Thanks very much.
I will pare my remarks in that we have such excellent witnesses that it doesn't seem appropriate for me to be quoting them as they're here in the room.
I think we know that it's been very clear that the replacement of the mandatory long-form census with the national household survey will produce usable and useful data that will meet the needs of many users, as we have seen in the Statistics Canada documents. It will not, however, provide the level of quality that would have been achieved through the mandatory long-form census.
I'm pleased to present this bill that would enshrine the taking of the mandatory long-form census every five years as well as remove the possibility of prison penalties for any of the violations.
We believe there has been some misinformation about the long-form census being added on, when indeed there was only a long-form census before 1971, and at that time they decided to make a short-form census. But before that, all of the information was collected from all of the citizens. In fact, it was the testimony of chief statistician Munir Sheikh that the Conservative Party had misrepresented his advice. I'll quote from Munir Sheikh's statement. He was at the industry committee this past summer. He said:
I want to take this opportunity to comment on a technical statistical issue which has become the subject of media discussion...the question of whether a voluntary survey can become a substitute for a mandatory census. It can not.
As a physician and former minister of state for public health, I also take great advice from people like Dr. David Mowat, the previous deputy chief public health officer for Canada, who stated that the problem with a voluntary census, with trying to elicit this detailed information from a voluntary rather than mandatory census, is that we know, from all of our experiences with a voluntary census and from the experiences of other countries, that certain categories of people will not respond proportionately to a voluntary census survey. In particular, we know that those least willing to provide information voluntarily would be those who tend to belong to socially and economically disadvantaged groups.
We can debate why this is so, but the reality is this: if we go to a voluntary census, the groups whose health and living conditions are most in jeopardy will be the most under-represented in the data.
You will hear from the witnesses, but someone who is not here is Mel Cappe, who stated that for the last 35 years people have been filling out this long-form census in one form or the other, as we have been doing for over 130 years. Now, from 2011 forward, we will not have a data point. This means that all those who filled out the form in the last 35 years did so for naught, because we will not have the next point on the series.
There has never been a case in the history of Statistics Canada where someone's personal census data has been released. All that is released is the aggregation by the census track, so they add them up. Statistics Canada has an unblemished record of keeping to themselves, privately, all of the returns of the census.
In her testimony this summer, Elisapee Sheutiapik, in her response to the questions about how intrusive or coercive the census is, explained that in the north there is a partnership with Statistics Canada, with the well-trained people who can speak Inuktitut, and that the people then willingly fill out the form because it is only by filling out the form that they can find the disparities present, where the average of 12 or 14 people live in one house.
Mr. Chairman, as you know, all the groups have come to the defence of the long-form census, including the very body set up to advise Statistics Canada. I would like also, with your support, to table some of the very interesting aggregations of the federally legislated census requirements of the 2006 long-form census, compared to the proposed national household survey, as prepared by datalibre.ca and Tracey Lauriault. I'm happy to provide that.
In closing, I just want to say that this bill actually speaks to the fact that we want taxpayers' dollars spent wisely. Group after group, all users of the data, all cities and provinces, feel that without the navigation system of a census, we will not know whether taxpayers' dollars are paying for programs that are actually making things better or worse. Turning off the navigation system allows ideologically based governments to just do what they want, and they will not be accountable for the complete waste of money for programs that are not based on the facts.
As we heard at the Assembly of First Nations meeting this summer, the census is the “count” in accountability.