Thank you.
That leads to the disconnect. We're talking about how this Liberal government, after nine years, is not listening to rural residents. It's like you've checked out. We know the shopping cart is now the most expensive vehicle in Canada to operate. I think all members on this committee know that.
Going back to doing the right thing on the environment, the northern part of my riding is on propane. Think about Canada. Think about the money we send to the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. My residents in York—Simcoe come to me and say, “Scot, I can't even get natural gas to my barn because I'm stuck on propane. I want to lower my costs and hire more people, but I can't even get natural gas lines.”
To my honourable colleague from Vaughan—Woodbridge, we talk about solutions. This is one solution. I think we can all agree in the room—I hope we can—that natural gas can be a bridge fuel, an alternative, in the short term so that people aren't spending double the money and creating double the emissions with propane. In York—Simcoe, though, we can't even get our natural gas lines.
The other part of that is hydro. I have farmers who want to start small businesses and small canning operations. We are stuck with old, phase-one infrastructure.
These are the things affecting my residents of York—Simcoe, who I'm here to stand up for.
Coming back to the budget, I have to speak about my hometown of Georgina. Walking through this, we're talking about the rural top-up that we're being denied. We're talking about old infrastructure. That's not happening. I haven't even gotten to the Lake Simcoe cleanup fund. That's a whole other apple cart, so to speak. That's a promise the Deputy Prime Minister made in the 2019 election. She stood on the shores of Lake Simcoe and promised $40 million in the budget. Think about that. After nine years, we are still waiting.
We're talking about action on the environment, but let's talk about another thing: the housing accelerator fund.
I think my colleague from Vaughan—Woodbridge knows I am a York Region MP. I'm one of two Conservative MPs in the York Region. It was interesting to me, as I was on the infrastructure committee after I was first elected, that the riding of York—Simcoe received less money than any Liberal riding in all of the York Region. We'll get to that.
I'm going to read this letter of March 5 from one of my mayors. I told her I would read it. She wrote:
To Scot Davidson,
On Feb. 28, 2024, the Town of Georgina was notified that our application to the Housing Accelerator Fund was declined. Town staff, including senior leadership, spent considerable time on the application over the summer of 2023, received guidance from CMHC on the merits of our application, and scored highly based on the application guidelines. Like many other municipalities, the Town of Georgina is a lean organization facing many priorities and challenges.
From a recent announcement, we learned that there were 544 applications to the federal Housing Accelerator Fund and only 179...were selected for funding. Asking municipalities to dedicate significant resources to prepare this complex application [littered with red tape] with a low chance of success would seem not to be in the best public interest.
We have seen recent announcements about municipalities of comparable size to Georgina receiving funding, and noticed many similarities between the actions they propose and the ones we proposed in our application. Based on the publicly available data, we believe our application was exceptionally competitive and deserving of funding.
At the same time, CMHC has let us know that they are not allowed to discuss the individual scores or assessment details of our application, preventing us from understanding where our application fell short. Without this information, we are unable to conclude whether the funding decision was entirely merit-based. Without this funding, our municipality will have to find other sources of funding to enable the provision of this critical housing supply, placing a further financial burden on our local government.
I would like to ask the federal government to respond as to how they will be supporting municipalities that submitted competitive applications but did not receive funding. I am also requesting a meeting with the Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities to discuss our concerns.
Thank you,
Margaret Quirk
Mayor of the Town of Georgina
When I received that letter, was I surprised? Unfortunately, no, but I think what would be surprising to the members of this committee and to me, being a York Region MP.... I'd ask you this, Mr. Chair, and I'm sure you can't answer, not because you don't want to, but because it's probably not permitted, as I'm a first-timer on this committee. Do you know, as per Stats Canada, the fastest-growing area in all of Canada? My colleague from Vaughan—Woodbridge, I'm sure, would want to suggest that it is Vaughan, but shockingly—and probably shockingly to everyone in this committee—it is East Gwillimbury in my riding.
I received this letter from the Town of Georgina on the housing accelerator fund. I think it's important for people at this committee to understand where we are in Canada with infrastructure and waste water.
I have a nursing home in York—Simcoe that is tired and aged. The province has stepped up with operators to build a new nursing home. They have to transfer the water and sewer allocations from the existing nursing home to the new nursing home, and that old nursing home is going to sit vacant. There's nothing we can do because there are no more water and sewer allocations. Why does that trouble people in my community? When they see the federal government paying exorbitant amounts of interest because of their failure to secure low interest rates, there is a day of reckoning that comes. People in my community know that the budget doesn't balance itself.
To recap where we are right now on the rule top-up, propane and aged hydro infrastructure, we can look at the housing accelerator fund. I think members of this committee are starting to get the picture that the people in York—Simcoe are on the outside looking in. Shockingly enough—and I'm sure it will be shocking to my colleague, the member for Vaughan—Woodbridge, because it was shocking to me—the mayor of East Gwillimbury, following the mayor of Georgina, applied for the housing accelerator fund.