Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
I certainly do want to thank the presenters here today. You certainly are demonstrating a compassion for the issue. I want to thank you very much for your words.
I grew up on a farm here in Ontario, just outside the Cobourg area, so I'm familiar with a little bit of what farming is and the benefits there can be. Some of your comments are very true and very realistic in regard to the benefits of being on a farm.
But I was also executor for my brother-in-law's farm, a 10,000-unit chicken farm, when he passed away. He was divorced, and there was one person working on that farm, who was virtually working on that farm alone and at barely above minimum wage.
So my concern is that the farming experience can be very good and very satisfying, and maybe therapeutic as well, but at the end of the day, when somebody leaves a prison, they may have a family to sustain, and they have to look for things. In looking at the skills of some of these other things....
For example, I was in New York City visiting some of the homeless shelters. They had a work program to reintroduce people to life skills, to the street. All of that is very important to do, but also, in going through these CORCAN farms--maybe somebody could help me with this--I'm seeing a lot of other skills here that are being developed. For example, in Alberta, there are welders. As has been mentioned before, there is manufacturing, and there are other areas. I know full well that in Alberta a welder up in Fort McMurray can make $100 an hour.
So it becomes a bit problematic when, as has been mentioned across this, right now we import farm workers, but those farm workers who are imported are minimum-wage workers. I wonder how many people can be satisfied in the long term while working at a minimum wage when they have families and responsibilities that they want to take on in the future. And how many more would like to have....
I can appreciate, Mr. Leeman, that the tickets are problematic in regard to going through and obtaining them and going through the levels of them. But perhaps that's something that could be focused on more to allow people to access the ticket levels and the additional training that's needed, so that they can move up through the ranks of journeymen, up through the ranks in the trades, and share in some of that rewarding experience financially as well, which many tradesmen in the construction industry here in Ontario--and certainly in Alberta--take part in on a regular basis.
My concern is along that line. I think we have to be aware that when people leave the prison system, part of leaving, staying out, and going into the greater community, is the rewarding as they move up through life skills and up through the wage levels and the increasing of wages. Maybe someone would care to comment.
In regard to my own background, I had a manufacturing company for some 30 years. I didn't need the welding tickets, the hard tickets, but I did need people who had some reasonable amount of skills to begin with. I could carry that through and train them more as time went on. As a matter of fact, one fellow, an aboriginal, a very best friend of mine, was able to take over a portion of the company eventually, even though he came in at minimum wage, with a very low skill level, but something that I could work with.
At one point, I'm very pleased to say, it was politely pointed out to me by the aboriginals that they outnumbered all the rest of us in my company. Many of them went on to become very successful or moderately successful, but all of them were able to go into that family-sustaining wage level that I don't think is that common coming out of a farming circumstance, unless you're able to move into farm ownership or into some other very serious end of farming.
Mr. McDermott, maybe you could comment on that for me.