Thank you. It's good to be in Yellowknife, and it's good to have Mr. Lessard back. He's a big supporter of the work we do here, and he is certainly very passionate about the issue of poverty. It's nice to have him. As a matter of fact, I want to say the only reason we're up here and doing this work is because all of the parties have agreed that this is an important priority the government should be taking a look at, and all of us are sincerely looking for answers that might get us there.
We're nearing the end of a fairly lengthy exercise. We've been at this for a year and a half to two years now. We're looking at a report we will table in the House of Commons that will have in it some action plans. As I look at it myself and try to contribute to that work, there are three things, among others, that jump out at me that we need to address in some meaningful way. One is income security, the other is housing, and then there's this notion of social inclusion, making sure people are able to participate in the education system, health care, social programs in the community, and that kind of thing. How we get there and how we do that is of course the challenge.
There was a sense over the last 10 to 15 years--I've been in public life now for close to 20 years--that somehow the market, if it's doing well, will lift all the boats. I think the Northwest Territories is an excellent example of that really not being the case. Actually, when the economy gets good up here--as it is and is projected to continue to be--there are a lot of people who fall through the cracks and aren't benefiting because the cost of living goes up. As the economy gets better, the cost of living goes up, and if wages don't keep pace, and if the cost of delivering services to people who are in difficulty increases, it becomes more and more difficult. So in my view, government really does have a major role to play in making sure we have some level of equity, justice, and fairness, and that we're keeping people in a state that has them ready to participate when the opportunity presents itself.
I've heard three things this morning that I hadn't heard so far. One is this whole issue in the north of transportation, the impact it has on both access to goods and the cost of goods. Also, not that I haven't heard of it before, but there's the notion of the working poor. It's a new revelation--across the country, actually--that people working at minimum wage full time year-round can't afford the basics. So they live in poverty. There's the suggestion that maybe if we allowed organizing labour unions more readily, then some of that might be dealt with. Then there's this notion of sleeping in shifts. I would probably want you to talk to me a bit more about that.
Given income security, housing, and social inclusion, maybe you might speak to those--any one of you--and offer any suggestions you might have for the federal government. That's what we're looking at, the federal role in a national anti-poverty strategy here, how the federal government could play a constructive, positive role on those fronts.