Thank you, Chair.
Reading this audit reminded me of an episode of one my favourite TV shows, “Yes Minister”. It's an episode where there is a hospital that has been empty for months but is nonetheless employing administrative staff, and the public servants assure the minister that it's one of the most hygienic hospitals in Britain.
In all seriousness, though, this is really horrendous stuff.
I'll read from the audit:
As the lead for Reaching Home, a program within the National Housing Strategy, Infrastructure Canada spent about $1.36 billion between 2019 and 2021—about 40% of total funding committed to the program—on preventing and reducing homelessness. However, the department did not know whether chronic homelessness and homelessness had increased or decreased since 2019 as a result of this investment.
Essentially, what the Auditor General has concluded is that the government, despite spending billions of dollars on combatting homelessness, can't measure and can't track homelessness. In many cases, it can't track it overall and certainly can't effectively know the impact of the measures it's implementing as to whether the money it's spending is actually making a difference or not and how the overall picture is changing.
One conclusion for me from this is that the government doesn't actually have a national housing strategy in any meaningful sense. They have a document called that, with aspirational goals, but they are not measuring progress towards those goals in any meaningful way, which hardly merits the term “strategy”. I think it is important that the committee hear from the minister at some point to provide some explanation for this shameful balderdash.
I guess I just want to ask this of our public servants, though. It doesn't seem to me that it should have been necessary for the Auditor General to point this out. For ministers and for public servants who were working on the national housing strategy and have been for a number of years, and presumably noticed that there was a lack of measurement or benchmarks, why did it take the Auditor General's pointing this out for you to note that maybe something was wrong here?
I'll hear from all of the departments. We'll start with Ms. Gillis at Infrastructure Canada.