I don't want to interrupt, but for example, the town of Georgina.... From a recent announcement, we've learned that out of 544 applications for the federal housing accelerator fund, only 179—approximately one-third—were selected for funding. Asking municipalities to dedicate significant resources to prepare this complex application with a low chance of success would seem to not be in the public interest.
That's from my mayors. They spent an enormous amount of resources with third parties. That matters because the smaller communities that are applying for these funds from the federal government are spending enormous resources on third parties that we don't want to see municipalities spending money on. The minister talked about fees going up and taxes going up. Now we're spending huge amounts of money to apply for these applications, and the towns aren't even receiving the funding.
The mayors have all told me that when they reach out to the government for a response on this, there is no response. They just didn't qualify, but they don't tell you why you didn't qualify.
Again, in the big picture, that matters because this Liberal government has increased the public service by 40%, yet we're seeing worse outcomes for communities like mine.
I'm trying to lay the picture out here for everyone and so that my colleagues across the table understand. In York—Simcoe, which is one of the fastest-growing ridings in Canada, we are on the outside looking in.
I wonder if you could comment on this. It's another example of red tape preventing meaningful projects from being funded in our communities.