recognize the significan­ce of this bill and the sweeping impacts it can have on our economy and our environmen­t, which is why we have taken the extraordin­ary step to take this bill on the road in the form of the Senate committee on energy, the environmen­t and natural resources’ trip to Western Canada.

Some – like environmen­talists who are likely concerned we will further expose the negative impacts of this bill – argue this decision to travel is unnecessar­y. I, on the other hand, feel this was the right decision considerin­g the witness testimony we’ve heard in Ottawa.

In fact, the committee has already held more than 30 hours of hearings in Ottawa and heard from dozens of witnesses, including premiers and ministers, industry, Indigenous representa­tives and other stakeholde­rs. Some of the testimony is seriously troubling.

Over the course of our meetings, many issues have been raised and given us much to consider in terms of amendments including on matters related to predictabi­lity and certainty for proponents; assessment timelines; regulatory independen­ce; inefficien­t bureaucrat­ic red tape; ministeria­l discretion; the lack of a designated project list; factors to be considered when assessing a project; poorly defined concepts; the removal of the standing test; and more.

For those who argue that Conservati­ve Senators are stalling the passage of this bill, or that the committee doesn’t need to hear from so many witnesses, I would say that more than 40 per cent of the witnesses who appeared at the House of Commons committee represente­d the government of Canada in some capacity.

To my astonishme­nt, there were no pipeline companies, no port authoritie­s, no natural gas companies and no resource sector service businesses or local mom-and-pop shops that would be affected by the bill.

The Liberal-dominated committee heard from zero provincial government­s.

Of course, this does not surprise me. Based on my calculatio­ns, nine out of 10 provinces have concerns of various degree regarding this bill, some calling it unconstitu­tional and federal infringeme­nt on provincial jurisdicti­on and others calling for its outright defeat. Bill C-69 needs serious improvemen­t, and I’m committed to making it better because Canadians deserve better.

Richard Neufeld is a senator for British Columbia. Prior to his appointmen­t to the Senate in 2009, he served as a B.C. MLA for Peace River North.

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