Mr. Chairman, members of the Standing Committee on Finance, ladies and gentlemen, I would like to begin by conveying my greetings and once again expressing our appreciation for your interest in our cause.
On March 25, as part of your study on the retirement income security of Canadians, we had an opportunity to make you aware of our difficult living conditions. In your own words, you, the members of the Standing Committee on Finance, said that you appreciated the chance to put a human face to the questions and gather information, with a view to passing legislation that might put a stop to the widespread hemorrhaging affecting the pension funds of ordinary Canadians. For us, these discussions were an opportunity to gauge the misunderstandings and incomprehension.
Today, June 1, 2010, marks our 60th pension cut, representing a personal loss of tens of thousands of dollars, and 60 months of having to juggle with a budget that has been cut by between 30% and 58%, in order to meet our financial obligations. It is five years since we began the process of alerting governments to the gaps in the administration of private sector pension funds in cases of bankruptcy, as well as the devastating consequences for retirees and all sectors of the economy.
At the time, this was a relatively new phenomenon. Before us, only retirees from Singer and the Jeffrey Mine in Asbestos, Quebec, had suffered losses, as their pension funds had an actuarial deficit at the time their employer's company went under. So, we began working on a number of different fronts. Our analysis confirmed that only a political solution could solve our problem.
So, we went knocking on the door of our federal member of Parliament, Louis Plamondon, of the Bloc Québécois. As luck would have it, Asbestos was represented by André Bellavance, an activist from the same political party. It was therefore as a result of a joint effort that Bill C-445 was introduced in May of 2007, then introduced again in February of 2009, as C-290, An Act to amend the Income Tax Act (tax credit for loss of retirement income).
During the two-hour debate in May of 2008, at second reading, the Liberal Party and the NDP stated that they were in favour of more in-depth study of the bill, thereby giving it a chance of survival—an expression of empathy for which we are deeply grateful. The Conservative Party, however, felt it was poorly drafted and, because it might veer off in many different directions, likely to result in astronomical costs for the Treasury.
We are neither politicians nor tax experts able to ascertain the implications of its wording, no more than we have the expertise to examine it. We recognize that it is normal to want to engage in verbal jousting and flex one's muscles when one has a grip on power, but there comes a time when the cries and tears of ordinary people must be heard and a solution found to ease their suffering.
We derived no pleasure from having to drive hundreds of kilometres on this awful day. We see our appearance before you as a cruel humiliation. Having to enter the arena once again, at the end of your life, to redress a wrong is an aberration. And yet, ours was a life of work, sacrifice, contribution to this country's economic progress and foresight, because we contributed to a pension plan, with dignity and pride. Being reduced now to the level of welfare because of our income, but with no opportunity to avail ourselves of its benefits in the way of exemptions, is destroying us.
At the previous meeting, Mr. Menzies, in expressing your consternation, you stated that what Mr. St-Michel had said was extremely troubling, and that what had happened to him was terribly unfair. You added that this kind of thing should not happen. And yet, that is what happened, and we know all the reasons behind the current state of affairs: lax management, elastic legislation that favours employers, and tax benefits that allow an employer to escape his obligations, with no concrete protections for workers who bear the brunt of all the inherent risks when a plan is discontinued. Workers can easily monitor the share of wages and social benefits. However, that share of the pension plan is managed at a higher level, away from the watchful eye and control of others.
With respect to provincial and federal jurisdiction, I am sure you know that we have made the same appeal to Jean Charest's team. Five years after our indirect appeal, the Harper government now feels the need to react to this hemorrhaging. What will become of the groups that were sacrificed while the storm raged? Our two ambassadors from the Bloc Québécois are proposing to hand over Bill C-290 to the Conservative Party to amend it as it sees fit, in order to break the log jam and restore some of our dignity. Our demand, as representatives of the Regroupement des retraité(es) des Aciers Atlas, imposes no particular form of redress and can be summarized with this simple image: a blood transfusion is needed to get the patient back on his feet.
Moreover, there is a need to move quickly, because the time we have left is not unlimited. I would just remind you that our income—