Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First, I would like to congratulate you on this initiative, Ms. Davies. I think it is an extremely wise and necessary initiative at this time. I also want to thank our friends for accepting the committee's invitation and coming to testify to their experience and the great need to reinstitute a "Corvée-Habitation" to make sure the most disadvantaged people are better housed. Those are the people targeted.
Personally, I am with you wholeheartedly when you say that we have to change our approach. At the same time, a question arises. What is there to suggest that it will work this time? I am asking each of you the question because I think the question of housing is an aggravating factor.
As you already know, the committee is currently studying the entire problem of poverty. In 1989, the government made a commitment to reducing child poverty by 50% by 2000. That objective was not achieved, and nothing has changed. At that time, one of the recommended measures was to improve the housing situation. Criteria had already been proposed. For example, one question was what indicator could be used to determine that investment had to be made in housing. It was agreed that it would be when there was a vacancy rate below 3% in a municipality—decent, affordable housing units, because there may be some that are vacant but are neither affordable nor decent.
The government also committed to investing 50% of the cost in a "Corvée-Habitation" with a provincial contribution of 35% and 15% from the municipalities. Who could have access to that housing also had to be determined. It was decided that the people entitled to these units could not pay more than 30% of their income. So that didn't come out of nowhere. It was the result of a strategy that accompanied the study of the problem of poverty. We had a Canadian strategy. Nonetheless, starting in 1993, there was complete withdrawal of the contribution, or the funding, from the federal government for housing, right up to 2001. Not until 2001 did the federal government start to contribute again.
I have two questions. What is there to suggest that it can work this time and that the people who are responsible for enforcing the rules that are made will play the game by those rules? Also, do the criteria that were adopted at the time still apply today, for example, the 3% vacancy rate rule for decent, affordable housing? Of course the question is also for the people who are activists at the municipal level. Is the 15% contribution still realistic? Since I have been a municipal councillor myself and was involved in the issue of affordable housing, I know that it is very difficult to do with that amount.
You are changing the criteria when it comes to the 30% of income we all know, but I will come back to that if I have the time, Ms. Davies.
I had several questions, but I would like to know your opinion on that subject. What is there to suggest that it is going to succeed this time?