Protect trans kids

Earlier this week I rose in the Nova Scotia Legislature to call on my fellow lawmakers to do everything we can to protect trans, queer and Two Spirit kids, and make sure that they are safe and protected at school and reflected in the curriculum.

Full text below:

I have a T-shirt that says “Protect Trans Kids.” I bought it at Cape and Cowl Comics and Collectibles , which is a great small business in Sackville. The last time I wore it was at a solidarity rally with the 2SLGBTQIA+ community, when protests around the country were calling for changes to Education Acts that would take away the rights and safety of trans, non-binary, and queer kids. I have two young children who are still figuring out who they are. Cisgender, transgender, gender-diverse, gay, straight, pan -who knows? What I do know is that it is my job, and my mama bear instinct, to protect them and all kids from the things that may harm them: the sun, not getting enough fresh air or exercise, or lack of self-love, or feelings of self-worth or self-confidence. Every child, no matter who they are, deserves the rights afforded them under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. They deserve school curricula that reflect them and respect them and keep them safe from ideas and people who don’t believe they are worthy of love or safety. We in this Legislature and all lawmakers must do everything in our power to protect trans kids, queer kids, Two-Spirit kids -all kids

Susan Leblanc Asks Housing Minister about Keeping Ocean Breeze Affordable

On the first day of the Nova Scotia Legislature I asked Housing Minister John Lohr how it is possible that his government didn’t reach out to the new developers of Ocean Breeze - traditionally affordable housing to over 1, 000 people - to ensure that it stayed affordable and people did not become homeless?

Full exchange:

SUSAN LEBLANC: Madame Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing. Earlier this Summer, the first eviction notices were distributed to tenants of Ocean Breeze, a traditionally affordable housing complex in Dartmouth North that is home to over 1,000 residents. You would think that the sale of such a significant piece of real estate would be of interest to a government that wants to protect affordable housing, but FOIPOP shows no records of correspondence between the department and the new owner. I can table that. In the midst of an affordable housing crisis, how is it possible that the minister didn’t even reach out to the new developer to make sure that Ocean Breeze residents don’t become homeless during this redevelopment?

HON. JOHN LOHR: Madame Speaker, I will say to the member that we have a public-facing part of our department, and our senior staff interact with many different entities -not only developers, but not-for-profits, community housing groups, many different groups, but the way this works is they approach us. If we didn’t interact with them, they didn’t approach us. That’s the reality. We don’t go out and approach groups. They come in and they approach us. That’s how we do it, and we react to that. They come to us looking for information on programs or whatever. This is how this takes place. If we have no record of having communication with them, they didn’t ask for communication. All of our information is readily available online, how to connect with us.

SUSAN LEBLANC: With all due respect, Speaker, a government that is all about action on housing seems to have a strange way of approaching that action when they’re waiting for people to come to us -sitting back and waiting. The developer has been clear that it is open to working with this government to try to maintain affordable housing at Ocean Breeze. After the government didn’t act on an opportunity to purchase the site, we were hopeful that the government would step in to make sure that the housing remains affordable, but FOIPOP documents also show that no funding agreements between the government and the new owners of Ocean Breeze exist. Will the minister make a clear commitment that there will be no net loss of affordable housing due to the redevelopment of Ocean Breeze?

JOHN LOHR: Again, I will say that this is a private development. We will interact if we are asked to interact. I can tell you that we are spending an unprecedented amount of money to preserve affordable housing. One of the examples I will give you is CHAP, which has gotten national recognition, where we have a Community Housing Acquisition Program to enable not-for-profits to purchase. That has preserved and saved hundreds and hundreds of units. We continue to work in this space. We’ve put almost $300 million into housing this year. We will continue to do that. We will continue to build up community housing and not-for-profit housing, which is something that the Affordable Housing Commission report identified as very weak in Nova Scotia. As I’ve said, we’re continuing to do an unprecedented step -a historic step of building public housing units in Nova Scotia. As I’ve said, we’re continuing to do an unprecedented step, a historic step, of building public housing units in Nova Scotia.

Anti 2SLGBTQIA+ Hate and Laws

On March 23 I rose in the Nova Scotia Legislature to give the following statement on the rise of anti-2SLGBTQIA+ hate and laws:

I rise to draw attention to the spate of anti-2SLGBTQIA+ laws that are being put forth and passed in countries around the world.

In the U.S., there are a frightening variety of laws targeting trans people and drag performers. Uganda has just passed legislation criminalizing identifying as LGBTQ+. Russia has banned sharing information on LGBTQ+ identities. These are just a few examples. It’s important, though, that we in Atlantic Canada not think we are beyond this kind of discrimination - there is hate here too. Most recently, organizers of the Little Rainbow event in support of rainbow refugees were the target of online hate, and a Moncton drag story time garnered protests.

I call on this House today to recommit to passing and strengthening laws that will protect, serve, support, and empower 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals and communities in this province. 2SLGBTQIA+ rights are human rights.

12 Days of Giving Food Drive in Crichton Park

On March 23 I was pleased to rise in the Nova Scotia Legislature to recognize Natasha Beuree-Edwards and the residents of Crichton Park for their 12 Days of Giving food drive. This is what I said:

"Mr. Speaker, Crichton Park in Dartmouth North is a generous community, a fact that has been on full display during the last three annual 12 Days of Giving organized by resident Natasha Beuree-Edwards.

Natasha started the 12 Days of Giving food drive in November 2020 to address food insecurity in the early days of the pandemic. That first year, the drive garnered just under 2,000 donated items. The success continued into December 2021 and 2022, with people donating between a 1,000 and 2,000 food items each of those years. A play on the 12 Days of Christmas, Natasha shared a suggested food item for her neighbours to donate for 12 days, and at the end, everything was collected and delivered to Christ Church Food Bank, where the food items were used in the Christmas hamper program.

I ask the house to join me in thanking Natasha and the residents of Crichton Park for their generosity and their effort to address food insecurity in Dartmouth."

John MacNeil Grade 5s African Nova Scotian History Challenge

On March 22 I was also able to recognize the Grade 5s and their teachers at John MacNeil Elementary School in Dartmouth North who felted and sewed a beautiful quilt for the Delmore "Buddy" Daye Learning Institute's African Nova Scotian History Challenge in February. Here is what I said:

Mr. Speaker, this past February the Grade 5s at John MacNeil Elementary School in Dartmouth found a truly special way to mark this year’s African Heritage Month. Throughout February, the students - taught by Matt Montgomery and Colleen Clarke - learned about the history of quilt-making in African Canadian culture. Quilters, they learned, used quilts to tell stories, but also to send messages through the Underground Railroad. Inspired by David Woods and Shauntay Grant, the students created a stunning needle felt quilt which they then submitted to the Delmore “Buddy” Daye Learning Institute’s African Heritage Month Challenge. The quilt consists of squares, each crafted by individual students, and the border represents the secret codes used for the Underground Railroad.

I ask that the House join me in congratulating the over 50 Grade 5 students at John MacNeil Elementary who wove and sewed this beautiful piece of art into existence.

John MacNeil Grade Twos African Nova Scotian History Challenge

On March 22 I recognized the Grade Twos at John MacNeil Elementary School in Dartmouth North for their incredible submission to the Delmore "Buddy" Daye Learning Institute's African Nova Scotian History Challenge. This is what I said:

"Mr. Speaker, I rise to congratulate the Grade 2 students at John MacNeil Elementary School who submitted to the Delmore Buddy Daye Learning Institute’s Awards for Excellence in African Nova Scotian history.

The students spent February learning about inspiring and influential people of African descent and turned those learnings into a beautiful art piece. Each student in Megan Douglas’s Grade 2 class created a puzzle piece decorated with African-inspired patterns and painted the puzzle pieces in the colours of the African-Nova Scotian flag. Then they pasted the pictures of change-makers, alongside words that best described them, to big puzzle pieces. The puzzle pieces came together to make a beautiful mural. The process was captured in a stop-motion video where the students say or sign the names and affirming words.

I am so happy to live in a community where these young leaders and artists are growing up. I ask the House to join me in congratulating them on their inspiring entry into the African Nova Scotian History Challenge.

Calling on Government to Protect Mabou Beach

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Environment and Climate Change. The Ecology Action Centre is asking people to write to the minister about the development threat at Mabou Provincial Park. As they explain: “Protected should mean protected. End of story. And yet, an American billionaire golf course developer is once again trying to swindle away the West Mabou Beach Provincial Park to develop a private 18-hole golf course. This legally protected and ecologically sensitive area is part of the mere five per cent of Nova Scotian coastline that is protected public land. We cannot afford to lose it to private development.” Will the minister promise that Mabou Provincial Park will not be turned into a golf course?

HON. TORY RUSHTON: As I’ve been very clear in the media, very clear in any of the letters that we’ve received in the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables, there has been no application from any developer on this piece of land. As it stands right now, that park is still a park. It will remain a park, but there’s been no application as to this date.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mabou Beach Provincial Park is a very special place. A 2019 study by Alain Belliveau of Acadia University commissioned by the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society found the unique sand dunes and wetlands contained at least 17 rare plants and animals, including four birds that are listed under the provincial Endangered Species Act. This is why Nature Nova Scotia and many others have asked the Province to unequivocally reject the idea of a golf course at Mabou Beach Provincial Park. We know there is no formal proposal before the Province right now, but we also know that the developer is working hard on this.This is why the minister should stand up and be very clear that Mabou Beach will never become a golf course, and I invite him to do that.

TORY RUSHTON: What I can be clear about is that, as I said in Estimates the other night, the Department of Natural Resources and Renewables gets about 2,000 applications for differing abilities for Crown lands throughout the whole province. As we go through those applications one by one, Mr. Speaker, we make sure that Nova Scotians get the Crown lands, the protected areas, the economy, and the recreational development that they want to see within our province. There has not been an application for that. If there is an application that comes in, we will deal with that application. As of now, we can’t go on stories or myths that an application will come in.

Sarah Rose Denny and Healthcare in Prisons Question to Minister

Susan Leblanc: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Mi'kmaw mother of two Sarah Rose Denny recently died of pneumonia after becoming sick while in custody at the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility. Family and friends say Sarah Rose Denny was full of life - that not only was she charismatic, she was naturally beautiful and so strong. She overcame so many obstacles. This should not have been her end.

The Elizabeth Fry Society of Mainland Nova Scotia has explained again and again that it is difficult to access proper health care inside correctional facilities, where inmates are the responsibility of the government.

Mr. Speaker, these are ongoing issues. Why has the government tabled a budget with no new funding for health care in prisons?

Hon. Brad Johns: It's very sad news and my thoughts certainly go out to the family of Ms. Denny. I will say that this is currently under review by the Medical Examiner Service and we're hoping to have a report soon.

Susan Leblanc: Mr. Speaker, Indigenous people are overrepresented in Nova Scotia's justice system. In order to be certain that this will never happen again, we need to understand what happened to Sarah. A review is one thing, but her family is calling for a public inquiry into her death.

Emma Halpern, the executive director of the Elizabeth Fry Society of Mainland Nova Scotia, explains that many other provinces do have mandatory reviews. We do not and, as a result, we don't know exactly what happened. The family doesn't know exactly what happened and if we don't know what happened, how can we learn from it? I will table those comments.

Will the Minister of Justice conduct a public review of Sarah Rose Denny's death, as her family has called for?

Hon. Brad Johns: The DOJ is very committed to ensuring that we have a fair justice system and a system that meets the needs of Indigenous persons across this province.

We know that Indigenous and African Nova Scotians are overly represented in the system, and we are reviewing that. I will not commit at this time, but I am waiting to see what comes back from the review of the medical examiner's initial review and then we'll see from there.

Housing Crisis in Dartmouth North - Speech in Nova Scotia Legislature

I’d like to spend a few minutes talking about housing in Dartmouth North. As we go into Supply debate on this budget, I want to talk a little about the current situation in Dartmouth North and what we see or don’t see in the budget for the scenarios that I’m about to offer and to describe. When I was elected, when I first knocked on doors in the 2017 election, the thing that I heard most about in many parts of my community was the people’s concern about the rising rents. At that time, Dartmouth North, as I’ve said before, was a place where you could get a cheap place to live. At that time in 2017, rents were beginning to rise. There was this indication that things were getting a little out of hand. Meanwhile, income assistance rates were frozen, minimum wage was extremely low, there was quite a lot of unemployment at the time. It was a tough go for many people.

When I was elected, I went to our then-leader, the member for Halifax Chebucto, and I suggested that we introduce some legislation on rent control, which he thought was a good idea, so we did. That piece of legislation sat on the order paper for several years. We introduced it, reintroduced it, the government at the time was not interested in looking at rent control at all, even though we were sounding the alarm in the NDP caucus about rents rising and that kind of thing. In 2019, things began to change in a very identifiable, remarkable way, I would say. 

I remember sitting in my office in the Summer of 2019 and reflecting to Sandi and Rebecca, who work with me, everyone who comes in this office now has an issue with housing. They said, it’s true. It wasn’t totally true, there were a few other things that we were doing in our office in terms of case work, but by and large we were beginning to see and hear stories of people getting evicted for funny reasons and not knowing that they could carry on an eviction process through Residential Tenancies to protect their rights. People were applying more for housing, for public housing, and being told that the wait-lists were two years long. People’s rents were going up in a way that was just unsustainable, and they literally were unable to pay for the rent increases, and renovictions began to become popular, as it were. 

Then when the pandemic hit, we heard the then-Premier say the now famous words “Stay the blazes home.” People couldn’t stay the blazes home if they didn’t have a home to live in, so we lobbied hard for putting in a ban on evictions and some kind of rent cap and that did happen. For a while it was sort of just to manage the pandemic but then, of course, the pandemic hasn’t really ended yet, has it? Some things were sort of turning around a little bit to protect people. Meanwhile, the situation was getting worse. 

Now we come to 2023 and we see that the rent cap is being extended, though no longer will it be a set-in-legislation rent cap, but it will be a set-in-Executive-Council rent cap. The minister has said he suspects the rent cap will be 5 per cent but we know that anything that is set in Executive Council is subject to change at any time, with no debate, no scrutiny, and no need to answer questions, so it’s a bit concerning. 

Here we are now - rents are skyrocketing. In Dartmouth North we have the lowest vacancy rate in the province. The average vacancy rate for Nova Scotia is 1 per cent, which is unhealthy. We know that a healthy vacancy rate ranges around 3 per cent. In Nova Scotia our vacancy rate is 1 per cent, in Dartmouth North it is around 0.6 per cent, so it’s lower. It’s the lowest in the province. There is nowhere to rent an apartment in Dartmouth North. If people need to leave an apartment for a reason like the condition of the apartment - say it’s an unsafe building, say their neighbour is harassing them and they just don’t feel safe anymore, say they had their job hours cut and they no longer can afford something - if they try to find another apartment in Dartmouth North, it would be virtually impossible 5340 because every time an apartment comes up for rent, the rents are doubling and, in some cases, tripling. 

At 71 Primrose, Mr. Speaker, there are a number of tenants - I think there are 16 units in that building, maybe a few more - who have all been told their units need to be renovated. I have been in some of the units, and they do not need to be renovated. I’m not a contractor, but I know a brand-new backsplash and brand-new cupboards and brand-new flooring when I see it. Many of the units literally have those things. They do not need improvements and if they did, they would not be the kinds of improvements that require someone to move out, but the tenants in this building have been told that, no, they need to leave and if they want to come back they certainly can but their rents will go up almost $1,000. 

The Minister Responsible for the Residential Tenancies Act will say that this type of practice, or this type of thing that is happening, happens few and far - not very often, the occasional time this happens. The other thing that is happening in Dartmouth North is there is a gal who lives in my neighbourhood who was told by her landlord - she had a fixed-term lease - he would not be renewing her fixed-term lease, which I think she was paying upwards of $900 for her apartment, but he would not be renewing it because he had a family member who was going to move into the unit. A few weeks later, after she moved out of the apartment, she saw the unit listed on the internet at $2,200. So that landlord used the fixed-term lease loophole to get her out of that apartment and to charge more than double the amount that he was getting for that apartment. Now, I understand inflation. I understand that people are facing inflation, expenses are going up. I understand that if you pay for your tenant’s heat that it is going up. I understand that roofs cost more. I understand all those things, Mr. Speaker, but I don’t understand how this government can sit back and allow such an abuse of the Residential Tenancies Act. 

That brings me to this budget, and what’s in this budget for housing. I hope I’ve painted a bit of a picture about the situation that’s happening. People are getting renovicted, people are getting kicked out because of a fixed-term lease loophole. People’s rents are rising. There is no place to go in public housing, and there is no place to go in market housing. And this budget has no money for new affordable housing. Now the Minister of Housing and Municipal Affairs will say that the government has put millions of dollars into housing, and that is true. Millions of dollars into housing is true. But it’s not millions of dollars into affordable housing. And this government refuses to adopt a definition of affordable when it comes to those development deals, when buildings are going up - at least in HRM, apartment buildings and many, many units are being built as we speak. There are three or four in the tiny bit of Dartmouth North that I live in myself. And none of those units are guaranteed to have affordable units in them, none of those builds are guaranteed to have affordable units in them. The minster says, okay, so what we’ll do instead is we’ll provide rent subsidies. We’ve got 1,000 more rent subsidies coming. Except that you have to be paying more than 50 per cent of your income to now qualify for a rent subsidy. And the minister explains that - the reasoning for that change well, because there’s so much pressure on the program. Well, no kidding there’s pressure on the program. Rents are skyrocketing, landlords are misusing the Residential Tenancies Act to misuse fixed-term leases. Renovictions are happening all over the place, and there’s nowhere to live. So of course there’s pressure on the rent subsidy program. My office has been signing people up, or helping people apply to the rent subsidy program for at least six or seven months. Because it is literally the only way to stop people in my community from becoming homeless and adding to the tent communities that are already up and around Dartmouth North and other places in HRM. 

We are hearing stories - I heard a story on The Current this morning, Mr. Speaker, about a woman in Bridgewater who has been living in a tent with her daughter, and they have to stop doing homework when it gets dark out, because there’s no more light to do homework. Think about that for a minute, folks. Think about that. Imagine raising a child, who goes to public school, in a tent. There’s another story that The Current played the other day about a woman, I think in Lunenburg, somewhere like that, who’s renovating a school bus to live in. Which would be kind of cool, but right now the cost of renovations is making it impossible for her to finish that job. This is the province that we are making decisions about and for. 

This is the province where this government says there’s so much pressure on the rent subsidy program that we have to change the qualifications to cut out people who are in what the CMHC defines as core housing need. We recognize people are in housing need, but we’re not going to help them until they’re in deep housing need. That is reprehensible. It's a terrible move, Mr. Speaker. So what happens to folks who are in this situation? They pay more and more of their income, the little income they have, on their rent. Which means they buy less groceries, which means they go to the food banks, which this government is happy to support. No one goes to school hungry in this province, we heard that today. So people are using food banks, people are using the insufficient food programs there are in schools. People are just going hungry. People are splitting their medication prescriptions in half. Spreading their medications over longer so they’re becoming more unhealthy. 

Therefore, we’re putting all kinds of burdens on people in general, and also our systems that we are trying to improve, like our health care system and our education system. When kids go to school hungry, they don’t learn as well. When people can’t take required medication that they’ve been prescribed, they get sicker and they’re more of a burden on the health care system. If we want to fix health care “more, faster,” then we need to properly invest in affordable housing. We need to make sure that everyone who needs one can access a rent subsidy. We need to make sure we’re actually building new affordable housing that is rent geared to income. That means it doesn’t cost more than 30 per cent of one’s income. And we have to make sure that people can buy nutritious food. These are not difficult concepts, Mr. Speaker. This is what we need to do to make sure that our population is healthy and that our health care system can flourish and can become a system of wellness. Imagine being the minister of the Department of Wellness. Well, we could have one, if we could do all of these other things that contribute to wellness in this province. I will end my time by saying that I am wholly disappointed that there is no real investment in affordable housing in this budget, that the rent subsidy program has been cut to shreds, and that this government thinks it’s okay that people go to food banks for their food instead of being able to afford their own purchasing of food in grocery stores or in a market. It’s shameful, it’s reprehensible, and we need to change it.

Funding for Climate Targets

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Environment and Climate Change. Last December, his department released 68 goals in their long-awaited climate plan. Unfortunately, we’re not seeing investment that matches the level of urgency and the work that needs to be done. Most of the climate funding in this recent budget has already been earmarked for existing projects under the Green Fund, leaving little left for work on climate goals. How does the minister expect us to meet our climate targets if he won’t fund the work that we need to do to address the climate crisis?

HON. TIMOTHYHALMAN: Indeed, we did release our climate plan in December of last year, with 68 goals to guide us for the next five years. In point of fact, since forming government 18 months ago, this government’s invested $300 million in climate adaptation: $44 million from the Green Fund, $57 million from general revenue that went into heat pumps, and immediately following the release of our climate plan, we released our plan for heat pumps, $140 million. (Applause)

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, to illustrate this government’s priorities, this House has been sitting for six days so far and already the government members have kicked and screamed about carbon pricing 34 times. We counted. Meanwhile action and dollars to address climate change are coming up short. Just three days before the tabling of this budget, the International Panel on Climate Change released a damning report that showed time is running out to prevent catastrophe. Governments have 10 fewer years to address climate change than previously thought, and I will table that. Does this minister believe we can afford to wait another year to get serious about addressing climate change?

TIMOTHY HALMAN: Mr. Speaker, we’re not waiting. We’re not marking time; we’re making a difference. We’re taking action. Included in the $300 million we’ve invested since forming government, in December we invested $20 million for nature conservation. These are significant investments. These are investments that benefit Nova Scotians and will help Nova Scotians adapt to climate change. We have a strong climate plan. We have the strongest piece of climate legislation in the country. (Applause) I am very optimistic about the future. We may hear a lot of doom and gloom from the other side about this (Interruption) but we’re moving forward together.

Coastal Protection Regulations Delays - Question for the Minister

SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is, again, for the Minister of Environment and Climate Change. We’re approaching another construction season without any ability to regulate how people build on our coasts. This week, we learned that the minister has thrown out any timeline for making this happen, saying his department is engaging in yet another round of consultations. These have been going on since 2018. Meanwhile, development is accelerating in coastal areas as people seek to be ushered in under the old rules. Can the minister see that every day that goes by without regulations is a day that puts the coastline at greater climate risk?

HON. TIMOTHY HALMAN: In 2019, this caucus voted in favour of the Coastal Protection Act because we recognized how critical that is. Nova Scotians are a coastal people. We’re going to continue to live by the coast. However, we need to recognize the hazards that can be associated with that. These regulations are critical that we get correct. A lot of work has gone into them, and more work will continue to go into them. There’s a lot of support for the Coastal Protection Act, but there’s also a lot of folks that don’t even know the Act exists, and a lot of folks that don’t even know what the entailing regulations could imply. We recognize that more work needs to be done on these . . .

SUSAN LEBLANC: The minister said it himself in 2019. The time for consultation is over. If people don’t know about this Act, then the government needs to educate them about it. One of the recent examples of coastal construction is a large infill wall on the beautiful and popular Crescent Beach in Lunenburg County. It happens to have been built by the owner of Cresco - just saying - the same developer that has benefited from the government’s dubious hotel purchase in Bedford. As one resident who grew up near the beach said, “There has been a big outcry on how this is being done. Why are there no protections in place?” The government’s delays are only benefiting people who are dead set on building under the old rules. When will the government actually protect people on our coastline and release the coastal protection regulations?

TIMOTHYHALMAN: Getting buy-in, getting understanding is key, especially on something as critical as this, and acknowledging there’s still a lot of awareness. I want to thank the honourable member for saying how important education is. That’s why I’m happy to inform the House that I’ve directed my department to begin targeted consultation with property owners to raise awareness, to raise education. To say that there’s not any other protections in place, that’s not the case. Residents of this province can reach out to their municipalities and talk to their zoning and by-laws. They can reach out to CLIMAtlantic. That has information. They can reach out to Natural Resources Canada. They can reach out to Municipal Affairs and Housing, who’s partnering with the federal government for flood plain mapping and lidar.

Question for Minister of Health - Another Clinic Closing

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Another doctor is winding up their clinic in Halifax. Jason Haslam received a letter last week informing him and his partner that they no longer have a family doctor as of May 31st. They have spent numerous stints on the family doctor list, but he says, “My real concern is for my fellow patients. There could well be patients recently diagnosed with cancer, for example, who may also be waiting on another long list for specialist treatment, or elderly patients like my own mother, who not only need regular checkups but also a family doctor to advocate for them with specialists, insurance, and so on. I live in real fear of what happens if she loses her doctor too.” Jason and the people he’s concerned about need a family health team. When will the government stop the exodus of family doctors from the Central Zone?

THE SPEAKER: The honourable Minister of Health and Wellness.

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, there have been a number of things undertaken in order to support physicians in Central Zone and throughout the province. Most recently, there was a letter that was sent to physicians explaining that if they were winding up their practice or felt that they need practice support, they could reach out to this 1-800 number, and that the local medical services team through NSHA and the Department of Health and Wellness would reach out to support them to ensure that they had the practice supports that they required.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Jason also said, “Ironically, in the same building as our now-former doctor, a private, for-profit clinic has opened. I guess our current Premier thinks only those who can afford to pay are allowed the luxury of health. It’s infuriating that others who may not be so lucky can simply be sentenced to the list for the crime of not having enough money.” I can table that letter. Does the minister think it’s fair that private clinics, where people have to pay to access primary care, are popping up at the same time as people are losing their family doctors?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, our government has shown a strong commitment, 6.5 billion commitments, to make sure that our publicly funded health care system has the resources that it needs. We are working very hard in primary care. Attachment does not mean access. We are looking at a variety of modalities in which patients can access care as they wait for attachment, and I would encourage people, if they do need access, to get on the Need a Family Practice Registry. That allows them a variety of different ways to support their health care, and we are looking at ways of increasing primary care providers in the province.

Endometriosis Awareness Month - March 28, 2023 Members Statement

Mr. Speaker, as my honourable colleague has just said, March is Endometriosis Awareness Month. I rise today to call on this House to prioritize funding for reproductive health care and endometriosis care in Nova Scotia. Reproductive health care and health care specific to people with uteruses is often not taken as seriously as it should be. This is especially the case when it comes to menstruation and the pain that comes with it. In Canada, one million people - 1 in 10 women and an unknown number of transgender and gender nonconforming people - live with endometriosis. This is a gynecological condition where tissue grows outside the uterus. Endometriosis symptoms include severe menstrual pain, chronic pelvic pain, and infertility. Many spend years trying to get an accurate diagnosis so that they can get proper treatment. Sometimes these folks are told that this excruciating pain is normal, but it is anything but. Symptoms are managed using a combination of medical and surgical care. I call on this government to prioritize the health care for people with uteruses and ensure that we have the specialists and funding necessary to address endometriosis in our province. (Applause)

Need for Midwifery Investment

SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. Nova Scotians have been asking government for years to invest in more midwifery services across the province. There is still zero service in Cape Breton and the Valley. Midwives in the region have been working on establishing an education program, which is a key piece of the puzzle, and they have asked for a study on how to make it happen. FOIPOP documents from the minister’s department show the process was moving along nicely until it was squashed at the last minute from the very top decision-makers. I can table that. Can the minister explain why her government is so resistant to supporting midwives and new parents that they won’t even undertake a simple study asked for by midwives across the region?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: Just to let the member know, we’re currently focusing on stabilizing our current midwifery services across the province. There are some issues around recruitment and retention. I also want to make note that we do have an unattached baby clinic. Certainly, the midwives in this province have been instrumental in supporting that. We are using midwives to the best of our scope, but currently, the focus is on stabilizing current midwifery services.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Perhaps we’ll have a chance to talk about retention in Estimates, but after this government tabled its budget last week, speaking of Estimates, our caucus heard from midwives and health advocates who were heartbroken that another budget has been tabled with no new investment in midwifery, including no new midwifery services in Cape Breton, where there was the highest rate of C-sections in low-risk pregnancies in the province between 2017 and 2020. C-sections are the most common kind of surgery, and midwives can help lower these rates and free up hospital resources, but we have to invest in them. If this government will spend whatever it takes to fix health care, why does it continue to refuse to implement the sensible and affordable suggestion to invest in primary care that will benefit pregnant people and free up other primary care providers in this system?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, this has been a historic budget in terms of our investment in health care- More, Faster. We certainly are committed to improving primary care access, and again, we go back to the fact that we need to stabilize our current services before we spread ourselves too thin and make the program not available to anyone.

QUESTION FOR MINISTER OF HEALTH RE: CRITICAL SUPPORT FOR PARAMEDICS

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. We are in critical need of support for and investment in our emergency response infrastructure. We are seeing paramedics having to work 12- to 14-hour shifts, and have seen response times in the Central Zone jump from eight or nine minutes just a few years ago to 27 minutes now. Today’s budget responds to this crisis with a move towards single-paramedic response units, an initiative that has faced criticism from paramedics for putting patient and paramedic safety at risk.

Can the minister explain why today’s budget is so disconnected from the emergency care crisis that Nova Scotia’s health system is facing?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: I would like to say that the SPEAR unit is actually a very innovative way to support people who don’t need emergency care. We know that there are some people who call 911 for a variety of reasons - most certainly because they need assistance. But the physicians in medical comms working with paramedics in the field have actually been able to support four out of ten individuals in community to be diverted away from the emergency room for the appropriate care (Inaudible) community. We are investing in primary health care, emergency services, workforce strategy, surgical access, cancer care, and patient flow. I don’t think any of those are disconnected from the health care of Nova Scotians.

SUSAN LEBLANC: We all know the challenges facing our province’s paramedics, and we know our emergency care system is at a breaking point. Paramedics are feeling left behind, and they are looking to the government for support to be able to continue in their profession: serving Nova Scotians. This budget saw an expansion of the More Opportunities for Skilled Trades tax rebate to certain health care workers and emergency medical care, but excluded paramedics entirely. In a time when we are facing unprecedented emergency response times, paramedic resignations and vacancies, and unsustainable working conditions, why is the government refusing to support and recognize the importance of the paramedics?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: I want to assure the member that we continue to invest in paramedics in the EHS system. We have invested $3.5 million in equipment to prevent injury. We’ve implemented double overtime for paramedics in recognition that they need to stay sometimes after their shifts. We’ve covered a benefit that was a great cost to paramedics, resulting in $2,500 more per year in their pockets. We offered them a $5,000 bonus. We have a workforce planning group that meets on a monthly basis to support paramedics. EMCI has a strategic working group made up of paramedics. We are very committed to paramedics in this province. We have actually asked the union to go back to the table so that we can - at a table - talk about the things that are important to paramedics, and give them the work-life balance they want.

When will this government support paramedics in the ways that they need?

SUSAN LEBLANC: My question is for the Minister of Health and Wellness. I want to bring the House’s attention to a growing crisis among our province’s paramedics. Numbers from the Department of Health and Wellness show that 133 paramedics left the profession in 2022 for reasons other than retirement. I can table that. This is more than double the number from just a few years earlier. Paramedics have attributed most of these numbers to chronic undercompensation in the profession. Wages in other provinces are substantially higher than in Nova Scotia. Paramedics save lives every day and are as integral to the health system as nurses and doctors. My question is: When will this government support paramedics in the ways that they need?

HON. MICHELLE THOMPSON: I, too, am very concerned about our paramedics. I have worked with paramedics for 31 years, and I greatly appreciate the way in which they have supported patients throughout Nova Scotia. We have done a number of things. We have invested $3.5 million in equipment to support them because they are off, and we know that injuries have been an issue. Recently, we covered a short-term illness benefit for them in December and put more money in their pockets. We have offered a $5,000 bonus to them. We continue to look at their scope of practice. We have a variety of different practice settings for paramedics. We have introduced an $11,500 tuition rebate for paramedics to incentivize people. (Interruption) We’re very focused on the paramedic workforce, and we will continue to work with them to find the practice setting that they want.

SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, in spite of all that, in spite of all of those things, the growing number of paramedic vacancies is a cause for concern. We hear that every paramedic in this province, at this point, has an exit strategy. The 2022 total of 255 vacancies is significantly higher than previous years and the impact of this is becoming clear, and I can table that. We’re seeing more than four times the number of late responses to emergency calls than just two years ago, and I can table that. Nova Scotians need to know that there will be emergency care available when they need it, and paramedics need to be supported to stay in the province and in their profession. Retention and compensation is a clear issue among our province’s paramedics, and this government’s failure to meaningfully address this has put Nova Scotians’ health and safety at risk. Will the minister commit to raising paramedic wages to be competitive with the rest of the country?

MICHELLE THOMPSON: Certainly, there are a number of things that we are working with. We do have a committee that has been struck with the Department of Health and Wellness, Nova Scotia Health, EMCI, the paramedics union, and the college to support their practice environment and make sure they have adequate work-life balance. In fact, we have signalled to the paramedics union that we would like to get back to the table to address their compensation as well as work-life balance concerns because their contract is up at the end of October.

MSI for Migrant Workers

Mr. Speaker, on this Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, I rise to draw attention to the unjust treatment of migrant workers - many of whom are racialized - in Nova Scotia.

In order to access our province’s public healthcare system migrant workers must have a one-year work permit. Unfortunately, contracts under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program, or SWAP, are (at the most) eight months per calendar year. This means that all workers under that program have to pay for their healthcare or rely on insurance packages negotiated by their employers.

I draw to the House’s attention Kerian Burnett, an agricultural worker from Jamaica diagnosed with cancer September of 2022 while working on a Nova Scotia strawberry farm. Ms. Burnett was fired after becoming ill and so doesn’t have access to the private health insurance that was tied to her employment. She is accumulating thousands of dollars in medical bills. No One Is Illegal Halifax/Kjipuktuk has created a Go Fund Me to help her.

I join No One is Illegal in calling on the government to extend MSI to all migrant workers.

Tribal Boxing Esker Cup

Always proud to have Tribal Boxing Club in #DartmouthNorth. This week I recognized 3 boxers and their coach for attending an international competition in Ireland:

Mr. Speaker, in mid-October, coach Bridget Stevens and three tribal boxing club boxers travelled from Mi’kma’ki to Ireland for the Esker AllFemale Box Cup, one of the largest competitions for female boxers in the world. Boxers Holly McDonald, Natteal Battiste, and Vanity Thompson represented the North End Dartmouth club, competing alongside over 300 boxers from 14 different countries. This was the first Esker All Female Box Cup after a two-year hiatus. Excitingly, Vanity Thompson, a VON licensed practical nurse by day, brought home the Best Novice Fighter of the Year award to Dartmouth North. I am in awe of the dedication, tenacity, and athleticism these boxers have demonstrated. I ask the House to join me in extending congratulations to Holly, Natteal, and Vanity, and coach Bridget on representing Dartmouth so well on an international stage, and to Vanity for being recognized as one of the best in the world. They all continue to do Dartmouth North and Nova Scotia proud.

Supporting Our Unhoused Neighbours

This week I spoke in the Nova Scotia Legislature about the struggles of some of our unhoused neighbors. Here is what I had to say:

As we sit here, my constituency office in Dartmouth North is actively supporting at least nine people who are unhoused. Some are sleeping in tents in designated parks, some are sleeping rough wherever they can, some are staying in the emergency shelter in Halifax, some in their cars, and too few are in hotels. Over half are seniors, many have serious health concerns, and some have lost custody of their children. All of them desperately want stable and safe, not to mention adequate, affordable, and healthy housing. We help them call the shelter diversion line; they tell them they’re over capacity. We help them call shelters, put them in touch with housing support workers, help them apply for emergency housing. We help them find food and gift cards. Sometimes the best we can do is help them find a tent. It is a sad state of affairs when MLA offices have to give out tents. It’s simply not good enough. We owe it to everyone who is or is at risk of becoming unhoused to come together and take urgent and substantial action on affordable housing. We can and we must do better.

Susan Leblanc Questions Houston Government on Heating Help

The income threshold and the refunds given out under the Heating Assistance Rebate Program have not changed in almost 15 years. Recently I asked the Houston government If they would raise the income threshold and the refunds under the program to allow more people to qualify in the @nslegislature. Below is our exchange:


SUSAN LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, my question is for the Premier. The Heating Assistance Rebate Program is designed to help people with the cost of heating their homes, but the income thresholds and the refunds given out under the program - between $100 and $200 - haven’t changed in almost 15 years. The price of furnace oil hit $1.98.4 cents per litre in Halifax last week and it has gone up about 30 cents since October. Dan McTeague, the President of Canadians for Affordable Energy, says; “I’m not so sure we’re not going to see incidents of people literally freezing this winter.” Will the Premier raise the income thresholds and the refunds under the Heating Assistance Rebate Program to allow more people to qualify for the program?

HON. COLTON LEBLANC: I certainly understand the hardships that Nova Scotians are feeling at the price at the pumps and when it comes to heating their homes with home heating oil. The member is correct: that program did open up earlier this week, with up to $200 for eligible Nova Scotians. We continuously look at ways to improve this program, Mr. Speaker. Again, on this side of the House, we’re very concerned about the impacts of what’s going to happen with the Liberal carbon tax and call on members opposite to join in opposing the federal carbon tax.

SUSAN LEBLANC: I thank the minister for that answer. I will say simply that if you are concerned, then you can do what I’m suggesting in this question and that is raise the threshold for this program because that is in your control. Mr. Speaker, people cannot afford their bills. A Wolfville woman contacted us to say, simply put, a 10 per cent increase in energy costs would likely leave me homeless. I could not afford another apartment. There is no amount of cutting back or efficiency that could close the gap. I’ve already made use of Efficiency Nova Scotia programs. I already use the food bank and I already keep the heat too low. I will ask again: Will the Premier or government expand the Heating Assistance Rebate Program?

COLTON LEBLANC: Mr. Speaker, we’re interested in targeted solutions and that’s why earlier this year we topped up the Heating Assistance Rebate program. All options are on the table. We’re considering what we have to do to support Nova Scotians. Improvements to the program ensure that Nova Scotians were getting the money quicker into their pockets through direct deposit. I’d like to remind the member we did create the Seniors Care Grant and there are actually provisions under that grant now - up to $250 for home heating oil - and I encourage her to remind her constituents about that.