Vancouver Sun

Spring session of legislatur­e to begin Monday

COVID relief, vaccine rollout on agenda, but chamber will be sparsely populated

- KATIE DEROSA — with files from Rob Shaw kderosa@postmedia.com twitter.com/ katiederos­ayyj

The spring session of the legislatur­e kicks off Monday and it will include more pandemic-era irregulari­ties including a sparsely populated chamber and a budget that won't be presented until the third week of April, which opposition parties say gives them less time to grill the NDP government on spending measures.

Financial relief for small business, COVID -19 measures and the vaccine rollout, housing for people without homes and income assistance rates are among the issues that will dominate the agenda.

The first day of the sitting coincides with B.C.'S long-awaited vaccine rollout plan for the public outlined by provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix.

Pessimism around the slow vaccine rollout, which has been beset by supply delays, could change after news Friday that Health Canada approved two more Astrazenec­a COVID-19 vaccines that will give Canada 22 million additional doses, which are expected to arrive between April and September.

Lt.- Gov. Janet Austin will deliver the speech from the throne on April 12, seven weeks into the 12week session.

The following week, on April 20, Finance Minister Selina Robinson will deliver the budget.

Typically, the throne speech and the budget are unveiled in early February, laying out the government's priorities for the fiscal year and giving opposition parties 11 weeks to question cabinet ministers during budget estimates.

B.C. Green party Leader Sonia Furstenau said she's concerned that the opposition parties will have only 14 days for debate during question period and budget estimates.

“I'm concerned about the implicatio­ns that has for opposition parties to fully hold government to account about the decisions that they're making,” she said. The house will break for the summer June 17.

Furstenau said that between the end of the 2020 summer session in July and the start of the spring session, there have been only seven days during the two-week winter session in December to question the government about its policies.

“That's an astonishin­gly tiny number of days over eight months,” she said, especially during the unpreceden­ted crisis posed by the pandemic.

The chamber, which during pre-pandemic times would be bustling with debate and partisan volleying, will seat only 24 socially distanced MLAS — 15 NDP MLAS, eight Liberals and one Green party member — while the other 63 will chime in virtually.

Cabinet meetings, committee hearings and scrums will continue to take place online, similar to last year's summer and winter sessions.

NDP house leader Mike Farnworth said the government will introduce seven pieces of legislatio­n relating to increased transparen­cy in the real estate sector, mitigating gun and gang violence, and measures linked to ICBC'S shift to an “enhanced care” model or no-fault insurance.

Farnworth said there's plenty of opportunit­y for opposition parties to question the government about the budget.

 ?? JASON PAYNE/FILES ?? Green party Leader Sonia Furstenau says she is concerned by the amount of days available for debate in the spring session.
JASON PAYNE/FILES Green party Leader Sonia Furstenau says she is concerned by the amount of days available for debate in the spring session.

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