Mr. Speaker, I have a few remarks to make on this bill. It is a pleasure to speak in support of the motion of my colleague, the member for Red Deer. His motion states:
That, in the opinion of this House, the Parliament and crown agencies should be subject to scrutiny under the Access to Information Act.
This is a very appropriate motion as it would make these agencies more accountable to Canadians. If one thing was made clear by the results of the last election, it was that Canadians demand accountability from their governments and their institutions. They are no longer willing to accept governments and institutions that help themselves to the public purse. They are demanding value for their money instead of governments and institutions that take hard earned tax dollars for granted and make their deals behind closed doors.
One of the best mechanisms currently in place to give Canadians some control over these institutions is the Access to Information Act. This act lets Canadians take a look at government books for themselves. This is only fair. In Canada we pay a very high amount of tax and we have every right to know how the government is spending the money.
In this respect the Access to Information Act serves as a useful tool to keep an eye on the appropriateness of government spending. All members in the House can show they support this right of Canadians by supporting this motion. It would be a gesture very much appreciated by Canadians.
As a farmer, I would like to use the example of the Canadian Wheat Board in speaking in support of this motion. I was shocked recently when I requested information on the pension plans and wages for Canadian Wheat Board commissioners and staff. Regarding the pension plans, I asked for a breakdown on employer versus government contributions as well as the age at which the commissioners and staff are eligible to receive benefits. My request was denied by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada on the basis that the Canadian Wheat Board does not fall under the terms of the Access to Information Act.
As a grain farmer and a member of Parliament I was appalled that I was refused information regarding pensions which I am responsible for funding. I can inform the House that the level of secrecy under which the Canadian Wheat Board operates is increasingly viewed with resentment by western farmers.
It further makes me wonder why the Canadian Wheat Board is so insistent on secrecy when a notice that compensation figures for executives and managers of Canada's major banks was recently released, presumably with no danger to the future operation of these banks.
Financial figures are available for the upper levels of just about every other corporation in the country and yet the Canadian Wheat Board insists on keeping its financial data a mystery. If banks can release this information, it shoots down the argument that the wheat board needs secrecy to remain a competitive player in the marketplace.
I wrote to the wheat board urging them to reconsider its policy. At that time I stressed this would go a long way in re-establishing the trust and confidence of other grain farmers in dealing with the wheat board. In turn, I was contacted by the wheat board. It provided me with some general salary information, but not in the detail I originally requested. Moreover, I was
told that the general information is only available to wheat board permit holders.
This experience shows how frustrating it can be for Canadians if they are trying to get financial information about a government agency that is not covered under the Access to Information Act.
I am not alone in my frustration with the wheat board. Recently a publication called the Prairie Agricultural Digest featured an article that asked why things at the wheat board are so secretive. This newspaper wondered what makes the wheat board so different from virtually any other privately traded or government corporation. The only answer they could come up with is that the people running the wheat board are either arrogant or out of touch.
The newspaper has embarked on a campaign to make the wheat board more accountable. Grain farmers can fill out a card directed to the Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food. The card states: "I am very opposed to the secrecy of the Canadian Wheat Board, and the board's consistent refusal to answer questions regarding the salaries, pensions and other benefits the wheat board commissioners and other employees receive. I oppose the Canadian Wheat Board being exempt from the freedom of information act".
Apparently these clippings have been flooding into the newspaper office. This sends a clear message that farmers are fed up with the secrecy, but it is a sad comment that they have to take this drastic action in order to try and get accountability from an agency that is supposed to serve them.
The wheat board has advertised a position described as fitness instructor. How much sense does it make to have a fitness instructor on staff but not have an access to information officer that could answer questions about how the board spends its money.
The issue of accountability also becomes important when we look at the pasta industry in the country. Pasta producers in western Canada came to see me around the middle of November claiming heavily subsidized pasta from Italy was coming into the country and they could not afford to operate any more.
When I showed my facts and figures to the prairie pools, they had no answers. The Canadian Wheat Board sells durum wheat to the Americans for the pasta industry and we also sell it to Italy.
The Americans bring in 40 million kilograms of pasta for a value of approximately $84 million. This pasta costs about $2 per kilogram. The Italians ship 17 million kilograms of pasta at $19 million, which is about half the price the Americans are charging for their pasta in this country.
I asked the prairie pools if they could explain how we could sell durum wheat to Italy, ship it over there, have it manufactured and brought back into this country for half the price. Is it not subsidized? They could not give me a reasonable explanation.
It makes you wonder what is going on when you do a little digging and come up with some of these figures. It creates a stronger argument for openness and accountability at every turn.
The Winnipeg Commodity Exchange is a totally open process. A public gallery allows you to actually watch the trading. That is the type of openness the Canadian Wheat Board should be trying to achieve, otherwise we are left wondering to whom it is accountable.
It is not just Canadians who are upset with wheat board secrecy. American farmers are getting very upset with having to compete with this bureaucracy. It is not the Canadian farmers they do not want to compete with, it is the large, secret dealing wheat board they see as an unfair competitor.
I am not advocating the dismantling of the wheat board, but this illustrates how, when when operating with a shroud of secrecy, people automatically suspect that you are not playing above the board. By dropping this shroud of secrecy the wheat board could avoid many of these problems.
When the wheat board came into being, it was a dual marketing system. That is what farmers want again. The time has come for the government to give Canadians the accountability it promised in its red book, and put an end to the secret dealings of government organizations like the wheat board.
The Reform Party has always stressed the need to be more accountable and responsible to the people who elected us. We have always stated clearly that the common sense of the common people should be respected. They have the right to be consulted on public policy matters. They have the right to govern themselves through truly representative and responsive institutions.
In the Liberal government's red book it states: "People are disappointed by and irritated with the poor quality of service provided by many public institutions, given the cost of government and the taxes the government are taking out of citizens' pockets. A Liberal government will take a series of initiatives to restore confidence in these institutions of government. Open government will be the watchword of the Liberal program".
We have been waiting for evidence of that open government, but so far it has been lacking. Canadians have watched in frustration as billions of dollars were funnelled through crown agencies such as the CBC, Canada Post and the wheat board, and they are waiting for action.
The time for that action is now. This non-partisan motion can be supported by all members of the House because it goes beyond party politics and achieves a purpose that is equally important to Canadians from coast to coast.