Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I'm sorry, Minister, but it's a little bit mind-boggling to hear you say that halfway through the National Housing Strategy, we've achieved half of what we wanted to achieve and in five years we'll have achieved the other half. It's not that simple.
The Federal Housing Advocate, whom you yourself appointed, said that 35,000 units were built and 60,000 were renovated in the first five years. So we're a long way from 480,000.
I would very much like to hear you explain to me how you are calculating the 480,000 housing units that you mentioned, because I have no idea what you are talking about.
Let's look for solutions anyway. We have admitted that there is a crisis and that the strategy is not working, but there are some things that are working.
The Rapid Housing Initiative, or RHI, has been applauded by many housing organizations in Quebec and around the world. It is a program that allows for the rapid creation of housing, but is seriously underfunded.
Have you considered rethinking the whole strategy and redistributing the money from the programs in a different way?
For example, I don't see how the National Housing Co-Investment Fund, which creates $2,000 rental units in Montreal, helps us. The poorest people can't afford such housing. We could rethink the whole strategy, take all the money invested and put it into a program like the RHI, which forces developers to build housing quickly that people can live in quickly.
Is this an option you have considered, Minister?