Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

McInnis: NDP’s failed agenda is delaying homes, hospitals, and major projects


Scott McInnis, MLA for Columbia River-Revelstoke, and Critic for Indigenous Relations, is calling on the NDP government to abandon the third failed version of its Heritage Conservation Act overhaul, after municipalities, builders, developers, and the business community rejected it for the third time in a row.

"This isn't a one-bill problem. It's a pattern," said McInnis. "Negotiate in secret. Consult after the fact. Ignore the pushback. We've seen it on DRIPA, on the Mineral Tenure Act, and now three times on the Heritage Act. At every step, this government has chosen secrecy over consultation, and every time it has blown up in their faces."

The latest revisions, drafted on a 30-day timeline to meet the government's own deadline, were rejected by UBCM, the Urban Development Institute, the BC Business Council, the Independent Contractors and Businesses Association, and the City of Kelowna. UBCM asked the province to pilot the changes before rolling them out. The minister said no.

"Three drafts, three rejections, same stakeholders. The problem isn't the consultation. It's the government," said McInnis.

The real cost is showing up in the projects British Columbians depend on. The City of Kelowna reports that a single archaeological find at the site of a new provincial complex care facility has already caused months of delay under the existing law, and warns the proposed changes will make those delays worse. The Urban Development Institute warned that builders are looking at "safer jurisdictions" to invest in.

McInnis said the Heritage Act file cannot be separated from the government's repeated flip-flopping on DRIPA, which has driven uncertainty across the economy. The Premier has flipped at least six times on whether to amend, suspend, defend, or appeal the Declaration Act. More than ten NDP MLAs reportedly raised concerns about their own government's handling of DRIPA in caucus.

"It feels like everything this government  touches falls apart," said McInnis. 

"Six different positions on DRIPA  in a matter of months. A Heritage Act bill rejected three times in a row. A  Mineral Tenure Act ruled inconsistent with provincial law. British Columbians  can't run a business, build a home, or plan a project when the government can't  decide what its own laws mean from one week to the next."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

NDP Government Blames Everyone but Themselves

The federal government has announced new measures to support British Columbia's forestry sector, including $65 million in funding for projects across the province. While any support is welcome, it falls far short of the level of assistance other provinces have secured for key industries. Conservative Forests Critic Ward Stamer says the NDP government needs to take responsibility for its mismanagement of B.C.’s forest industry instead of trying to pass on the blame. Despite promising to create more jobs in the forest sector, the NDP government has overseen the loss of thousands of forestry jobs and 21 mill closures which have devastated communities. “If Premier Eby spent more time addressing the regulatory issues impacting the forestry sector than he did complaining about the federal government, we would not be in the position we are now,” said Stamer. “And instead of trying to place the blame for mill closures on Donald Trump, Minister of Forests Ravi Parmar should t...

Tourists Rack Up $200M in Unpaid Health Bills While BC Patients Wait Years for Care

While British Columbians wait years for basic medical care, the NDP government has allowed non-residents to rack up $200.6 million in unpaid health bills since 2020-2021. New research from SecondStreet.org, obtained through a freedom of information request, revealed that people from outside Canada are coming to BC, receiving health services, and leaving without paying their bills.  The losses span every health region in the province. "British Columbians are not guaranteed timely access to healthcare, be it treatment or diagnostics, and this situation continues to deteriorate under the NDP," said Anna Kindy, MLA for North Island and Critic for Health. "Taxpayers are footing the bill for tourists' health treatments to the tune of over $200 million, enough to cover over 21,000 hip replacements in this province while British Columbians wait months to years for that surgery.” The research found BC has the worst record of any province in Canada examined so far. Under a dec...

NDP Finance Minister Given "F" on Report Card by Canadian Taxpayers Federation

Peter Milobar, MLA for Kamloops Centres and Official Opposition Finance Critic, released the following statement in response to the Canadian Taxpayers Federation's 2026 Finance Minister Report Card, which ranked BC Finance Minister Brenda Bailey dead last among provincial finance ministers in Canada with an overall grade of "F":  "British Columbians didn't need a report card to know things are headed in the wrong direction. They see it every time they pay their bills, try to buy a home, or watch another government deficit pile up. But now an independent national organization has confirmed that NDP Brenda Bailey is the worst-rated finance minister in Canada. "After nearly a decade of decline under this NDP government, British Columbia has become a province where people pay more, government borrows more, and families get less in return. We have some of the highest debt in the country, repeated credit downgrades, and no credible plan to get our finances back on...

Labels

Show more