Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Off the top here, just before I get to a couple of significant areas I wanted to address that haven't been touched on per se--and at least one of them hasn't been touched on at all--and just so we don't entirely reinvent the wheel, I'll say that I know the good witnesses at our table today are probably aware of all the stuff that has been done and that has been attempted over time.
I'm going to read something from Geoff Gillard of the Canadian Housing and Renewal Association. Back in the spring of this year, Geoff said: The recent 5-year renewal of the three key federal housing and homelessness programs ended more than a decade of short-term...housing funding announcements. This was a welcome shift....
Maybe it's not a 40-year plan, but I dare say that in this area most of us might agree that's a little far out the other side. We don't know what the demographics are--the birth rates and all those kinds of things. Projections could be made, but if we plan too far out then we have problems.
Maybe five years isn't quite long enough, but it's better than a couple of years or a few years at a time and that kind of thing. This gentleman, among others, was at least pleased at the recent five-year renewal.
I don't like to duplicate and overlap a lot of things, as sometimes there's a waste of efficiency that way, too, so the other thing I'd comment on here with respect to the bill is that as it's coming into force it would require the minister to “convene a conference” with provincial ministers, representatives of municipalities, and aboriginal communities in order to establish the national housing strategy.
I think it's been inferred, and maybe it's the elephant in the room here, but it's a reality that provinces and territories might be unlikely to participate in a conference with other parties. We don't know that for sure, but we know that a definite jurisdictional struggle of some sort might go on.
I'll give you an example in regard to my own riding of Saskatoon--Wanuskewin. I've just come from a huge funding announcement event there last weekend. It was significant. Several hundreds of thousands of dollars went into this. It's among Mennonite churches, for example. If you know Mennonite people, you know these folks know how to lever the dollars. They brought dollars in from their own provincial...and man, they got value for the dollar there.
In respect to what more needs to be done for the senior population, we've already had discussions with those fine people, and they are running into an issue. I am from Saskatchewan, so I'm not slighting the Saskatchewan government, but the present reality in being able to work it out in terms of advancing some of those unique housing modes that they want to do while still retaining some control of significant dollars from their contributing donor churches and so on..... They don't have that option, so we have a real rub there in terms of moving it ahead. In that situation, federal moneys won't come in until the province agrees, obviously, yet we have the provincial jurisdictional issue in which they say, “No, we will then take total control of who comes into those housing situations, even though significant moneys from you folks have come in”.
You may want to comment later. That was just to highlight or point out the very huge problem in terms of the jurisdictional struggle as we're trying to help those people resolve this thing. It's not in my court or my purview; I'd like to see it taken care of, but it's for the province to deal with, and I hope it does.
As you know, there is already an established federal-provincial-territorial process in place, with rotating chairs. In addition to that, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and Human Resources and Skills Development Canada are presently conducting consultations with provinces, territories, municipalities, and stakeholders--including the private sector and aboriginal organizations, as mentioned here--in order to seek their views on how current approaches to housing could be improved to better meet the needs of Canadians.
That input goes back to the government from the established federal-provincial-territorial process. I say that simply because maybe some adjustments need to be made there. Maybe there are merits to certain aspects of the bill, but we don't need to necessarily entirely reinvent the wheel, either, when we have a process in place that the provinces, territories, and federal governments accept and when we have the input of CMHC and HRSDC as well. That's the backdrop for it.
I do want to ask something significant. I don't know if any of you at the table have backgrounds in economics or accounting or banking. That might be the way to put it. This bill says, in subclause 3(2), “The national housing strategy shall provide financial assistance, including financing and credit without discrimination, for those who are otherwise unable to afford rental housing”.
My question is to all, or to as many as we have time to hear. Is it really a good idea to provide financing and credit to individuals who would otherwise not be eligible for such financing, particularly in respect of the good remarks that Michael made on the bubble that burst in the United States? Is this a good recipe? Is this a good thing to be entrenching right in the bill?
If this became law, the provision of credit without discrimination to all Canadians would introduce a significant financial risk to the Government of Canada. The Government of Canada, the federal government, would be liable for those defaulted loans, as I guess the U.S. was as well in that scenario, to some degree. The Government of Canada, then, being the guarantor, would either have to change conditions for our banks and lenders or provide the backup guarantee. This bill doesn't provide any threshold or test to determine how to assess whether an individual cannot otherwise afford rental housing.
I guess that's my basic question. Is it a good idea to provide financing and credit to individuals who would otherwise not be eligible for financing, with the very considerable risk involved in credit without discrimination? Where does it lead us?