This leads me to the question of access. If your intent is to still have that dedicated transfer, as you suggest, I guess the question is whether you intend to use that transfer to fund the commitment in Bill C-48 from last year, which provided $1.5 billion to enhance access to post-secondary education. In fact, Bill C-48 specifically earmarked funds “for supporting training programs and enhancing access to post-secondary education, to benefit, among others, aboriginal Canadians, an amount not exceeding $1.5 billion”.
I understand that the government committed $1 billion in its budget for infrastructure. As we indicated in our platform in the election, we had $1 billion for infrastructure for universities, which was important, but we also had a lot of money for access.
It turns out from what Minister Flaherty has now said before the finance committee this week that the $1 billion in fact is from Bill C-48, which, as I said, was supposed to be for access.
When you talk about people who are aboriginals or low-income Canadians, what I don't see here is any help for those people, especially when they need it. A tax benefit that comes six months later isn't much good for a person who is from a low-income family and who's trying to pay his tuition in September. I guess the questions are what are you doing about that, where is the $1.5 billion that was provided for in Bill C-48, and why isn't it being used for access? Will you sit down with the provincial ministers, with the finance minister, whoever else it takes, to get this moving so we have something real for access for students?