Thanks, Chair.
Chair, before I pose questions to our panellists today, I would like to move a motion that I put on notice on June 6. I'll read it into the record:
That, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), the committee undertake a study examining the value of regional development agencies in Canada and their impact to the quality of life in Canadian cities and communities; that the committee invite witnesses with specific knowledge of the work of the regional development agencies; that the committee allocate a minimum of seven meetings to this study; that the committee report its findings to the House; and that pursuant to Standing Order 109, the government table a comprehensive response.
Mr. Chair, if I could speak to that motion, first I want to say that the importance of the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency in Atlantic Canada is immense. I was astonished to learn that John Williamson, a Conservative colleague, said, and I quote, “no Atlantic MP is prepared to make the tough but necessary case that regional development agencies hurt the development of local economies in the long run.”
Not only did Mr. Williamson write this, but Conservatives last December repeatedly attempted to cut RDA funding to reduce funding of almost every RDA program to $25,000. Now, Mr. Chair, that to me is astonishing and appalling. When I think about the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, which was established back in 1987, and the amount of work it's done in the Atlantic provinces, I could speak to this for hours.
I certainly can speak about Newfoundland and Labrador and what it's meant. When this agency was introduced, it was done because there was a very difficult and sluggish economy in Atlantic Canada. Things were really tough. This organization has achieved immense benefit, brought immense benefit to Atlantic Canada, and the other RDAs that have been structured since are really modelled after what the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency has done and achieved.
When I think about economic value and the important part that it brings to the life of small businesses and communities in rural Atlantic Canada, I could talk about the Burin Peninsula, for example, and the amount of work and the dollars that have gone in there to establish Grieg's sea farms as a major employer and contributor to the economy. I could talk about the Bonavista Peninsula and the work it's done for providing support to establish a UNESCO geopark designation that is supporting 25 communities and driving tourism in a very positive direction. I could talk about the money and the funding and support it's provided to municipalities in Newfoundland and Labrador, many of them very small places that depend heavily on ACOA, as we commonly reference that organization, and the kind of work that it supports for small towns in rural Newfoundland and Labrador and rural Atlantic Canada. We could talk about the provincial organizations like the Newfoundland and Labrador Snowmobile Federation, which is a major winter tourism driver, or talk about Hospitality Newfoundland and Labrador, a major tourism organization, and we can also talk about the positive impact it's had for the fishing industry and other industries in terms of export trade and the kinds of things that are happening.
Mr. Chair, I wanted to introduce this motion and suggest that we do a very comprehensive study to point out the value of this organization in Atlantic Canada and the other RDAs across the country. It's not just about ACOA; it's about the seven regional development agencies across the country, albeit some of them are practically new, like the one in B.C., for example, or some of the ones in western Canada.
Nevertheless, the study would be an opportunity to inform and remind Conservatives of the work done by these RDAs, which I credit with changing the economy in Atlantic Canada since 1987.
Mr. Chair, I'll leave it there.