Madam Speaker, once again, I want to say that I am pleased to speak to Bill C-11. I am pleased to speak to the bill but not so pleased with what may come of it.
I am sure that this is not easy for the people of Cape Breton, for the miners who have worked underground for some 30 years and for the younger ones who have not been working that long. With Bill C-11, the government is trying to pass the buck on Devco. This is certainly not easy for the people or Cape Breton and I can sympathize with them.
It is not easy for workers in a region such as Cape Breton, where the unemployment rate is as high as that in the Acadian peninsula. It is not easy today for a miner 40 years old, who has been a miner all his life, to realize that he will one day lose his job. Where will he find another job? It is not easy today, with the new economy, this knowledge and high tech economy. I put myself in the shoes of the miner wondering what he will do if and when he loses my job. I was talking about someone 40 years old, but there are others who are 45 years old. That is still young—I am 45—but I would not be prepared to go to university.
I remember the prime minister saying that one has to acquire new skills three times in his lifetime. My God, three times in a lifetime. It costs a young person $30,000 to $40,000 to get a university degree. If he has to do it three times, he will be in debt for the rest of his days.
But, with Bill C-11, the miner in Cape Breton is going to be left in limbo. Is he going to have a job tomorrow, or not? That is the problem. That is what needs to be dealt with. How can these people be helped? It is sad and unfortunate that the government has taken this position. It is too bad that the government has not put into place a program saying “Some people will be able to retire, but we have another program that will help others re-enter the labour force and offer them new opportunities”. Instead, they are offered nothing but uncertainty.
Think about it, we have here nearly 305 MPs quaking in their boots—or should I say their high heels, Madam Speaker—because they do not know if they will be re-elected in the next election. Everyone is worried, and there is a lot going on in ridings. Things are hopping because the MPs want to get re-elected; they are afraid of losing their jobs.
Now, put yourself in the shoes of the Cape Breton miner, who also does not know whether he is going to lose his job or not and who might find himself without a livelihood. Put yourself in the place of this miner who is going to wake up jobless one fine morning. That is no easy thing, especially for a person with a family, with children who go to school or university. It definitely is not easy.
The NDP asked the committee to go to Cape Breton to meet with the workers, sit down with them and listen to their concerns. We did not get the support of this House. I want to tell the people of Cape Breton today that the NDP supported them from start to finish.
I am sure the people of Cape Breton are listening on CPAC to the debate in the House of Commons tonight. They will see that the only ones who are getting up in the House of Commons, one after the other, are members of the NDP.
We are fighting for the people of Cape Breton, fighting for the working people of Cape Breton, fighting for the miners who are facing the possibility of losing their jobs. It is not the Liberals. They do not have any alternative for those people. I am telling the Liberals on the other side of the House that it is not easy for working people who worked in the mines all their lives driving scoop trains or being miners to find a job today in this country at the age of 40 or 45.
I worked 15 years in the mines. I know what a mine is. High technology is not what one finds down in the mines. When one leaves mining it is a big problem. What are the Liberals saying to those people? Are they being told to get out of Cape Breton?. The Prime Minister has been saying all along that if they cannot find jobs they should go somewhere else. That is too easy.
The people of the Atlantic provinces want to live in the Atlantic provinces. We were born in the Atlantic region and we have the right to live in the Atlantic region as Canadians. We need the government to not only support Ontario. Are we part of this country? Yes or no.
We had a member in our region who wanted to sell out the Atlantic area. His name was Doug Young and he is with the Canadian Alliance today. That is where he is.
The government is not helping the people of Cape Breton with what it is doing. It is leaving them with no alternative, leaving them there in the cold. It is not helping those miners and it should be ashamed.
As I said, the 301 members of parliament in the House of Commons shake in their pants and hey shake in their dresses because they are worried about the upcoming election and probably losing their jobs. Most of them are a bunch of lawyers. They should not be worried about losing their jobs, but the people of Cape Breton have to worry about it because they do not have a job the next day. It is not easy for working men and women who lose their jobs and have no alternative. It is no fun for their families, living in the dark and not knowing what will happen to them the next day. It is no fun for them.
One of the things we ask is for members of the parliamentary committee to fly by plane to Cape Breton. If they are afraid of a plane, it is not that far. They could meet with the people of Cape Breton and listen to what they have to say. The Liberals did not want to go to Cape Breton. They do not want to get up in the House of Commons and speak about it. Are they shy or what?
The only thing the Liberals say is that the caucus of the Atlantic met and let us catch the wave. I hope the people of Cape Breton tonight are listening and will let the wave go by because the Liberals are not there to fight for them.
We in the Atlantic have served the Liberals on a silver plate for 100 years, and this is what we get today. Brian Tobin, Premier of Newfoundland, said that the people of the Atlantic would never give up on the Liberals. The Liberals gave up on the Atlantic. That is what happened in the Atlantic region. They gave up on the people of the Atlantic region. They came to the Atlantic region and took all our resources. They took all our fish. After doing that they said they would cut their employment insurance and put them on welfare. That is what they have done to the people of the Atlantic.
Today we have a Liberal government that does not want to take responsibility for the gaffer, the one in French we call le trov noir, the black hole. These people cannot go from one season to the next. The provincial government says that it is not its responsibility. The federal government says that it is not its responsibility. Its wants the people of Cape Breton to go on welfare. The NDP will fight for the people of the Atlantic and for the people of Cape Breton.