Mr. Speaker, I am glad the member brought up the residential school agreement that the Conservatives signed. It is one that we are proud to have negotiated.
The member speaks about putting millions of dollars into housing. We had over $5 billion in the Kelowna accord that was set to deal with many of these issues.
Our party is not ashamed to say that we started the homelessness strategy that in fact had reached about $2 billion by the time the member's party assumed office.
I do not think I need a lecture from the member about housing and who signed what and when. The issue I am talking about is what the member does not seem to be able to understand. If we are going to deal with the fundamental issues of a disease that is caused by substance abuse and intravenous drug use, we need to deal with them in a manner that is consistent with public health principles. These are not my principles. They are not Liberal Party principles. They are proven public health principles. Any country in the world would have known what they are. And I am asking the government to actually observe them.