Thank you so much, Madam Chair.
I was very much looking forward to this presentation today. Cindy, in particular, your reputation has preceded you as being very knowledgeable, and various people have recommended that you would be a wealth of resources for this committee.
I want to start my remarks quickly, because I want to get my head around this, and get some perspective. I always struggle with the poverty thing, placing that as the blame for difficulties and so on. I came from a low-income family, a poverty family, you might say. If we had known about the low-income cut-off as a family, it would have been so high up there it would have been totally unattainable. We didn't even know about it, mind you.
I was the oldest of five boys and one girl. There were periods of time when my dad was not employed. If my mom and dad happen to read Hansard, they might hear some of this today. I suppose that by today's standards, even our house, compared to aboriginal homes and so on, might have been at the lower end, or possibly even condemned. I know it was torn down later. But it was warm in the winter. We had food, lots of garden stuff, and so on.
The upshot is that poverty did not drive our family apart. We had very few wants provided and supplied to us; most of our needs were met, although we weren't always even sure about that.
I say that to simply drive home the point that I don't believe that poverty in and of itself is the determining factor in terms of driving families apart. It certainly wasn't in our case; in fact, it drew us together. Faith was an important part of it and education was stressed. There were those kinds of supports.
Anyhow, with that as a background--