Thank you, Chair.
I want to speak in support of the motion. I think there are serious issues with what has happened with the ministry. We have documentation from dozens of agencies that have been, frankly, mistreated in terms of not being able to protect their clients. There is no one from the government side to offer what is going to happen to thousands of clients on March 31.
We are going to release data today that will show that big parts of where the cuts are taken from are actually underfunded on a per person basis. While everyone should be happy for anyone who got more dollars, it looks like a shuffling around for political purposes. Certainly, the intent that was there from the last government to try to close the gap that we heard about today, to make up for a shortfall, looks to have been abused. It's very serious that those cuts not go forward until full information is put forward.
If there is a response from the government's side, I think it would be very incumbent on this committee. I would like to invite the government members to support this motion, because without it there will be an incredible cloud hanging over the actions of this government. Not from any source yet has there been objective information to say that these cuts are not harming people, first of all. So thousands of people stuck in the middle of getting assistance are going to have that help removed. And this is self-help, this is a hand up, this is self reliance, and they're going to be deprived of it by the actions of this government.
It's really important, and I think it would be great if there was consensus from this committee that would send a strong statement to the government to stop this, to hold up, to provide the rationalization. If the government members are confident that there is a rationalization, that they really believe this can be justified, then there should be no reason to do this in haste.
I think you have to show respect to the people you've heard from. To do the opposite is to say, your 25 years...you've been here since 1986; those Afghan interpreters don't matter. On the one hand, you've contracted to protect Afghan interpreters and bring them to Canada, and yet the one agency that can do that in a major centre, which is a resource for all across the country, you're effectively shutting down. Can't you take a pause? Can't you say, wait a minute, there might be something wrong with this? It's not committing anybody to do anything else, except to say that we actually want to run the government well. We're not going to manipulate it for political purposes. And even the appearance of that is going to make us stop and do something better.
If the Afghan association goes out of business, where are those interpreters going to be? Where are their families going to be? No one in CIC has provided answers to that. We've talked to the regional head; we've talked to the national head. There are no contingency plans to serve people. Why would you want people on welfare? Why are you shoving them down on municipalities?
Toronto, we're going to show, has less funding per capita than almost any other part of the country for new immigrants. That city council is going to be asked to pick up the slack. Is that what this government is saying, that they want Toronto and other places to pick it up? Now the Province of B.C. is picking up $8 million. Otherwise people in B.C. would be hurt right now. I say to the members from there that's not something the government should be proud of. I don't think B.C. has a surplus.
This is really important. I think it's important for this committee. I think it's important for this Parliament to say it's time to re-examine this. That's what this says. We're not taking away the executive power. It's simply saying to them that there's sufficient reason here to rethink this. We don't know whether this is officialdom. It looks like a political thing, but if it's not and it can be explained, we need to bring the officials forward and find out what's happening, because you cannot justify this on the grounds the minister has been speaking about. It does not line up with numbers, and very soon that's going to be public information.
I hope the committee will see its way to getting ahead of that and helping this be dealt with in a way that doesn't hurt people, because that's what's going to happen. At least 78,000 people in Ontario will be harmed in 45 days if this committee doesn't act the way that Ms. Chow suggested.