Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I've got a few questions for the witnesses today on the issues of limiting choice, withholding payment, and universality. I'm still waiting for someone to make a case for this bill. We haven't seen that yet, and I'm going to try to get you to analyze these three areas of concern.
In terms of limiting choice, clause 3 states that the purpose of this act is to establish criteria and conditions that must be met before a child care transfer payment may be made. Ms. Dallaire from the CCAAC stated last Tuesday that her organization's position is that we need a range of programs. We need income supports for families, and we also need a range of quality child care programs.
My concern is that this bill could potentially take away from that. We've already heard that Mr. Dion would take away the $2.4 billion provided directly to parents under the universal child care benefit; that's disconcerting, because there are obviously people who aren't in that cookie cutter formula of day care that this would take away. It would limit choice for parents.
We'd be saying to parents that if a father or mother wanted to stay at home to provide their child care services, they don't qualify. It would limit the ability of parents to pick the child care service that they deem is most important to their children.
My larger concern with this bill is the withholding of funds for child care. We've already seen that happen provincially in the Province of Ontario; Dalton McGuinty, the Liberal Premier of Ontario, was given $97.5 million for child care, and in this year's budget the only need he said he saw was $25 million. He took $72.5 million from child care.
Now we see one government doing it. I don't want to give the tools to another government to withhold funds for child care. I struggle to see how a bill about child care.... The only thing it does is provide means to take away child care funding. It gives governments a knife to cut funding, and we saw this happen in the early 1990s when the then Liberal government cut $25 billion from social services.
We realize, obviously, that Pierre Trudeau left the country a debt of $38 billion in 1984, so they had to make cuts, but I don't want to give governments the ability to cut child care. If they're going to make cuts in the way the Liberals did, why are we going to allow them to do it in areas of social services?
What this bill says is that child care is a free target for governments. It says that if they want to pick any excuse to cut child care, they can. I don't want to see governments cutting child care. I am very proud that this government tripled the funding for child care. That's something we can be proud of, supporting child care, but we have a bill now that allows us to cut the heart out of child care if a government decides to. If the Liberals were returned and decided to make their target area child care, this bill allows it. Any government could. When am I going to hear a case, an argument, of how this is going to enhance child care, how it's going to enhance choice, how it's going to add funding?
We've already heard from Ms. Savoie, the person who put this bill forward, that there's no new funding involved in this bill--no new funding. I've heard from witnesses who seemed to be anticipating that this would mean more funding for child care. Let's be very clear--there is not a cent, and that's from the person who put this bill forward.
I'll give you one example of how a government down the road could have the means to cut child care. Ms. Savoie said it would be conditional on universality. Subclause 5(4) states the criterion of universality must be met in order for a province to receive funding. Well, in Quebec right now, which is exempt, that's 54%. About 50% in Quebec have child care services, so we have a concern now that there are going to be different interpretations of universality, and a future government could use that tool, as Paul Martin did between 1993 and 1997, to cut child care.
I found the comments by Ms. Friendly interesting. Are you concerned that this bill provides no new funding, and are you concerned that this bill provides governments with an ability to block and freeze child care funding?