I'm worried about transparency to parliamentarians, because our job is to hold you to account, Minister, to make sure the money is actually flowing to the communities. I'm concerned, because I'm not getting the answers around that.
Now, for community mental health services, harm reduction, support counselling, psychotherapy and other services, we know they remain out of the reach of millions of Canadians. Will we see meaningful investments specifically in these areas in the budget next week?
I want to quickly read an email I got from a constituent of mine. He wrote, “Our adult son unfortunately has become addicted to fentanyl. We have him in a treatment centre. It's very expensive. We've borrowed money from a family member to finance his recovery.” He may have to sell his house to pay for it. He asks if there's any financial help that might be available to him. We know the answer: No.
If his son broke his neck, he'd be getting covered. The universal health care system doesn't protect him. What do you have to say to his father? We know that Portugal went on a renaissance in terms of developing treatment on demand, so that they truly have a universal health care system now. When will we have parity between mental and physical health in this country? What do you have to say to this son's father? When are we going to have treatment for this young man? What a decision he has to make: whether he's going save his son's life or abandon him.