Well, basically, if you recall, there was a big cleanup to be made in the government's finances in the nineties. There were deficits; deficit after deficit. I think the rationale of the government was that every program had to be cut to do its share of the hard work that had to be done.
We may agree on the principle, but some areas need to be protected. They need to make their fair share, but they also need to be protected because of the work they do, their pluses and the effect of what they're doing in the communities.
That year was a particularly tough year, and it was not because we hadn't presented good projects, because if you follow that graph, every peak of the different projects we prepared related to the community and the needs of the city. The second one here was a project that was designed to protect old people against violence and fraud. We were working with a formation program to give experience to our francophone youth. We were working with the Timmins police corps so we could register all the bicycles, because there were maybe stolen bicycles. We handmade the project. It was really linked to the needs of our community, not only the francophones.
But you know, when you work project by project, you see the bottom part coming afterwards. You can't develop projects every year, because you don't have the manpower to do so, and you don't necessarily have the money to do so. Even though we had good projects, or if we had been more efficient and had done something positive for our community, it didn't mean or wouldn't have meant that the next year we would have had more funds. The rationale of cuts simply continued. It got a bit better by the end, but still, as you noticed with the other graph, to be able to just function with the means we had in 1985, we should have gotten raises in our basic funding. And we didn't get them.
It's like the tax we developed for the First World War: once you're in a pattern, it's tough to get out of it. If you recall, income taxes on individuals and businesses were supposedly temporary. They ended up not being temporary, but being the real thing. Now they're tough to get back.
And you know, it's normal. Governments were scared of overspending, because there were spending sprees in the seventies. Every government wanted to make sure they would get the extra mile for their bucks. I agree with that, but we thought they would have recognized the efficient work we were doing with the few funds we were getting. We're exceptionally efficient, but we can't go on; people are tired. We've asked the community year after year to help us financially, but the pie is not growing bigger and all these organizations are playing for the same pie.
I don't know if I've been clear, but now we need to have a global strategy, otherwise we will miss the boat—the formation, the economic diversification, and the out-migration of our youth elsewhere in the province.