Evidence of meeting #11 for Human Resources, Skills and Social Development and the Status of Persons with Disabilities in the 39th Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was billion.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

9:50 a.m.

Bloc

Yves Lessard Bloc Chambly—Borduas, QC

It's quite amusing: Ms. Sgro says that Mr. Savage said it all. She had to think about it, but, ultimately, did he say it all?

But enough joking around. Mr. Chairman, the committee's report was tabled on January 15, 2005. It's quite recent since the government didn't actually give a response to the report until 2006. So it was barely two years ago. So it's quite current. A number of people around this table attended the committee's proceedings, including our colleague Mr. Cuzner, who moreover chaired the committee or subcommittee at that time. Those proceedings went on for a number of months. Some staff members were there, and they did a remarkable job.

Mr. Chairman, I listened closely to my colleagues. I'll start with Mr. Savage's speech, which is very symptomatic of the situation. He's entirely right when he says that the poor, those who are the least well-off, are people who don't vote. That's understandable partly because they're excluded from society. So they increasingly lose interest in society. That probably explains this lack of will on the part of certain members to take a real interest in policies concerning the poor: it brings in few votes. I'm not saying that's our colleague Mr. Savage's intention, but it's simply the reality. That's why, when we as politicians make a commitment to fight poverty, most of us don't establish any monetary measures.

I believe our colleague Mr. Savage is entirely sincere as regards the substance of the issue. However, what he says clearly reflects the political dynamic. People will commit to and politically support what is politically profitable. That's what's happening here.

As for our colleague Mr. Lake, it's the same thing; it's sidestepping the issue. He simply said we were wasting our time. I understand why we're wasting our time: we're talking about poor people! We're not necessarily talking about those who are poor right now, but rather those who will be poor if we don't deal with them, because many will lose their jobs.

Let's immediately turn to employability. That's what we're talking about right now, unless I missed something, but I don't think so. When you talk about employability, you're talking about employment access conditions and employment retention. Our colleague Mr. Gourde clearly understood this. I don't share the conclusions of his remarks, but he acknowledges that there are job losses, that this is a new situation because it's occurring on a massive scale. He acknowledges that part of the labour force in these sectors is quite old. He says that we can return them to the labour market. If we don't return them here at home, we can send them out west, if they want. He's entirely right in saying that they are free to go there. However, do they have objective conditions in which to decide whether or not to go? I would ask our colleague to think about that.

Currently, an average of 20% of all those who lose their jobs are over 55 years of age. Every time 100 jobs are lost, at least 20 workers over 55 find themselves unemployed. In the manufacturing sector, 125,000 jobs have been lost. That means that 25,000 workers over 55 have been affected.

That's not a minor point, Mr. Chairman. Is there room for them in Alberta? Are employers interested in hiring workers over 55? Mr. Gourde even mentioned 60-year-olds. Mr. Chairman, they can no doubt be hired for short periods, but an entrepreneur who wants to fill career-track positions isn't interested in hiring these people because he'll have to invest in people who will only be working for a few more years.

The biggest problem is uprooting these people. Will 20,000 or 25,000 be going out west? That's not realistic, Mr. Chairman; it's not realistic. It's mainly young people who will be moving because their roots are new. A young couple will take some of their roots with them; they'll take their children and everything. For those over 55, their children and grandchildren are already settled, their living environment is settled, and they're quite a bit less motivated to go out west. It seems to me that suggesting the contrary is also a way of avoiding the issue, Mr. Chairman.

With all due respect to our colleague Mr. Gourde, who has conducted a quite accurate analysis of the situation, the conditions really are along the lines of a conservative policy. I'm not criticizing him for that; that's his political option. He has that right in a democracy. He especially has a right to express it, but it's a laissez-faire policy. Let's let people do what they want. Let's let the communities that can get people back to work do it, even if there aren't any jobs. One hundred and eleven or 123 municipalities—I'll spare you the figures—live solely off forestry. Neighbouring towns are quite remote; you don't go there by foot; you're in the forest.

Once again, these are loopholes in an attempt to justify a policy that doesn't hold up. It's a policy that should be called what it is, a laissez-faire policy, a conservative policy; it should be called that. Let people make do; it's inevitable. We'll invest a little; we'll make a symbolic gesture.

Mr. Chairman, I'll recall what $1 billion represents for two industries across Canada. For Quebec, that means $217 million divided by two. If we make a fair division, that means $108 million per sector: forestry and manufacturing. That amount must be divided again by three, because it's spread over three years. Let me tell you that doesn't do a lot to jump-start an industry? It cost more than that to conduct studies on the high-speed train, for example. With this amount, they want to jump-start two industries and support them.

There is unanimous agreement on one thing here: this is definitely inadequate; these measures do not meet the needs. I hope the final motion will at least reflect the opposition parties' intention. But perhaps someone on the Conservative side will have a burst of clear-sightedness. I won't say conscience, because I don't want to hurt them.

I'll close on a very personal note, Mr. Chairman. Our friend Mr. Lake has raised something. When I'm on Parliament Hill, I try to be friendly and easygoing with our colleagues because I recognize that there's work to be done. It's true that I'm more gloomy when I get here. That's because I witness attempts to sidestep the issue, and that depresses me. I heard that we were wasting our time, Mr. Chairman. I wasn't sad until I heard that. When I hear that kind of thing, I say to myself it's lamentable. So we're wasting our time talking about people who are dealing with a major crisis in the manufacturing and forestry sectors? It's scandalous to hear that, when they also say that we have to improve employability. That's highly contradictory but we're also talking about that.

10 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Okay, I have Mr. Lake.

10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Lake Conservative Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont, AB

I think the—

10 a.m.

Bloc

Yves Lessard Bloc Chambly—Borduas, QC

I'd just like to make an incidental comment. Mr. Lake—particularly since he's preparing to speak; this will give him the opportunity to return to this point—raises the concern that Quebec should do its share. Quebec has invested $2 billion in the past two years to support these two sectors. Canada is investing $1 billion in both sectors across the country. I would ask our colleague to get informed about the effort Quebeckers have already made.

10 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Thank you, Mr. Lessard.

I have Mr. Lake and then Mr. Savage.

Go ahead, Mr. Lake.

10 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Lake Conservative Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont, AB

I think maybe the difference, in terms of our approach to this, is that people need hope and people need opportunities. We see that. When things are as strong as they are, I don't know that we need to keep hammering home how bad they are, whether it be for political reasons or otherwise.

Clearly, the numbers speak for themselves. Clearly, the economy is one of the strongest in the world. Clearly, the employment rates are higher than they have been in decades. These are facts. Our poverty rates are lower, despite all the talk and the efforts to make people think they are higher than they are. Again, that's not to say we don't need to do some work on that.

When we talk about wasting time, I think it is really a question of priorities. We have before us an employability study and a poverty study to do. The C.D. Howe report clearly identified that a decrease in poverty is directly correlated with an increase in employment. It seems to me that we're already on the right track in this committee in dealing with employability and poverty—the two studies we're trying to tackle right now--which would go a long way in addressing the concerns you continually bring up.

I did want to address a few of the things you talked about. I'm interested in your wording. You used the phrase and were talking about sending people to western Canada. Nobody is talking about sending anybody anywhere. Simply allowing people to go where they want is freedom of mobility in terms of where the jobs are.

There have been a couple of reports on the news recently, and quite interesting reports, about some parts of the country--I believe I saw them talk about Newfoundland and Cape Breton. Workers have actually chosen to go to Alberta to work, have made a lot of money there, and have been able to find housing. Then they've gone home and reinvested the money they've made back into their communities. And now there's a little bit of a boom in certain areas in terms of people building houses and reinvesting in their communities and in their homes. It's an example to me of the way the system should work. I'm not sure why anyone would want to stand in the way of that. Now you have people working in their home communities to build these homes and to take advantage of the results of that freedom of mobility, in a sense.

You ask if we would take workers who are 55 years old. We'll take anyone who wants to come and work right now. We need workers in Alberta. We need people working. In fact, you talk about the cost of living being so high in Alberta. One of the reasons the cost of living is so high is because we can't find people to build the housing. So it becomes kind of a self-fulfilling situation. If we had workers willing to come, people who would choose to come and use the skills they have to help build the housing, then we'd have the housing, and the cost of living wouldn't be so high for the people coming. These are things we need to look at.

Again, just coming back one more time to the targeted initiative for older workers, and I think you used the phrase “the results of Conservative policy”, I'll point to the results of Conservative policy. There was $72.5 million in the targeted initiative for older workers, and the result is that 50% of new workers to the labour force last year were over the age of 55. It clearly points out that some of these strategies are actually working. And I never hear any credit given for that. We always hear that now we need more.

If we really want to have an impact in this committee, the best thing we can do is carefully choose among the many good priorities in this committee and make the decision to focus on our employability study and make sure we get that done. Who knows when there might be an election? I think there are four colleagues in here who might know, but the rest of us are kind of at their whim.

But let's make sure, whenever that happens, that we have this employability study done. And if we're fortunate enough to avoid an election and continue to move forward, let's get going on this poverty study. Let's hear the witnesses, what they have to say about this, when we get to that point, and let's work hard to ensure that we have a second good study to follow up on the good work we've done as a committee on the employability study.

But I think we would be best to have a vote on this motion and move on to the good things we've been working on.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Thank you, Mr. Lake.

I have Mr. Savage, Ms. Sgro, and Mr. Cuzner.

Mr. Savage.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Michael Savage Liberal Dartmouth—Cole Harbour, NS

Do the members want to speak before I read the amendment?

February 7th, 2008 / 10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Rodger Cuzner Liberal Cape Breton—Canso, NS

Yes, go ahead, Judy.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Michael Savage Liberal Dartmouth—Cole Harbour, NS

I'll make the amendment once everybody has had a chance to speak.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Judy Sgro Liberal York West, ON

I'm going to just add two words. I hate wasting time and being repetitive. I have to be totally honest, but I think everybody has made their case.

If anybody who picked up the National Post this morning and looked at the financial section wants to deny that we're going to be walking ourselves into a recession.... We'd better be careful. This whole issue that Mr. Lessard is raising and that we've been raising is flagging those concerns, the fear about where we're going.

Yes, the economy is still doing very well, and that is for a lot of reasons, but we're not going to escape it when the U.S. is being as affected as it is. The first people who are seeing that are those in the forestry and manufacturing sectors. That's why we continue to raise this issue. I support the intent of Mr. Lessard's motion and know that he cares passionately about this. As a government, we need to be ahead of the curve, not behind the curve.

I think the employability study is exactly what that's all about. The poverty study is trying to get out there. The fact is, though, the recession is probably heading our way faster than any results we'll have from either one of these studies, but at least it would lay out where we need to go and how we have to deal with things.

I believe we are here to help people, and that's the role of government--not to have the laissez-faire, “I don't give a damn” attitude. I think our job and a lot of what is being done in that employability study and being done here is good work. But it is 12 minutes after 10, and I don't think we're going to get anything done on that today, so let's see if we can't move this along and do the right thing for Canadians.

I can't support Mr. Lessard's motion in its current form. I don't like being specific about amounts. I think it's the intent and the direction to tell the government that we have some serious issues, so let's do some more work, and let's be proactive in trying to deal with this. You can't send 55-year-old or 60-year-old men or women out to the west, because a lot of those jobs just aren't going to be for them. But we do need to find some way of dealing with a very difficult area, which is what the employability study ultimately is going to help with.

So if we could just get on with it, I think it would be a good idea.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Thank you, Ms. Sgro.

I have Mr. Cuzner, then the motion by Mr. Savage.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Rodger Cuzner Liberal Cape Breton—Canso, NS

Mr. Chair, I hate wasting time and being repetitive.

10:10 a.m.

Some hon. members

Oh, oh!

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Judy Sgro Liberal York West, ON

Sometimes you just have to do it.

10:10 a.m.

Liberal

Rodger Cuzner Liberal Cape Breton—Canso, NS

I want to mention two things, and it ties in with Mr. Lessard here.

We're seeing that the market is doing a much better job now. The Alberta employers are doing a much better job in accommodating workers from eastern Canada.

I spent nine years, through the late 1970s and early 1980s, back and forth to Fort McMurray. It's a place that I have a lot of time for and I still have a great number of friends there. There are a couple of different Fort McMurrays.

I have a brother who's working there now. The market is doing a tremendous job in accommodating skilled labour. They fly people out for three weeks and then they're home; it's a three-and-one rotation. They're out of the community. That money is coming back into our community, which is a positive thing. They're investing in their homes, they're buying new cars, they're buying their insurance, and their children still go to....

There's a social void, in that we don't have the coaches and they're not able to put the time in with the church group or be Boy Scout leaders, or whatever it might be. So it's different. But people in our community aren't foreign to that. We fished offshore draggers and we have many people who have military careers, but there still exists.... That's a great thing for people who are in a certain space where they're trained, they're skilled, they're able to go out there, and they have the confidence to take part in that economy.

I still have a couple of areas in my community that were devastated. They're still reeling from the downturn in the offshore fishery, which happened in the early 1990s. They haven't bounced back from that yet. They don't have the skills and they don't have the confidence.

There's one particular area in my constituency where it's been really tough dragging them over the hump. Sometimes the standard programs just can't get there. They need a little bit of something. If it's confidence or a change in attitude or the actual skills they need to support them, I still think government can play a role there.

Those communities are becoming fewer and fewer, but if we're staring down the barrel of a recession, they may become even more frequent; I don't know.

I don't disagree with what Mr. Lessard is saying at all. There are communities that need these supports, and I think government has a role to play.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Thank you, sir.

Now I'm going to move to you, Mr. Savage, if you'd like to make your amendment.

10:15 a.m.

Liberal

Michael Savage Liberal Dartmouth—Cole Harbour, NS

I'll just read the motion with my amendment in it: “That the committee recommend to the government, in view of the serious crisis in the forest and manufacturing sectors”, and then I want to add, “and the inadequate response of the government to date, that it implement without delay an improved assistance plan for the forestry and manufacturing sectors, and that the adoption of this motion be reported to the House at the earliest opportunity”. So, I remove the section between “sectors” and “and” in the second to last line.

Should I say it again?

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

Sure, one more time.

10:15 a.m.

Liberal

Michael Savage Liberal Dartmouth—Cole Harbour, NS

It would read:

That the Committee recommend to the government, in view of the serious crisis in the forestry and manufacturing sectors and the inadequate response of the government to date, that it implement without delay an improved assistance plan for the forestry and manufacturing sectors, and that the adoption of this motion be reported to the House.

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

All right. Is there any discussion on this amendment?

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

Mike Lake Conservative Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont, AB

Can you read the amendment one more time? Can you just read it as it stands now, the whole thing?

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

It reads:

That the Committee recommend to the government, in view of the serious crisis in the forestry and manufacturing sectors and the inadequate response of the government to date, that it implement without delay an improved assistance plan for the forestry and manufacturing sectors

Then the rest of that is deleted down to the last line, which says “and that the adoption of this motion be reported to the House at the earliest opportunity”.

All right. I'll just give you a chance to think about that, because Mr. Lessard will probably have something to say about that. Take your time. We've only been an hour and a half so far, so take another five minutes.

Yes, go ahead, Mr. Lessard.

10:15 a.m.

Bloc

Yves Lessard Bloc Chambly—Borduas, QC

I'd like to add a few words, Mr. Chairman. Part of the amendment has escaped me, so I'm going to reread it, and you'll tell me what's missing. It is being moved that the committee recommend to the government, in view of the serious crisis in the forestry and manufacturing sectors, that an improved assistance plan for the forestry and manufacturing industries be implemented as soon as possible and, in view of the inadequate response of the government to date, and that the adoption of this motion be reported to the House at the earliest opportunity.

Is that it? Did I translate it accurately? I felt there was a little bit—

10:15 a.m.

Conservative

The Chair Conservative Dean Allison

I would say that is essentially what was said. The only difference is that Mr. Savage added, after the first line up to the first comma, “That the Committee recommend to the government, in view of the serious crisis in the forestry and manufacturing sectors”, the words, “and the inadequate response of the government to date, that it implement without delay an improved assistance plan for the forestry and manufacturing sectors, and that the adoption of this motion be reported to the House at the earliest opportunity.”

So I would say you had the essence of it. It was just a question of where that was in place, a question of the context.

Mr. Lessard, did you want to comment? And then I have Madame Savoie.