Thank you, Chair.
Good afternoon to my colleagues.
Minister, thank you so much for coming to chat with us.
First and foremost, I'm really pleased to hear you say that we do have a crisis and that the lack of action by successive governments has gotten us to where we are.
I want to make a few points. My province of New Brunswick grew by 49,000 people last year. It grew by 49,000 people in the 29 years before that. That is something that is a good thing for growth, but obviously, when you bring in 50,000 people in one year, that is going to put a lot of pressure on housing stock.
In my province, we have a Conservative premier who boasts about having a billion-dollar surplus this year, yet what he has invested in housing wouldn't fill three streets. The lack of focus is unbelievable. I will say, too, Minister, before I get to my question, that I came in in 2015. I'm happy to be here. In 2016 I did some research on previous policies that the federal government before us had enacted, and what I got back was a blank sheet. I was shocked. I said, “Where are all the policies that the previous government enacted federally?” and there weren't any. I was shocked to see that.
I congratulate you. I think we've shown a lot of leadership by stepping up and recognizing that we need all levels of government to solve this crisis. We need the federal government. We need the provincial government. We need the municipal government, and let's not forget the private sector.
Minister, can you just talk about the importance of having all three levels of government and the private sector working together, and what we are doing to make that happen? Thank you.