Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
I have filed two written reports, one on March 18, 2013, and one previous to that.
Starting with the March 18 report, I want to draw some things to the committee's attention. First of all, Saskatchewan did increase its population to the tune of 54,448. If you divide that into 14 ridings, that's 3,889 people per riding. That's not a significant increase in population, and it certainly wouldn't justify a fundamental shift of what has been the history in Saskatchewan.
I want to talk a little about the history of Saskatchewan. For the most part, except for the period 1933-1965, we've had a mixed urban-rural riding. In 1965, when that mix was settled, there were then 13 ridings, and when the committee did the quotient, it was 71,168 people, a mere difference of 2,645 persons from the present quotient. When you multiply that by 13 ridings, it's a difference of 37,000. An addition of 37,000 people, or 50,000 people, does not justify a fundamental shift in how Saskatchewan is being represented.
When we look at how the commission arrived at the fundamental change, I would suggest to this committee that they were predisposed to creating urban-only ridings, as evidenced by the fact that they said the initial communications confirmed their initial thoughts that there should be urban-only ridings. Then they were not prepared to change, notwithstanding all the subsequent representations that were made essentially to keep that the same.
If you look at their report, they said the majority of the subsequent representations, after they had made up their mind as to how this would work, were opposed to changing that urban-rural mix. Yet they chose not to accept that. Why? I say because they were of the view, as they said, that the time had come to change what we'd been doing and to switch to urban-only ridings.
But what is that based on? Is that based on a population increase of 30,000? When we look at the quotients throughout Canada we find that most quotients vary to a significant degree between the provinces. We look at Alberta, the number of people in their constituencies, 107,000; Ontario, 106,000; I think it's 35,000 in P.E.I. So there's a wide range of switching. If the committee were going to do something with that small increase in population, I would suggest they could have done it by what I would call tinkering with boundaries, adding some here, taking some there, but not making a fundamental shift.
When we look at the history of Saskatchewan, we find that except for that period of 1933-1965, it's been an urban-rural mix. That's what Saskatchewan is about. That's what makes Saskatchewan unique. It hasn't got a great population, and Regina-Saskatoon is not Montreal, Vancouver, or Toronto; they can be well represented.
So when we look at the numbers—and I filed that on March 18—we see that the commission had a submission made initially by a number of political science professors from Regina and Saskatoon, who suggested that in that period of time there was a precedent for urban-only ridings. But I draw your attention to the fact that in those years, in that chart, Saskatoon had a rural portion ranging from roughly 3,000 to 4,500, and Regina itself, in 1951-52, had a population of 5,241 that moved into a rural-only riding.
What's interesting in that period is that Souris—Moose Mountain effectively had two members of Parliament, as opposed to the area I now represent. It takes me three hours to get to the northeast corner of my riding and two and a half hours to get to the southwest corner, and it takes my learned colleague here 20 minutes to cross Wascana. The issues that face Wascana or Regina and the issues that face Souris—Moose Mountain are similar. We have cities, we have housing shortages, we have newcomers that we need to deal with, we have policing issues, we have oil and gas exploration, potash, carbon capture and sequestration, and enhanced oil recovery—all the issues that might exist in Wascana and more.
What I'm saying, Mr. Chair, is that the time has not come in Saskatchewan to fundamentally change what has been happening. It's not there. The commission was dead wrong. We should not accept that.