Good morning, and welcome.
This is an enjoyable conversation that we're having, and I'm certainly learning.
I'd like to follow up on this issue of the challenges that are being faced in the major urban centres versus the challenges that are faced in more rural communities or in other provinces.
Prior to becoming an MP, I worked as a consultant with the Ontario Smart Growth Initiative and we travelled all across Ontario, talking about growth issues. What became very apparent was there were two--I don't want to call them two solitudes--very different experiences.
When you're in Toronto, for example, growth was in your face. Whether you liked it or not, the onslaught was coming and the issue was how do we manage or try to steer it; versus in Sudbury, for example, in northern Ontario, they're dealing with depopulation and youth out-migration, and where do we stand and wave our arms to try to attract more people to come here. So this is not only an issue, as you say, between provinces with large cities, but even within those provinces, B.C. and Ontario.
I also agree with Ms. Foster on the notion that if the municipality decides it wants to go in this direction and it embraces the notion and welcomes people, it's a far better approach than somehow trying to require people to live in places where they don't want to live.
I'm actually wondering if you know of examples where this may work. The question I have is, is there an issue of almost critical mass in a community? For example, if someone's come here from another country, if they go to Toronto or Vancouver they know that they will find people who speak their language, who share their culture, and they can find a grocery store to buy specialty items and they can find a church, whereas if they move into a more rural area they're very much on their own.
Have there been provinces or communities that have actually been proactive in terms of saying we want to bring immigrants in, and rather than just going after one or two people we'll actually try to build a critical mass in our community so that immigrants actually want to come here because they can get some of those services that maybe they think up until now they could only get in large cities? Are there provinces or communities across the country that you think have taken this approach, and does it work?