What I'd tell you is that as chair of the social policy advisory committee, in 2009, when this issue was brought to my attention, I think our entire city council was shocked that the poorest of the poor refugees coming out of war-torn countries were required to pay back a transportation loan when they really were coming here with nothing. That is the reality.
We have had presentations by Somalian women, for example, who came with a translator to talk about how grateful they were to be in Canada and how they wanted their children to have a sense of hope for the future, but they were struggling economically. The transportation loan was an extra stressful burden in their lives.
I'm sure that as an MLA in your riding particularly, MP Kwan, you have heard these stories before, that families with high rents in B.C. are struggling just to pay the rent. They get an average for a family of four of about $750 for rent supplements, and then they have $400 for living costs, and they are expected to pay all of the other deals plus the kids' clothing.
We see growing lineups at our food banks because ends can't be met. It's not just the stress of being grateful to Canada and also often scared of the government; it's also that paying another $89 or $100 a month after 12 months to pay back their loans is taking food out of their kids' mouths. Honestly, some of them are just sending their teenage children out to work in order to meet this obligation, because they don't want to go back and they want to be good citizens.
I think any of us can understand what it must be like to start your life with a burden, with no employment opportunities at that time, and to be relying on government assistance but also to be obligated to pay the money back to that government.
I can give you an example. Peter Yuot is a young man from the Sudan who came with his two brothers. He's settling in New Westminster in an apartment. He's working two different jobs. He's back and forth trying to take care of his younger siblings, who are in high school. He has worked at several different kinds of jobs. He was forced to drop out of upgrading courses at Douglas College when he was told he wasn't eligible to apply for a student loan until his federal bills were fully covered.
Most of the immigrants and refugees I have talked to want to contribute to the community, but there are just so many barriers facing them. Really, everybody I present this issue to, whether it's Rotary Clubs, ratepayers' organizations, different committees, non-profit organizations, is shocked. They are shocked that we are asking the poorest of the poor to have this burden on their back.
One thing I know is that political people I talk to across parties agree that this is an unfair burden.
I was very excited with a new government coming in. We tried to work through the old government system, and we did take all the time to go through all the proper channels, through all the local councils in B.C. and throughout the country and through all the non-profit organizations. All the change that occurred was bad public policy that may have been put in place in the seventies. They are now considering that the needs and the high cost of living in Canada are no longer something that is really acceptable or humane, in my opinion.