Thank you. It's nice to be visiting.
We know that in 1995 the cap on the Canada assistance plan began the downward spiral all across this country. Whether it's the cancellation of the national housing program or the welfare rates plummeting, you don't need me to go on about the destruction that occurred.
Also during that period we saw the beginning of block funding, the social transfer and the college and universities grants being lumped together and cut by a dramatic percentage. I've often thought that if we are to move forward to talk about having conditions on the various funding transfers, even if is a national housing strategy, an anti-poverty strategy, early childhood education and care, somehow there needs to be a recreation of some kind of plan. For argument's sake, we can call it the Canada prosperity plan or Canada anti-poverty plan. Whatever we call it, it would bring back or recreate the kind of structure that we had many years ago when the federal government first created social transfers. It's really about dealing with the social safety net.
With the social safety net now mostly gone, we have no conditions attached to any of these transfers. It's close to impossible to have a discussion about any of these issues, given that it's a direct transfer and the federal government has no role to play, other than occasionally receiving a report here or there.
Is that the direction we are talking about? Minus Quebec, because Quebec is different; Quebec has no problem with block transfers. They are miles ahead on their housing, their early childhood education and care, and their anti-poverty plan. Is that what we are talking about?
Is there a proposal on housing, child care, poverty, child benefits, minimum wage, welfare rates? Have you gotten together to say, here is the kind of proposal we are looking for? It's in different pieces out there, and unless we bring them together.... We can say the national housing program needs to build affordable housing, and then the housing allowance and the rent supplements.... We know all that. How do we do it?
It's a bigger question. Does anyone care to comment?