Thank you. First I'd like to thank the committee for the opportunity to put forward our presentation this morning and welcome you to Calgary.
The Calgary and District Labour Council has approximately 30,000 members, and the Public Service Alliance of Canada has about 5,000 members in the Calgary district. In reality, we at the Calgary and District Labour Council, the voice of labour, truly try to represent the best interests of all working people in the city of Calgary, whether they have the privilege and opportunity to belong to a union or whether they're unorganized workers.
As we do our presentation today, we really feel it's about choices. We feel that taxation is about choices. I should go back and say that what we truly strive for, both the Labour Council and the PSAC, is equality in our society. That would include such things as the eradication of poverty and of child poverty. Taxation is about choices, and equality should be front and centre.
There are a lot of rosy things happening in Alberta, but a lot of things get left behind. The colleague before me talked about poverty reduction and things of that nature. I would echo a lot of those comments. A little-known fact is that what has happened in Calgary over the last couple of decades is that the gap between the rich and the poor has increased dramatically. In fact, when we go back to the tax year of 2003, Calgary became the capital of the rich—i.e., of high-income people and low-income people—and not only that, it was the highest divide ever in the history of Canada.
It has only gotten worse since. At that time, it was approximately $248,000 for the top 10% of wage earners and between $12,000 and $13,000 for the lowest 10% of wage earners. It works out to $19.10. As I said, that's the largest divide ever in the history of Canada, and it has only gotten worse since 2003.
We talk about taxation and about fairness. We need to do the things to change this, so that the divide between the low-income and high-income is reversing, not getting worse each and every year. We feel it was created over the last couple of decades not just by the federal government and its budgets, but more so by the provincial government and the local government as well—particularly the provincial government in going to a flat tax, which is great for some people but really negatively affects others.
I have to state that universality.... We don't believe in spending cuts for the rich. We have lived that. Twenty years ago I worked for the Alberta government, and the line there was, we're going to do the trickle-down effect. Well, let me tell you with absolute certainty, for the last thirty years, workers in the Calgary area have not been trickled down on. We have not received the benefits that have been portrayed by provincial and federal government leaders. The trickle-down effect on workers does not work.
We feel that taxes should not be cut, that tax cuts in the past have not benefited our society, and that in fact taxes shouldn't be cut. The money should be put into our fully funded public services.
To qualify that, they have to be universal. In public services, our priorities are a properly funded health care system, a properly funded national child care system, which I think is probably our priority, and also a national pharmacare system.
These aren't big, expensive items. We had hearings in Calgary about a month ago on the pharmacare issue. In fact, it would save the federal government money if we had a national pharmacare program.
It's things of that nature we would like to use our taxes wisely for, instead of taking tax cuts. We really and truly have to go back more to a system based on ability to pay and a fairer tax system, because flat taxes don't cut it. Tax cuts for the rich do not help anybody in our society, other than the extremely wealthy.
I want to bring people back to reality in Calgary. When I moved to Calgary in 1977, we had the highest minimum wage in Canada. It took 20 years for the Alberta government to achieve, by 1997, the lowest minimum wage in Canada. We have a lot of struggles here. It used to be that you could work for 42 hours and make the low-income cutoff line. In Calgary now, our minimum wage is $8 an hour. You would have to work 83 hours to afford a one-bedroom apartment in Calgary. If you were a parent with one kid, you would have to work 101 hours in Calgary each week just to make what it would cost to have 30% of your income going to pay for housing, for a two-bedroom.
We don't feel that the tax cuts we've seen are fair and that the tax system in Canada is fair in any way, shape, or form. We think it's totally disproportionate towards visible minorities, the aboriginal community, and women.
In fact, we find when we look at wages in Calgary.... We've developed a living wage at $12 here in our community, which I think is low as it is, but even at that we find when we look at the workers in Calgary making less than $12 an hour—and these are all our figures going back to poverty—that 60% of them are women; one-third of the disabled community in Calgary are in poverty; 50% of our recent immigrants are in poverty; one-third of our visible minorities are in poverty; 50% of one-parent families are in poverty; 20% of our children, i.e. one in five children in this city, are in poverty and in fact often go to school in the morning without food; and 25% of our elderly are in poverty.
To cap that off, we know for a fact that in the year 2007 there are almost 75,000 people in Calgary working for less than $12 an hour. These are the people who need tax relief, not the people who are setting record profits.
Just to go a little further on that, the reality is that when we look at low-income—