Madam Speaker, I begin by congratulating the member for Esquimalt—Juan de Fuca for his commitment to the welfare of children in general, in particular Canada's children. If his work on the land mines issue is any indication of his commitment, he is to be congratulated and appreciated for his sensitivity and his caring on such matters.
I agree with his point quite aside from the intention of his private member's bill that there are some things we cannot legislate. We cannot legislate love. We cannot legislate proper nurturing. We cannot legislate a healthy environment but we can aid in that process. We can provide the tools for families, individuals and communities. We can provide that environment and work toward that healthy relationship of nurturing between parents and children.
Child development is a complicated issue. The hon. member's suggestion that increased resources be channelled into early child development is a laudable one. It reflects a growing consensus that the well-being of Canada's children is a shared responsibility of all citizens and all levels of government.
As the hon. member will recall, the Government of Canada recognized the importance of early child development in the Speech from the Throne. Early childhood experiences influence overall health, intellectual development and well-being of individuals for the rest of their lives.
By investing early in children's healthy development, we are investing in their long term health and in the long term health of society. Federal, provincial and territorial governments have identified healthy child development as a priority and have been working closely for some time on collaborative initiatives aimed at helping children living in conditions of risk to get a better start in life.
These initiatives include the community action program for children. This is a very successful program. This program is so successful that the views are to expand on that program and to continue that program. It speaks to many of the concerns and many of the initiatives that should be undertaken as stated by the hon. member opposite.
The aboriginal head start program was referred to in one of our documents for the election. It was a commitment that we made and it is a commitment that we saw through. The aboriginal head start we have found so successful that we have expanded on it. We have doubled the funding. I would like to see a further expansion.
I think there is an area that the Canadian model does not address and that is the fortification of the linguistic and cultural base that individual children have. This adds much to the self-esteem of the individual once they have that basis. They are able to develop properly in and out of their own environment.
The Canada prenatal nutrition program is another one that talks about early head start. We believe we have a head start when it comes to this initiative. When we have 21,000 low birth weight babies born and it costs approximately $60,000 per infant to deal with the effects of low birth weight or premature births, which are sometimes the case from not having the proper prenatal nutrition care, we feel this is a very worthwhile investment.
We also know that we can avoid the exorbitant cost if we do continue on with this program. It is extremely successful, not only with the children but also with the parenting. It also provides the appropriate foundation for young people, particularly single parents, single mothers in this instance, to go forward and to build a proper nurturing and caring before the child is born as well as to continue on once they have given birth.
All these programs have proven highly successful in meeting the needs of the target population, not to mention the Inuit and first nation child care program which we know that we did not have a jurisdictional issue on. The federal government has very clear jurisdiction. We went forward and instituted $72 million. On the other child care issues we did not enjoy the same kind of agreement among our partners out there, so we could not proceed, this being one of the reasons.
If we as a society are to ensure that all Canadian children have the best opportunity to develop to their full potential, our investment must be much broader and much more comprehensive than early child development alone. I can assure my fellow parliamentarians that the Government of Canada fully supports the idea of a national strategy focused on early child development, but not in a narrow sense. Every program, every service offered to children should have that litmus test that speaks to early intervention, that speaks to child development per se from the age of zero onwards.
A substantial body of evidence exists which shows that the quality of early childhood experiences is at the root of many adult health and social problems and I think my hon. colleague spoke quite well to that. The links between poverty and chronic illness, teen pregnancies, youth suicides, drug abuse, family violence and long term unemployment are well documented.
To achieve this, the national children's agenda will be taking discussions beyond the government level. All Canadians will be invited to help shape this agenda. As part of the agenda, we believe the overriding issue is addressing child poverty, something we are working toward with the new national child benefit system. This is one approach. This is one effort.
The national child benefit will give Canadian children a better start in life by improving economic benefits and social services available to low income families with children. It will reduce the barriers many low income families face in moving from social assistance to the workforce. Over time it will reduce poverty, support families, make work pay and enable governments to work together to improve children's chances of success.
Over the course of this mandate we will double our initial investment of $850 million in the national child benefit system. We are also collaborating with the provinces and the territories on the national reinvestment framework to redirect savings from welfare spending into new and improved services and benefits for low income families with children.
The national child benefit system is a cornerstone of the national children's agenda. Together, governments are working to develop the agenda as one that will continue to evolve and build on programs to support children. It will include many partners across Canada.
I remind my hon. colleagues that these are not the only activities we are engaged in to promote and improve children's well-being. The Government of Canada has announced three new initiatives as part of the national children's agenda.
First, we are establishing—and I am sure my hon. colleague with his background will appreciate this very much—centres of excellence on children's well-being to broaden our understanding of how children develop and what we can do better to support them in the early years of life.
One of the cornerstone pieces of research that the centres of excellence can undertake is the effects of FAE and FAS children have had to endure, the long-lasting effects of fetal alcohol effect and fetal alcohol syndrome. I hope we realize that FAS and FAE are the most preventable disabilities that our country can do something about.
Second, we are expanding on the successful aboriginal head start program to help children on reserves to get a good start. We are doubling the funding.
Finally, we will build on the HRDC and Statistic Canada leading edge survey, the national longitudinal survey on children and youth, as the foundation for reporting on the readiness of Canadian children to learn. We have a profound interest in how our children develop intellectually, not just in one particular way. In a very multifaceted way we want to know that our children develop psychologically, mentally, physically, spiritually and intellectually in a manner that is appropriate for their age group.
Collectively these new initiatives, along with existing federal programs such as the community action plan for children, first nations child care and child care vision, are equipping us with powerful new tools that will help us to create a made in Canada strategy for the country's children.
I congratulate the hon. member. I hope he realizes that perhaps we do not call it a national head start program but the collective of these is early intervention and head start.