I resigned as a member of the CFIB because I found their questions and the slant on the information they gave to ask people for answers was so right wing and so pro anti-social justice, it was unbelievable. The CFIB has found a way of selling enough memberships to give itself some clout, but I think their intellectual rigour is somewhat lacking.
As far as the downloading goes, unfortunately it's a provincial example, but I'm going to give you one. You've heard a lot about persons with mental disabilities. The City of Hamilton used to give a monthly bus pass, charged back to the province for persons with disabilities, to go and be part of the community. That monthly bus pass, if I recall correctly, was about $60.
Today that bus pass is no longer allowed. They have to take a form to their physician, the physician has to sign the form for every trip that is not work-related; it needs to be health-related. The truth of the matter is that everybody at this table is going to tell you that working is health-related.
However, be that as it may, now you're expecting people with mental disabilities to carry around pieces of paper, ask their physician to sign them every time they take the bus, and then they have to take them to the person they are going to and have that person sign the forms. Then after they've been signed, they have to go into an office where someone audits every single sheet, and then has to go back and question.
Believe me, it costs a lot more money. Instead of saving money, what the provincial government has done on this issue has just frustrated the whole idea of doing it. The municipality was prepared to subsidize it, but the rules were so tough—because we're going to make sure that no one cheats. In saving people from cheating, they've cost us far more money. That's an example.
The federal government got out of the housing business, and look what happened. Very few people are building rentals or accommodations for persons with disabilities or low incomes to help them maintain their dignity and stay part of the workforce.
There was some questioning about how I could be talking about fiscal responsibilities. Don't I have a heart? The truth is that helping people to be part of our society and contributing to it, at the end of the day, should save us money. At the end of the day, I believe those kinds of things should be worked out amongst the federal, provincial, and municipal governments without looking at whose party is in power.
The other brief point is that when we are appointing people to work on these commissions, boards, and so on—federally, municipally, and provincially—it is often the case that the persons who have helped the party the most get the appointments. That is wrong, and I can tell you a number of instances. What we have to do is not find the best person who served the party in power, but the best person to work on these issues.
Thank you.