Commons renovates to squeeze in 30 more MPs after fall election - Action News
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Politics

Commons renovates to squeeze in 30 more MPs after fall election

Parliament has to make room for 30 new MPs after the next election. Part of the plan is to replace the back rows in the House of Commons chamber with "theatre seating" at a cost of $2.75 million.

Public Works unveils plan to seat 338 MPs where 308 now sit

Parliament has to make room for 30 new MPs after the next election. Part of the plan is to replace the back rows in the House of Commons chamber with flip-up 'theatre seating.' (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

In politics, voters often want nothing more than to throw the bums out. But in Ottawathese days, the question being asked is how to squeeze even more bums into the seats in the House of Commons.

The number of ridings represented on Parliament Hill will grow in the next election. Under the governments Fair Representation Act, introduced in 2011, the House will expand by 30 seats.

Federal bureaucrats have been scratching their heads since the legislation passed, trying to draw up plans to fit 338 MPs into a chamber that now fits just 308. When Parliament is dissolved in the coming election, those plans will finally be put into action.

Nancy Chahwan, assistant deputy minister at the Department of Public Works, dropped some hints this week.

"We will be ready," Chahwan said during an appearance before a Commons Committee on Government Operations and Estimates.

"We have been working for a good period of time with the House of Commons to design additional seats."

House of Commons to install theater seating for new MPs

10 years ago
Duration 1:52
Nancy Chawan, an Assistant Deputy Minister at Public Works, tells the Government Operations Committee that new theater seating will be installed in the House of Commons to accommodate the 30 new MPs after the next Federal election.

Chahwan revealed that the two back rows of seats on both sides of the Commons will be replaced with what she calls "theatre seating."

As the name suggests, these seats will fold up to save space. There will also be more of them to cram in 30 more MPs.

Newly released photos from Public Works Canada show the new seats will be designed to blend in with the older ones. The department expects the new seats to be installed by the fall of 2015, in time for the next Parliament.

The project is expected to cost $2.75 million. Public Works says that includes the design, manufacture and installation of the new seats as well as the cost of wiring up the microphones and earpieces at MPs' desks for translation and communications.

'Can't stack us up like cordwood'

New Democrat MP Pat Martin, who is a trained carpenter, saidhe likes the design of the new seats. Martin is chair of the government operations and estimates committee. This week was the first time he had heard any details about the plan to rip out the back two rows of the Commons, he said.

"They cant stack us up like cordwood," he said after looking at photos of the new seats.

"Thirty more MPs are going to arrive. come hell or high water. So, I have to admit theyve come up with a pretty creative solution."

In the fall of 2015, 30 new MPs will enter the House of Commons forcing a new, tighter seating arrangement. (Public Works Canada)
Martin questions the cost of the project, however.

"It does seem a staggering amount of money to buy a bit of office furniture," he said.

Martin alsosees some potential drawbacks. In the current setup, mostMPs sit two-by-two. With the new design, some membersin the back rows of the Commons will be relegated to that place every air traveller tries to avoidthe middle seat.

Plus-sizeMPs test new seats

Thenew folding chairs are designed toat least be comfortable, even if aMP has to shimmy past colleagues to take a phone call or answer the call of nature. To that end, when the seats were first unveiled, five MPs who are of larger stature were invited to try them out.

"We called ourselves the Big Five," saidConservative MP Joe Preston, who was part of that trial run.

These are prototypes of new seating that will be featured in the House of Commons after the 2015 elections brings 30 new MPs. (Public Works)
Preston declined to identify his four plus-sized seatmates, but said they could all sit together in a single row of the new seats.

"These seats were incredibly good," he said.

No matter how comfortable,MPs wont be sitting in the new chairs very long. Centre Block on Parliament Hill, which is home to both the House of Commons and the Senate, is set for a major multiyear renovation thats scheduled to begin in 2018.

The plan is for the Commons to move to a temporary home in West Block while the work is being done. Public Works says it has not been determined yet whether the new theatre-style seats will be a permanent fixture inthe Commons or if they'll be torn out and replaced with something else.

The overall cost of refurbishing Parliament now stands at roughly $3 billion.

In their appearance before the Commons committee this week, Public Works officials assured the panel of sometimes skeptical MPsthatthe project is running on time and on budget.