Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good morning to all the witnesses. Thank you for your presentations.
Something I would like to raise this morning is a United Way report that was just released yesterday in Toronto, looking at the issue of poverty in Toronto. I am a Toronto member of Parliament, and the level of poverty in Toronto is quite shocking. Toronto is rapidly becoming the poorest city in Canada. I represent a riding in the west end of Toronto, where we have many low-income people.
One of the issues the report signalled was the incidence of payday lenders, who have come into many poor communities, and the level of really exploitative interest rates that some of these payday lenders charge. Especially people who are working but are still poor, people, who in order to cover the gap until their paycheque comes in, will make a short-term loan at one of these payday lenders. Then they get trapped in these really high interest rate situations and begin to sink deeper and deeper into debt.
Ms. Hughes Anthony, I know your organization does not cover the payday lenders, but the banks are heavily regulated in terms of the interest rates they can charge. I wonder what your take is on the payday lenders, because it seems to me to be a regulatory gap that is leading to really serious problems with very vulnerable people.