Madam Speaker, I am happy to speak in support of the minister's discussion paper on improving social security in Canada.
I suspect that few in this room or in the entire country for that matter would dispute Canada's affluence and ability to sustain a generous or even enviable social safety net. In fact, how many countries can we identify that would love to be having this debate right now. Rwanda, Haiti, Bosnia, Cuba, most recently India, to name the more obvious, but also European countries. Even the Americas would love to be engaged in a debate about how to improve what is arguably one of the best social safety nets in the world. I would say we are rather lucky. We are a wealthy nation and we must remind ourselves of that as we engage in this discussion.
I would like to point out that many people have stated a need for reform of our social safety programs. Most Canadians agree that change is imperative. The basis of this need for change comes from two sides. One, we must cut because of the debt and the deficit situation. Others argue that our social programs were born of a different time and place, a different era, and that they are now simply out of date and need modernizing and restructuring to better reflect the current needs of our citizens.
It is this second position with which I agree. Our programs have become dated and there is an absolute need to restructure whatever assistance the government can provide to better reflect the contemporary needs of Canadians. I do not deny that financing our ideological generosity over the long term means attending to our deficit, but we do not have to compromise our ideology or our generosity, or force the burden of prudence on to the backs of those in need.
New directions are necessary. Some will cost money but savings can be realized by improving inefficiencies within the system. We can improve the way we deliver assistance and reduce the amount of overlap and duplication. We can achieve savings by devolving some responsibilities to the provinces. We do not want to cut simply for the sake of cutting. I believe the government has the plan to bring about our badly needed social policy reform.
Foremost, we recognize and fully embrace the need for open and informed consultation with all Canadians. We must if we are to be the architects of a safety net for generations to come, exercise the greatest prudence, and the greatest patience in engaging Canadians in this historic debate. It has to be a system made by Canadians if it is meant to serve Canadians.
I want to commend the Minister of Human Resources Development for his strong personal commitment to a thorough, comprehensive and meaningful consultation on this issue. His commitment is one I urge all members to rely on, to appreciate the need to seek out the views of every constituent in every riding of the country, to want really to know what it is our constituents want.
It has been suggested that the Reform proposals represent firm decisions and that we as members on this side are involved in selling a plan. As you can tell from my comments, it is not my intention nor is it the intention of the government. Rather, my effort today is designed to sell a process, a need to involve Canadians in this important debate.
There are certainly elements of the discussion paper that excite me, particularly those involving helping children and its general direction to more active social programming I wholeheartedly support.
Specifically as a New Brunswicker I can attest to the fact that we have been engaged in a similar debate at the provincial level. Such discussion and debate has resulted in a conception of some forward-looking social programs in our province such as the community academic services program, a literacy training program, and job corps to name just two.
It is the vision behind these creative partner-based programs at the local level that underpins the federal government's renewal initiative. The benchmark for our success is not how much money the government can save, rather it is whether such programs are beneficial and effective in the lives they are intended to improve. That is the objective that must be brought to the government's desire to reform the social safety net. It must be the guiding principle for decisions taken and it should be the framework adopted by all members of the House when they seek input from the constituents in their respective ridings.
I personally learned a great deal from the forum on social policy held in my riding in April. I know that my constituents are encouraged by the fact that they have been asked to help in the minister's reform proposals. My constituents recognize what a proposal means. It is something offered, something suggested, and they know their opinions will be welcomed and valued in helping transform a proposal into reality.
We in Fredericton-York-Sunbury are ready for October 30 when we reconvene to discuss this important reform again. We are anxious to offer whatever assistance we can to the minister because we, too, want a safety net designed to suit our needs both now and in the future.
We must listen to Canadians. The magnitude of this debate is such that its success will depend on achieving some kind of national consensus. In order to achieve that consensus we must assure ourselves and all Canadians that apart from our new social program regime, every effort is made to attend all possible opportunities on the revenue side and elsewhere on the expenditure side.
We must be as creative and fair as we possibly can in addressing our fiscal situation or we will not be able to count on the support of those who need to know the system is fair. We must remind ourselves that our social programs have and continue to be designed with a purpose; to mitigate against poverty, inequity, regional disparity and uneven opportunity.
The reality now is that the fault lies with the system, an outdated system on which far too many with tremendous capabilities have to depend. Our labour market needs these people but we have to find better ways to marry the employment needs of Canadians with the employment needs of Canada.
We are entering a more enlightened era of governing and of offering aid to citizens who need assistance. We have progressed through earlier notions of simple charity and through the 1960s notion of entitlement.
I am pleased that in this reform we are moving further along that continuum. We now recognize the differences between those with and those without, the haves and the have nots, the empowered and the enfranchised and those unempowered and disenfranchised. These differences are far greater than merely money and material assets.
These differences are far more fundamental; differences in skills, confidence, access to opportunity be it financial, academic or professional. These are the factors and the measures against which we must judge the integrity, suitability, sustainability and success of our social programs.
These are the dimensions needed to reflect an enlightened, holistic, modern approach to people, their needs, their goals and their personal desires. I want to emphasize that the cornerstone of this exercise is to recognize the importance of giving people control over their own lives, to let individuals themselves be the decision makers and architects of their own destiny.
Our paternalistic system of defining and administering to the needs of people is approaching an end. I cannot overstate, as we engage in this transition, our need to provide short term support during the progression from unemployment to employment.
As a New Brunswicker I am proud of the fact that we are moving in the direction of greater independence. Just as we need to be able to rely on the support of the federal government to help us through this transition, so too do citizens struggling to improve their own lot in life.
Practically, I would propose special consideration must be given to the unique seasonal nature of the Atlantic Canada workforce. I wholeheartedly support the need to offer training, counselling and choices to those historically dependent on federal programs such as unemployment insurance.
I would also maintain the need for continued income support where present circumstances simply do not allow for many seasonal workers to enjoy a sufficient annual income. We must seize the opportunity to make the entire social system more client based, more efficient, less bogged down, less heavily weighted with administrative infrastructure.
I conclude by appealing to all Canadians to participate in this review regardless of their personal predisposition or politics. Even past positions should not get in the way of helping the government do what is right by Canadians. Lives are at stake, many people are depending on us. We cannot allow the impact of the exercise to be dismissed.
I believe that the solutions to the challenges before us lie in the hearts and minds of compassionate, caring, committed Canadians. Change is necessary. Resources are scarce. We must collectively, hopefully collegially, create a new system that captures the generosity and compassion of Canadians that have served us so long and so well.