Labour is calling for a day's delay to the Canterbury
Earthquake Recovery Bill so Government amendments can be
properly considered.
Parliament is sitting under urgency to pass the bill which
enacts the Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Authority (Cera)
and gives it strong powers to repair earthquake-damaged
Christchurch.
Cera will lead and co-ordinate the recovery effort in
Canterbury.
Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee said passing the
legislation under urgency was essential for the region to be
repaired as quickly and efficiently as possible.
The bill passed its second reading this morning with only the
Greens and independent MPs Hone Harawira and Chris Carter
voting against it.
Labour MP Clayton Cosgrove said Labour had provided all its
amendments to the Government early but now Parliament was
well into the committee stage of the bill (where changes get
discussed) and the Government had not yet produced its
amendments.
"What he (Mr Brownlee) hasn't provided is the Government
supplementary order paper with all the technical wording and
what he proposes to amend or do over and above what
submitters have proposed," Mr Cosgrove said.
"The difficulty is if we stick to this current timetable the
guts of the Government amendments to a bill that gives Mr
Brownlee wartime powers will have virtually no parliamentary
scrutiny.
"At the moment if we stick to the timetable agreed it will
have an hour and 20 minutes if that."
In Parliament, Mr Brownlee fobbed off requests as to when the
amendment would be tabled saying it could be 1pm, 2pm or 3pm.
Mr Cosgrove said submitters had a brief chance to submit, yet
the Government was dragging the chain.
He said a 24-hour delay would not make a difference as
Canterbury remained under a state of emergency until
Saturday.
"We don't want to come back in a few months and say 'sorry
people of Canterbury, Parliament has stuffed it up we have to
do it again.
"I would have thought he could allow another 24 hours. I am
prepared to work overtime, I know my colleagues are."
Mr Brownlee said it would enable an effective and timely
rebuilding effort by working closely with local councils and
engaging with local communities.
The bill would give it the powers it needed to relax, suspend
or extend laws and regulations.
"The bill has undergone extensive consultation with
government department legal experts and has been provided to
the opposition parties for their review," he said.
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