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Constituency Office
40 Centennial Parkway North, Unit 2
Hamilton, ON, L8E 1H6
Telephone: 905-662-4763
Fax: 905-662-2285

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137 West Block, House Of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
Telephone: 613-992-6535
Fax: 613-992-7764

Marston.W@parl.gc.ca

The Economy


Mon 11 Feb 2008

MARSTON CALLS ON TORIES TO CAP CREDIT CARD RATES
NDP challenges Conservatives to rein in big banks and apply a 5 percent above prime cap

Ottawa – In the House of Commons today, Wayne Marston, MP (Hamilton East – Stoney Creek) called on Harper’s Conservatives to cap credit card rates to a floating 5% above prime rate. Mr. Marston made the following statement:

“The NDP wants this government to show leadership and fairness by taking action for working and middle-class families.

Hard working Canadians deserve protection as consumers. The Government should be capping credit card interest rates to no more than 5 percent above prime.

Here are 5 good reasons why credit card rates and the banks should be reined in:

1 Today’s rates are outrageous. 19 percent or higher interest unfairly hurts working families.

2 Consumer debt is six times higher than the 1980’s at 300 billion and total household debt, driven by high-interest debt, is over 1 trillion dollars.

3 Families who used to be able to save 15 to 20 percent of their income, now can only save an average of 2 percent – that won’t be enough to retire on.

4 The high cost for medications, training and childcare are driving up the costs of essential items, forcing more hard-working families into debt

5 Big banks are making record profits, heading for another 20 billion dollar year as they gouge consumers

The Conservative Government has given massive corporate tax cuts that have benefited the big banks. The NDP wants to see the big banks reined in with capped credit card interest rates so that hard-working families can meet the needs of their families today and in the future.


Fri 18 Jan 2008

Budget 2008: Harper should think green to create growth
WAYNE MARSTON

Stephen Harper hasn't decided when his Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is going to hand down his budget, but already, there is rampant speculation and even a few promises about what will and won't be in it.

As your Member of Parliament, I try to stay away from speculation as much as possible and stick to what I know. I know we need investment in our community and to find ways to keep our jobs and to create more lasting jobs.

Statistics Canada's most recent manufacturing employment figures show 33,000 manufacturing jobs were lost last December alone. Tallied up, 2007 was worse than 2006 with a 6.2 per cent decline adding up to almost 350,000 manufacturing jobs lost since November 2002.

If Mr. Harper or Mr. Flaherty think a plan for this sector should look like Mr. Harper's recent forestry sector plan, which amounts to no more than showing up with a cheque after a mill or plant has been closed and the jobs have disappeared, they have misunderstood the potential of the manufacturing industry as much as they have the forestry sector.

But what can be done? If you looked around lately, a lot of people are talking about "greening" our economy and we in the NDP are talking about green-collar jobs. Green-collar jobs result from creating demand in existing sectors, while using many of the same skilled people in work that also contributes to the goal of reducing our ecological footprint.

Take for example our steel industry. If we were to look at Germany, where supports to the wind sector have increased demand for steel, because a lot of steel is needed to make wind turbines, we have an innovative way to think green and create jobs. Germany's wind sector employs 40,000 people, second only to its auto sector.

If Mr. Harper's budget were to support the wind energy sector so that it became more viable and widespread, in Steeltown we could talk about making the same product, perhaps with some modifications, for a new sector. And that would mean creating green collar jobs in our community.

Manufacturing jobs are disappearing in our community and others across the country. This affects everything from school enrolment to retail spending and has huge significance to local economies like ours, as well as our national economy. It is time for the federal budget to be about the manufacturing sector and the jobs depended on by so many in our community.

Published in the Stoney Creek News


Fri 7 Dec 2007

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

MARSTON CALLS FOR STRATEGY FOR NEWLY UNEMPLOYED MANUFACTURING WORKERS
Statscan reports over 16,000 newly unemployed manufacturing workers in November

Ottawa – Wayne Marston, MP (Hamilton East – Stoney Creek) has been hammering the Conservative government in the House of Commons this week to develop a jobs strategy for manufacturing workers.

“Statistics Canada reported today that in November alone, over 16,000 jobs were lost in the manufacturing sector. During Question Period and in a speech last night in the House, I questioned the Conservative government why it is that in almost 2 years of power there is still no Canadian manufacturing jobs strategy.” said Marston.

Wayne Marston and the NDP are promoting a Jobs Strategy for the Manufacturing sector that would include a comprehensive strategy on keeping and promoting new jobs in the sector, improve EI eligibility for workers and families in transition and to protect workers pensions in cases of bankruptcy and closures.

In a speech to the House of Commons on Bill C -411 on December 6th, Wayne Marston called on the need for market based definitions to protect Canadian jobs from foreign dumping such as has been seen in the steel market.

“Conservatives scripted answers are cold comfort to the families of the 16,000 workers who lost their jobs in November and the almost 100,000 in the last year. We all know the damage to our local economy and individual households of these job losses. We also have known for years that job loss and plant closures have serious health consequences for workers and their families.” commented Marston.

“This Government needs a plan for the manufacturing sector and for newly unemployed workers and the time to act is now.”

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Fri 7 Dec 2007

r. Wayne Marston (Hamilton East—Stoney Creek, NDP):

Mr. Speaker, the provincial government in Ontario established a council to advise MPPs on manufacturing issues. It is undoubtedly a weak response. What the sector needs is a plan, not more advisement.

However, it is at least a step forward. Since taking power two years ago, the Conservative government has not moved with the times of increasing dollar values and continued cuts in the manufacturing sector.

When is the government going to take seriously the plight of workers and the communities that depend on those jobs and establish a plan for these manufacturing industry workers and their communities?

Mr. Colin Carrie (Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Industry, CPC):

Mr. Speaker, I do not know where this NDP member has been, but last year the industry committee did an unprecedented report which came up with 22 recommendations that his critic actually supported. The interesting thing with the NDP is that in our budget we addressed 21 out of 22 of these recommendations and the member voted against it.

We lowered corporate income tax rates. He voted against it. We increased the capital cost allowance writeoff. He voted against it. We cut the paper burden on businesses. He voted against it.

There was $800 million per year for education, $1.3 billion for research--

Wayne Marston (Hamilton East—Stoney Creek, NDP):

Mr. Speaker, those scripted answers from the minister will be of little consolation to the families and workers who have lost their jobs.

Statistics Canada today says that 16,000 people lost their jobs in November. Study after study has shown the negative impacts of job loss and plant closures on workers and their families.

If the Conservatives will not help save the manufacturing sector with a comprehensive jobs strategy, will they commit to immediate and serious investments to help unemployed workers and their families?
Mr. Colin Carrie (Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Industry, CPC):

Mr. Speaker, all the NDP has are strategies. I hear they even strategize on whether or not to shave off their leader's moustache.

The manufacturing sector does not need strategies. It needs action. That is exactly what we have given it. We have lowered taxes by $1.3 billion. We have increased the capital cost allowance. We have responded positively to 21 out of 22 recommendations in the INDU report. We are taking action, which is something the NDP will never do.


Thu 6 Dec 2007

Speech on Bill C-411 - anti-dumping measures
FROM HANSARD

Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak to Bill C-411. I will begin by saying that we, the NDP members of the House, will be supporting the bill when it comes to a vote.

My community of Hamilton has long been one of the central manufacturing areas for all of Canada. For generations, men and women from my riding of Hamilton East—Stoney Creek have filled the plants of Hamilton, working hard to keep Hamilton's industrial engine turning. Lately, far too many of those hard-working Canadians have been put out of work. It is not just a Hamilton trend, but that trend plays across every province of Canada in all core manufacturing areas, with the greatest damage happening in Quebec, Ontario and B.C.

Clearly, the manufacturing sector must not be ignored any longer. Measures such as those contained in Bill C-411 are needed now to help prevent the further dumping of cheap foreign goods into Canada and the loss of manufacturing jobs that will absolutely follow.

As well, it is vitally important to the well-being of our country that Canadians start to buy Canadian. Cross-border shopping feels like an adventure to some, but I would ask Canadians to pause and take a moment to take into account the effect it has on their economy and their neighbours' livelihoods.

Not all is lost, though, because these days I am hearing more and more constituents of Hamilton East—Stoney Creek talk about buying Canadian to save Canadian jobs. Sadly, this has not begun to happen because of the leadership of the Conservative government. No, it is mainly as a result of a growing understanding of the impact that cross-border shopping has been having on our economy.

As well, everyone who is watching the media will know that the fear of toxins coming into North America imported from other countries, particularly from China, has begun to spur a buy Canadian attitude, so in a roundabout way, the common sense of Canadians is beginning to take hold and they are fighting back. We could use more of their common sense in this place. Then the members just might stop performing for the cameras and start performing for Canadians.

One point I want to be clear on, which will come as no surprise to government members, is that the NDP looks at the marketplace much differently than other political parties do. For instance, we do not believe health care should be a part of the open market, or we will wind up like the U.S. spending double per capita on health care than we do now in Canada and getting worse results.

On the other hand, we also believe that there are areas that need to be protected by the public sector. There is a role as well for the private sector to play here too. We believe that Canada must have market based definitions to protect Canadian jobs from foreign dumping.

The steel industry in Hamilton is a case in which the steel companies are very much at the mercy of foreign companies which dump their excess inferior steel into our market, undercutting our very best steel producers.

Going back to the broader manufacturing crisis, an example of the failings of both the Liberal and Conservative governments over the past five years is how they stood by and watched over 50,000 textile and clothing jobs simply disappear. After listening to the Conservatives during this particular debate and others when they so glibly shout out “a promise made, a promise kept”, today that rings hollow in the face of the deepening crisis and job loss in the manufacturing sector.

The record shows that the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of International Trade while in opposition said:
A Conservative government would stand up for Canadian workers and work proactively through international trade policies to ensure Canada competes on a level playing field.

Fine words, but the Conservatives simply have not got the job done on this file.

Today we have literally thousands of workers from Hamilton's manufacturing plants waiting for their federal government to do something, anything, to protect their jobs. The only standing up for Canadian workers that the current government has done to date, and the last government for that matter, is to stand up and wave goodbye to the jobs.

If I am starting to sound a little angry, it is because I am. In point of fact, Hamilton lost 11,000 jobs just in the last year. Between 2002 and 2007, close to 300,000 manufacturing jobs have been lost across the country. Then people wonder why poverty is on the rise. That is 300,000 breadwinners who have gone from well paying jobs to where?

I will wait for it, because of all its best lines about growth and the McJobs that the government will claim to have created with its policies. If we look around, older workers, and so many in manufacturing are older workers, get retrained and then they are handed a spatula and turned loose.

Canadian families are struggling. They have to do more and more with so much less money. The value of their earnings has dropped significantly and they have watched their buying power lose ground since 1989. Remember 1989, that was the year of the free trade agreement. It was free all right. It freed many Canadians of their jobs.

For close to 20 years, I have watched my friends and my neighbours lose their jobs, lose their homes and lose hope while they waited for the real intervention from their federal government to protect them. They cannot wait any longer. The government has a responsibility to act now. Stop the spin, stop the BS and put together a real and comprehensive manufacturing strategy, a strategy devoid of partisanship. Come together with business and labour and the best economic strategists in the country and do it now.


Wed 31 Oct 2007

ATTENTION FLEET MANAGERS! Natural Resources Canada and Environment Hamilton would like to invite you to attend a 1 day workshop on November 22nd. The workshop will help you develop a fuel management plan and implement it for your fleet.

For more information on Fuel Management 101, please click on the file below.


Fri 26 Oct 2007

Marston says Liberals failed to answer the call of duty
Cornwall Standard-Freeholder (ON) Fri 26 Oct 2007
Byline: Trevor Pritchard

The federal Liberals neglected their duty as Canada's official opposition when they abstained from voting on Prime Minister Stephen Harper's throne speech, a Hamilton MP said Thursday.

Hamilton East-Stoney Creek NDP MP Wayne Marston spoke last night to about 200 union members who have been attending the Canadian Labour Congress's week- long Autumn School at the Nav Canada Conference Centre.

While the country doesn't want to go to the polls any time soon, Harper's throne speech - which called for an extension of Canada's Afghanistan mission to 2001 and rebuffed the Kyoto Protocol - was too drastic for the NDP to support, said Marston.

With the Liberals abstaining, Wednesday's speech, which was a confidence motion, easily passed 126 to 79.

The Bloc Quebecois and the NDP both voted unanimously against it, and NDP leader Jack Layton has begun calling his party Canada's "effective opposition" - a jab at Liberal leader Stephane Dion's decision to sit out the vote.

"We don't want an election, but we also have principles that say we can't agree with that throne speech," said Marston.

"We were prepared to say no. And you saw the Liberals sit on their hands."

A former labour council president, Marston acknowledged the longstanding support the NDP has had from the labour movement, telling the crowd the party "couldn't get elected in 100 years without you."

Born in the small town of Plaster Rock, N.B., Marston explained how many of his friends from his youth had moved to Ontario after jobs were cut at the local mill.

He lamented that the same cutbacks were now happening to Ontario's manufacturing industry, with those jobs being replaced by lower-paying jobs in the service sector.

"The lives of people, they should be getting better," said Marston.
"They should be growing."

With recent polls showing the Liberals dipping below 30 per cent support across Canada, Marston pumped up those on hand with a call to "get rid of some of the ladies and gentlemen in the Liberal party."

He encouraged anyone with an appetite for activism to get involved in politics.

"You are at the core of activism. And activism is at the core of what is needed to save our country," said Marston. "When you come together you're a powerful force."


Thu 27 Sep 2007

MARSTON APPOINTED NDP STEEL CRITIC
Federal NDP shadow cabinet announced today

Ottawa – Hamilton East-Stoney Creek MP Wayne Marston saw his critic responsibilities increase today as the Leader of Canada’s NDP, Jack Layton, named him Steel Critic (Deputy Critic of Industry for Steel). Mr. Marston retains his critic areas of Human Rights, Multiculturalism and Sport.

“I have worked with steelworkers in our community for decades and many of them have supported me as their Member of Parliament. I’m looking forward to working with them in this new capacity as well as the broader group of stakeholders in Canada’s steel industry.” commented Marston on the appointment.

Mr Marston acknowledged that the industry is facing many difficulties at this time. Historically, Canada’s manufacturing sector has generated quality jobs—jobs paying 28% better than average. But in the first six months of 2007, Canada lost 75,700 more manufacturing jobs—bringing us to nearly 300,000 jobs lost since late 2002.

“When Stephen Harper boasts about Canada’s lower unemployment rate, he carefully avoids talking about the quality of jobs available. But I know that steelworkers in Hamilton and elsewhere aren’t fooled: good-paying jobs in this industry are being replaced by insecure service work and self-employment.” added Marston.

“It’s time for a national strategy for our manufacturing sector. A national strategy that encompasses energy prices, infrastructure and unfair trade deals. A national strategy that puts working families first so that at a time that we are supposedly prospering we keep and create good jobs with pensions and benefits instead of losing them.”

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Sat 15 Sep 2007

In September of 2007 I sent the document linked below. I wanted to be in touch about a touching family reunification story in Hamilton East-Stoney Creek as well as share some information about the gap between corporate profits and wages.


Fri 15 Jun 2007

In June 2007, I sent the document linked below because I wanted to be in touch on a couple of important issues like the so-called Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) being negotiated between Canada, the U.S. and Mexico and highlight some of the community events and work that was going on at the time.