moved
That in the opinion of this House, the government should approach Canadian National Railways and have it authorize the privatization of the Franquet-Chapais trunk line for a nominal sum and ensure the maintenance and consolidation of the CRAN subdivision in the riding of Roberval, in order to promote mining and forestry development in the region.
Madam Speaker, I am taking this opportunity to put this motion before the House so that it can be debated by members of Parliament, because in my riding of Roberval, and especially in the Chibougamau-Chapais area where mining development is vitally important, rail service is to be abandoned pretty soon.
I know that the region of Lac-Saint-Jean and Chibougamau-Chapais is not the only one in Quebec, and indeed in Canada, where rail services are being shut down. I know that Crown corporations need to rationalize their expenses. I know the various services provided to Canadian taxpayers are expensive. But I also know that infrastructure is needed to further the economic development of a region.
Some people will say that, of course, we must shut down trunk lines, especially those that are not really profitable. However, as far as the region of Lac-Saint-Jean is concerned, and especially the Chibougamau area, we are talking about a crucial infrastructure for mining development throughout the region.
I know that members of this House are in the habit of using such expressions as "it is vital for the development of my region" and we "cannot do without it".
In this instance, we should realize that a railway is frequently the only viable alternative for moving the output of mining companies from a remote region like Chibougamau-Chapais or even Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, both of which are quite far from Quebec City or Montreal. Infrastructure is needed to offset geographical disadvantages.
I would not raise this issue in the House if the CN did not turn a deaf ear to repeated pleas by people in my riding. I would not make representations in the House if the Minister of Transport proved more sensitive to this problem.
Yes, we can all agree on reducing rail service in many regions o Canada. We are ready to look at the problem responsibly as elected representatives who want to spend public money sparingly. My colleagues responsible for regional development and transport tried to make the Minister of Transport more aware of the problem and get regional public hearings before unfortunate decisions are made that could jeopardize the future of a whole industry.
Unfortunately, I was not able to convince the Minister of Transport that he should review these decisions. I have found and read reports dating from the days when those who are now government members or ministers were in opposition. In a paper those people, including the present Minister of Transport, wrote and signed, we read that the Conservatives set out to dismantle our railway network, especially in Quebec. They called for an end to that strategy, which was being implemented irresponsibly, and demanded public hearings in affected areas to allow people there to at least have a say and voice their concerns.
One cannot make cuts in a railway system, in an infrastructure essential to the development of an area, and get away with it, if one has not previously taken the trouble to go to listen to local people and determine the risks involved in dismantling it.
It has to be understood that there are two important rail lines in northern Quebec, namely the Franquet-Chapais line, which is the object of my presentation today, and the CRAN line.
In the case of the Franquet-Chapais line, Canadian National Railways, when it submitted a request for abandonment, was authorized to dismantle this rail line in June. You can understand, Madam Speaker, how important it is to deal with this issue today because, starting in June, CN will be at liberty to dismantle the Franquet-Chapais rail line, the line between Franquet in the Abitibi and Chapais in the Chibougamau-Chapais region.
Canadian National Railways has also indicated that it intended to ask the Transport Commission for authorization to abandon its operations on the CRAN line. For the benefit of those who are not familiar with the local geography, the Franquet-Chapais trunk line is presently not in use, operations having been stopped for some time already. The mining companies are using the CRAN line for their operations.
Just imagine the vicious circle the people of Chibougamau-Chapais are caught in; they need rail service to carry their ore, but the Franquet-Chapais trunk line was closed down some months ago and is about to be dismantled, and now CN is announcing that in an effort to streamline, it has decided to drop rail service through the Lac-Saint-Jean region that allowed the companies to carry on their operations.
It is absolutely unthinkable to use trucks for transportation in the mining sector. Yet, that is what the people of Chibougamau-Chapais are being told to do, use trucks to transport the ore to where the concentrators and the necessary facilities are. However, this would mean a 50-per-cent increase in transportation costs. Given the state of the economy today, what business could absorb a 50-per-cent increase in operating costs? In some respects, this decision jeopardizes the development of the Chibougamau-Chapais region.
The Franquet-Chapais line is located along a geological fault where new deposits are discovered nearly every day. New hopes arise each day along the geological fault, from the Chibougamau-Chapais sector all the way to Abitibi. Ore deposits are being discovered every day and every day, new projects are on the verge of being launched. However, a decision such as the one Canadian National is preparing to make will snuff out any hope that the Chibougamau-Chapais region may have. This is a region in desperate need of hope, given its remote location in
northern Quebec, a region which relies on the discovery of new mines and new deposits for its development.
The people of Chibougamau-Chapais are proud. They depend neither on the Quebec government nor on the federal government for their livelihood. They are involved in mining operations, make good money and contribute to the economy of this country, of Quebec, of the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region and of Abitibi as a whole.
What you have here is an entire region not begging for hand-outs or asking the government to go out of its way to create temporary jobs, an entire region capable of creating real, productive employment to help increase Canada's gross domestic product. You have people willing to contribute to our collective wealth. Are jobs not scarce these days? When any initiative should be welcome and every effort should be made to support economic development and job development instead of investing in social programs, temporary programs and even infrastructure programs?
Here is a suggestion. The hon. members and ministers opposite are out of ideas and are wondering how to pull the country out of this recession. They are looking for ways to regain the considerable number of jobs lost in Quebec since the beginning of the recession. Figures published this week revealed that-if these timid actions are all this government has to propose-it will take three years to restore the level of employment enjoyed in Quebec before the recession. But when the people of Chibougamau-Chapais find new mineral deposits, propose economic development solutions, try to increase the wealth of this country, they see their initiatives jeopardized because the Minister of Transport disowns his signature.
The Minister of Transport refuses to be sensitive to the people of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, of Chibougamau-Chapais. The Minister of Transport is no longer the man of the situation and the government refuses. The people responsible for setting up the economic team which it lacks flatly refuse to see the light.
The unemployment problem is caused by people who refuse to seize opportunities. However, the people of Chibougamau-Chapais, in desperation, decided to take matters into their own hands, to make up for this government's inefficiency, to thwart CN's plans and they called for the privatization of this trunk line. Let the champions of private enterprise stand up in this House, if there are any among the members across the way. They wanted to privatize the network, to have CN transfer the Franquet-Chapais line to the people of Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean-Chibougamau-Chapais for the nominal sum of one dollar so that they could keep this section in operation until such time as it will become absolutely indispensable, with new mining discoveries. Let these people hang on to this life buoy, this line which CN wants to dismantle.
The request was made. Our people did their job. They asked CN and they got this answer: "We would get $5 million for the line's old steel-the railway being made of steel-, so we are going to sell the line to you, the people of Chapais, for $5 million." Big deal! CN is acting as if it had not stayed in business because of the taxpayers' money, as if it was the railway's sole owner and had paid for it without the help of taxpayers. It is forgetting that the Franquet-Chapais line, like all other rail lines in Canada, was paid for by the hard work of generations and generations of Canadian workers.
Why should we deprive people of the opportunity to take charge of their own lives? Could someone across the way explain to me in a sensible way, without partisanship, trying only to think that we must help people, that we were elected to support our people, to defend them, to help them earn a living, could anyone explain to me why we should refuse the request of people who are not asking for anything, but only to buy for a nominal sum a rail line which was closed down by CN? Why refuse that? Is it impossible to respond to these demands? I appeal to my colleagues on the other side. I appeal to the Minister of Transport. I appeal to the Minister of Finance and Minister Responsible for the Federal Office of Regional Development. I appeal to all my colleagues on this side of the House and my colleagues in the Opposition. Why should the government not reexamine such an issue and allow people to take control of their lives and ensure their development? What else does it want? Did it ever receive a more attractive proposal from a group of citizens who want to live, who want to survive, who want to ensure their development without asking anything from the government? I am proposing to the government a job creation program that will cost only one dollar, but will bring in lots of money to the government and will allow people from our region to use that infrastructure. While the government is putting millions and billions of dollars into the development of infrastructure that does not exist, it keeps citizens from acquiring, for one dollar, something which already exists and which is necessary. Explain that to me, Madam Speaker.
Finally, I would like to tell you that this issue is very serious for my region and for Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. There are so many raiy lines in western Canada. And we agree that they are needed.
We understand that for the sake of the economy in that region, it is necessary to use rail lines as links between urban and rural centres, in order to transport grain and various commodities. We understand that. There is no one on this side who has asked to
dismantle those lines. Everyone agrees that they are important for the economic development of that part of the country.
But we ask that the same sensitivity been shown towards the East. Why should that not be the case in the East also? What makes Chibougameau-Chapais less remote than any other area in the West, say northern Manitoba or Saskatchewan? Where is the difference? Lines are maintained when they are important to development in western Canada, and we agree with that. But we cannot agree to the dismantling of rail lines that belong to us in our area.
Moreover, we want to buy that line and keep it open. We simply want Canadian National to give us back the taxes we paid to finance the construction of those trunk lines. As I see it, the Canadian National is a one-way organization. They pull the plug to drain away the savings of Canadians but when the time comes to open the tap at the other end, there is nothing left. I think this is the way things are done.
We would ask the government to take action on that issue in a non-partisan way and without using the schemes that some would want to see implemented in that case. There is no concept as reasonable and as cheap as the one that has been submitted to this House to guarantee the development of a region.
Some businesses will inevitably close down if that trunk line is abandoned. With a 50 per cent increase in transportation costs, it will not be possible to ensure the economic development of Chibougamau-Chapais. Annual wages of $50,000, $60,000 and $70,000 are paid in the mining sector. Our people are proud of those wages, but they work very hard to earn them. However, we need help. Is there anyone in this House who would refuse to support a motion that gives one dollar to the government, that ensures the development and the pride of a region, that ensures people that their livelihood will not be taken away from them?
I see that my time is up, Madam Speaker, but I would ask the members of this House to show solidarity. We have to save the Franquet-Chapais trunk line. We have to hold public hearings on the dismantling of the rail network in Quebec and in the rest of Canada.