Thank you so much, Chair.
Thank you, Ms. Houle. It's wonderful to have you here. You do very important work, as all of my colleagues have said here today.
Ms. Houle, we had Mr. Kevin Lee here. He's the chief executive officer of the Canadian Home Builders' Association. He testified, and his testimony was very powerful, in my opinion. He said:
I'm here to tell you that you'll never fix the affordable housing issue with funding alone. There are simply not enough tax dollars to go around....
If you don't...fix housing affordability, you can never fix your social housing problems. If you don't fix housing affordability, people can't buy homes. That puts pressure on the rental housing stock....
I see you nodding in agreement, so I assume that you agree with that kind of statement.
I had the chance to visit the Royal Ottawa hospital this past week. They have 240 beds. This is a mental health and research facility. This is what the manager there told me: If I have one message for you, it's that we do not have access for supportive housing. I know it sounds terrible, but ultimately, these beds don't get freed up.
When you walk by encampments and when you look at people who are truly struggling, there's an interaction there with mental illness. For our emergency rooms, such as in my community of Peterborough, this is one of the big issues. There's nowhere for people to go. It's not just housing. It's housing with supports for people who have that complexity. It's all connected.
I take your housing advocate position seriously, but there has to be an accountability factor on the federal government. You can't manage anything that you don't mention. The reality is that we keep taxing people. We keep taxing home builders. We keep putting on these costs. People aren't able to build, which opens up the housing continuum.
My question is for you as the federal housing advocate. The department spent $1.36 billion between 2019 and 2021, but the Auditor General said that the department did not know whether chronic homelessness and homelessness had increased or decreased since 2019 as a result of this investment. How do we ensure that this money—billions of dollars—is spent so that we have fewer encampments and the people who need housing are actually getting housing?