This is a very broad question, and I thank you for it.
As I just mentioned, one of the key things is to make sure that our people are housed safely and reliably. So we have to make sure that the homeless are taken care of. We have to make sure that there's sufficient affordable housing, and we've heard a lot of talk about it for years. But we're actually delivering on these programs with another $1.4 billion in affordable housing, because there is a shortage. We recognized that in the early days; we're making a difference.
We also need to work with the voluntary sector that contributes so much. As I mentioned earlier, they deliver a lot of our programs, particularly through, with, and for Service Canada. We have a voluntary sector council that meets on a regular basis to provide us advice on just how we can do those things. We also have to make sure that the vulnerable in our communities are taken care of. That's a responsibility we have.
So it's initiatives like the employment insurance compassionate care benefit, which we expanded, that are good. These things mean that terminally ill patients are no longer restricted, as they were under the Liberal government, to having only immediate family receive the EI benefit for taking care of them. Because so many people don't have immediate family or immediate family nearby now, anyone of the patient's choosing can receive the EI benefits to provide care for the terminally ill patient.
This is part of our social commitment to Canadians. It's helping the vulnerable by making sure they have the basic standard of living and access to government services and programs. That's why we expanded our outreach for the guaranteed income supplement, because not enough people were getting access to it.
There's a whole wide range of things that help build a community, but we have to take care of the most vulnerable within it first. That's what my department is focused on doing.