As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we feel there are two crises in Canada. There is a crisis in affordability for the most vulnerable populations. The reason for this crisis is that for the last 20 to 30 years, we as a nation have underinvested in social or community housing as an important part of our social infrastructure. We have some of the lowest rates of community housing in the G7 or the OECD.
One important part of the solution is for the federal government to work with all other levels of government, including Quebec, and the non-profit sector, to expand the social housing stock. We estimate there are about 650,000 units of social housing in Canada, and some experts feel that we need to double that to be at the G7 average. That's one part of the solution.
The national housing strategy represents an $82-billion investment in housing. Halfway through the program, we've committed about half the funding. We've repaired 130,000 units of aging social housing infrastructure and we've committed to the creation of about 60,000 additional units. As you can see, much more needs to be done, and this needs to be an all-of-society endeavour.
With respect to the second part of the crisis, this involves—