Mr. Speaker, while the Tory members and the Liberal members are arguing with each other about whose to blame, I can categorically say that they are both to blame for the sorry state of affairs in Canada today. I will be sharing my time in debating the budget with the member for Winnipeg North Centre.
Since the Liberal government came to power 500,000 more Canadian children have slipped below the poverty line. Those figures are shocking.
In the budget we are debating today the finance minister announced $300 million for the national child tax benefit. I know there are some members from the government who will argue that this was a noble gesture, but we have to say it is one that does absolutely nothing to address the fundamental flaws in the benefit systems, namely that it is not indexed to inflation and it does nothing to assist the poorest of the poor, kids and parents who are on welfare.
This last policy is in keeping with a continual bashing of poor people by this government and the government before it. It is really abysmal that the last time a federal budget increased support for families on social assistance was in 1985.
Deindexing of the child tax benefit means that the value of the child benefit declines in real terms by 3% each year. It really allows the government to get away with saying that it is actually increasing dollars to kids in working poor families while knowing full well that those dollars will be recouped. It is part of a culture of deception, a culture that has been cultivated by the finance minister and by this government. This budget fails Canadian children again.
This budget also fails the homeless. The federal budget is a national disgrace on housing and homelessness. Not a single penny has been allocated for new spending and this means no new social housing units this year and no money for homelessness initiatives.
A serious federal response to this disaster requires money to be put on the table. This budget was the ideal time for the federal government to show us it is ready to take on this issue.
In January and February of this year I visited large urban centres and smaller communities across Canada to see for myself the consequences of deliberate public policies that leave Canada with the dubious distinction of being the only industrialized country in the world without a national housing strategy. What I saw, what I heard and what I experienced shocked me and should shock the finance minister, as the issue of growing poverty and homelessness becomes even more visible and more tragic as more people die.
In every community I visited I was struck by three basic issues, the lack of adequate incomes and high rents that drive people into poverty, the impact of the lack of new social housing construction, and the desperate need to improve and maintain the standard of low income market housing starts.
This budget was an opportunity for the finance minister to recall his own words in 1990. I will recall those words for him. Then in official opposition as chair of the Liberal Party's task force on housing, the now finance minister condemned the Tory government for doing nothing while the housing crisis continued to grow out of control: “The government sits there and does nothing. It refuses to apply the urgent measures that are required to rebirth this deteriorating situation. The lack of affordable housing contributes to and accelerates the cycle of poverty which is reprehensible in a society as rich as ours”.
Three years later the finance minister steamrolled his own report and in its place introduced a budget that slashed all federal funding for the creation of new social housing. That single act alone meant that 75,000 new social housing units that had been targeted for construction were never built. This was a decision that has now denied tens of thousands of families the right to decent and affordable housing.
This budget comes at a time when Canada is facing one of its largest national disasters in its history. The big city mayors, the city councils of Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa-Carleton, Nepean, over 400 organizations and 1,200 individuals have recognized the homelessness crisis in Canada as a national disaster. However, in no way does this budget even begin to address this disaster, thereby condemning hundreds of thousands of people to struggle in misery, even risking death, without federal relief.
This budget also comes at a time when the Prime Minister has been invited numerous times by the mayor of Toronto, the Toronto Star , the Toronto disaster relief committee, and the leader of the NDP to tour the disaster in the city of Toronto and to see with his own eyes the destruction it has wrought on Canadians.
Even though it is the Prime Minister's responsibility to review the disaster that is the direct result of his government's policies, he has not apparently had the time nor the commitment to do this.
Maybe if the Prime Minister or the finance minister saw the crisis firsthand like I have done, they would be moved to action. Anything less, and this budget is much less, is a devastating shame.
The budget also fails Canadians on health care. Let us put the so-called health budget in perspective. Liberal cuts to the Canadian health and social transfer since 1995 now amount to $21.5 billion. More than half of that was in health care funding.
This year the budget puts back only $2 billion, not exactly the cause for celebration that we have been led to believe. Members of the government keep repeating $11.5 billion. That is what they want us to remember about this budget.
What they want us to forget is that $11.5 billion is spread out over five years and only puts back half of what has been taken out. It gets worse. We will not get the ongoing benefit of the $11.5 billion because it is not cumulative.
By the end of the next five years, only $2.5 billion will have been permanently added to the transfer. It is like a wage bonus instead of a wage increase. It is a one time fix that really leaves us no further ahead.
In fact, the federal share of health spending is not going to change significantly either. This is a real measure of what has happened in terms of public policy around health care.
When medicare began, the federal-provincial ratio was 50% federal dollars and 50% provincial dollars. When the Liberals came to power, the federal share dropped to 18%. Now it is down to 11%.
In five years after this so-called reinvestment in health care, we will only be back up to 12.5%. We have to ask how much clout will 12.5% buy with provinces that are sliding toward two tier health care.
Overall this budget, despite being characterized as a good news budget, actually widens the gap between the rich and the poor. Information from the National Anti-Poverty Organization has made it clear that if we look at two single people, one earning $15,000 and one earning $100,000 and apply the so-called tax relief measures in this budget, in actual fact the gap between their incomes will actually increase by $658. It is very clear that this budget is actually increasing inequality.
On education as well this budget gets a failing grade. I was at a community college in Vancouver, Langara Community College, just the other day talking to students. They asked me whether there was anything in this budget that would help students with the incredible student debtload they have.
I searched high and low. I went through every page. There is not a single item in this budget that will assist students in Canada who are now reeling and suffering from high tuition fees and student debt.
Even the Canadian Council on Social Development gives this budget an F, a failing grade, when it comes to post-secondary education.
This budget has also failed unemployed workers who are still suffering from the massive cutbacks to the unemployment insurance program while the $20 billion surplus sits there.
We want to say to the government that this budget has failed Canadians who are most in need. I heard a Liberal member earlier talk about the sacrifices that have been made.
There are people in my riding of Vancouver East who are still hurting, who are still unemployed, who are still on the street, who are still suffering from high student debt. There is nothing in this budget that will help those people.