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  • His favourite word is veterans.

Liberal MP for Cambridge (Ontario)

Won his last election, in 2021, with 38% of the vote.

Statements in the House

Questions on the Order Paper December 13th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, the Canada digital adoption program, CDAP, was established to help small and medium-sized enterprises, SMEs, realize their full potential by adopting digital technologies. CDAP comprises two separate funding components: grow your business online, GYBO, and boost your business technology, BYBT.

With regard to part (a), 17 complaints were received between March 1, 2022 and October 25, 2024.

The nature of the complaints is as follows: eligibility criteria and application process; not being eligible to apply more than once; stacking rules; application process; application process and delays due to the review of proof of payments; application being rejected; not being eligible to apply more than once; eligibility criteria; not being eligible to apply more than once; problems with vendor; not being eligible to apply more than once; not being eligible to apply more than once; problems with vendor; not being eligible to apply more than once; not being eligible to apply more than once; problems with vendor; and eligibility criteria.

With regard to part (b), Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada,ISED, does not receive this information.

With regard to part (c), as of the end of Q1, July 2024, eight recipients, out of 20,634 grants that have been paid out, have been required to refund the grant to ISED after their application was approved.

With regard to part (d), out of the 29,103 grants disbursed up to October 25, 2024, boost your business technology received 295 complaints.

Among the complaints regarding digital advisers, approximately 40% involved misrepresentation of the boost your business technology program or errors in advertising campaigns by digital advisers. Another 15% related to the quality of digital adoption plans produced, while an additional 15% were about digital advisers submitting applications on behalf of clients. The remaining complaints covered various issues, including ineligible discounts and invoice discrepancies.

With regard to part (e), currently, about 245 SMEs, representing fewer than 1% of claims, have had their claims rejected.

With regard to part (f), as of October 25, 2024, no businesses have been required to pay back the full grant to ISED after it was received.

Housing Accelerator Fund November 21st, 2024

Mr. Speaker, the Liberal government is committed to building more homes faster through the housing accelerator fund. We have signed over 175 agreements to fast-track the construction of over 750,000 new homes across Canada. In my riding of Cambridge, we are receiving $13.3 million to implement nine local initiatives, including the fast-tracking of municipal lands programs, which will spur over 3,600 new homes. These initiatives will also increase affordable housing by removing the barriers and streamlining the zoning process.

Unfortunately, the Leader of the Opposition's plan to cut the fund is a disaster. He must stop muzzling Conservative MPs who are simply doing their job, advocating for their communities. Mayors, housing experts and even 18 of his own members of Parliament oppose this plan to cut the fund. I urge him to support our Liberal plan. We need to continue to build homes faster across Canada for all Canadians.

Small Business November 5th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, the Liberals are going to continue to support small and medium-sized businesses. We are empowering entrepreneurs. We are increasing the lifetime capital gains exemption. We are investing in Canadian start-ups, and we are supporting equity-deserving entrepreneurs and businesses. This also gives me the opportunity to highlight that we have negotiated agreements with both Visa and Mastercard to lower interchange fees by up to 27% as of October 19 of this year.

Our government is committed to supporting small businesses, economic growth and prosperity for all Canadians. We have been with small businesses and supporting small businesses from day one, and the opposition has voted against all of it.

Small Business November 5th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, I am happy to respond to comments made earlier by the hon. member for Mission—Matsqui—Fraser Canyon regarding support for small businesses.

Our government understands the important role that small businesses play in the economy. This is why we will deliver $2.5 billion to close to 600,000 small and medium-sized enterprises by the end of the year through the Canada carbon rebate.

We have negotiated agreements with both Visa and Mastercard to reduce their interchange fees by up to 27%, or by $1 billion over the next five years. This means that more small businesses will be able to invest in their operations, create good jobs and strengthen our economy. To help Canadian businesses thrive, we have also invested in them through the Canada summer jobs programs and My Main Street programs.

We lowered the small business tax rate from 11% to 9%. This is in recognition of the vital role that small businesses play in our economy and to enable business owners to have more cash flow. In 2024, small businesses and medium-sized enterprises will save an estimated $6.2 billion because of the preferred small business tax rate.

To encourage Canadian innovators to turn their ideas into growing businesses, our government announced the creation of the Canadian entrepreneurs' incentive, which would reduce the inclusion rate to one-third of a lifetime maximum of $2 million in eligible capital gains. Combined with the increased $1.25-million lifetime capital gains exemption, the Canadian entrepreneurs' incentive would make eligible business owners better off when selling business shares worth up to $6.25 million.

The government's latest budget devotes $200 million to renewing the venture capital catalyst initiative, with a goal of supporting venture capital for entrepreneurs who are part of equity-deserving groups, and investing in underserved communities and those outside key metropolitan areas. This will ensure that more small businesses owned by women and members of the Black, 2SLGBTQI+ and indigenous communities have access to the capital they need to start up and scale up.

Giving young people the option to choose entrepreneurship as a valuable career path for the future is important to our government. That is why in budget 2024 we invested $60 million in Futurpreneur Canada to help the organization increase its capacity to support young Canadian entrepreneurs.

These measures combined make a real, tangible difference that supports small businesses, including those led by women and members of equity-deserving groups.

Committees of the House October 8th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, I would like to ask you to review the tape. I absolutely did not say that.

Military Justice System Modernization Act September 19th, 2024

Madam Speaker, I will try to keep it brief, but there is a lot in the question that deserves an answer. I too want to see the bill go to committee. I was the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of National Defence when the meat and potatoes of the study from Arbour came through, and the work we have done on this has been critical.

I agree wholeheartedly with the member opposite, and I think we will work together. I will point out that this is the first piece of legislation in 18 months that I hope and believe we will see full party support for.

Military Justice System Modernization Act September 19th, 2024

Madam Speaker, I am not going to speak to specific cases, because I do not have all that information in front of me. However, I will say once again that we have to work closely with the provinces. We have to encourage the provinces to make sure they are investing effectively.

This recommendation to move recommendation 5 from the Arbour report was a pillar recommendation. This was not a soft recommendation. This absolutely needs to be done, and we have moved in that direction. We know that this is what the stakeholders were asking us to do. We know that there are going to be challenges as we move forward with respect to resourcing and making sure that the provinces are properly equipped to manage. However, again, this is a provincial-level issue and a provincial-level question.

Military Justice System Modernization Act September 19th, 2024

Madam Speaker, I agree that we absolutely need to make sure that we are working very closely with the provinces on this issue. We want to make sure that this transition is smooth. I will say this has been the case for some time now. No cases of sexual misconduct are being adjudicated within the military justice system. All of those cases are being tried in the civil courts.

I will say that ensuring that we are working with the provinces on this is critical. We have heard a number of comments this evening criticizing our government with respect to delays that are provincial in focus. We have to encourage the provinces to make sure they are investing effectively, so there are no backlogs within their court systems.

Military Justice System Modernization Act September 19th, 2024

Madam Speaker, the Minister of National Defence has made it clear that he is committed to ensuring that the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces are workplaces where all members, military and civilian, feel supported, respected and included. While much has been accomplished toward this goal, there is still more to do.

Bill C-66 is another critical step toward lasting institutional reform, as well as toward strengthening trust and confidence in the military justice system. It is the next step in the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces' efforts to implement recommendations from the independent external comprehensive review and the third independent review of the National Defence Act.

Apart from the recommendations addressed in Bill C-66, the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces have also made progress on recommendations from the minister's advisory panel on systemic racism and discrimination report and the national apology advisory committee report.

Overall, these four reviews have helped define how DND and CAF are undertaking changes to the military justice system and culture change. That is why today I would like to provide the House with an overview of these independent external reviews and the progress the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces have made to implement their recommendations to date.

I will begin with the independent external comprehensive review, also known as the IECR. This review was launched in April 2021 and led by former Supreme Court justice Louise Arbour to examine harassment and sexual misconduct in National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces, as well as policies, procedures, programs, practices and culture, including the military justice system.

I apologize; I should have mentioned at the outset that I need to split my time with the hon. member for Hamilton Mountain.

The final report was made public on May 30, 2022, and the minister at the time welcomed all 48 recommendations. When the final report was received, there were 17 recommendations for which implementation could actually be undertaken immediately. These included, but were not limited to, the implementation of recommendation 48, appointing an external monitor to oversee the implementation efforts of the IECR's recommendations.

The minister at the time appointed Madame Jocelyne Therrien as the external monitor, who provides monthly progress reports to the minister on the implementation of the IECR's recommendation. She also provides biannual progress reports that are made available publicly.

The minister also announced the implementation of recommendations 7 and 9, changes to the military grievance and harassment process, in August 2023. With the implementation of these recommendations, any CAF member who has experienced sexual harassment can now choose to direct their complaint directly to the Canadian Human Rights Commission without first exhausting the internal grievance and harassment process.

More recently, in June 2024, the minister announced that in response to recommendations 1 and 2, the CAF had issued interim policy guidance to abolish the definition of sexual misconduct for its policies and to include sexual assault as the stand-alone definition, referring to the Criminal Code as the applicable law.

In response to these recommendations, the term “sexual misconduct” has been replaced with three new terms: “conduct deficiencies of a sexual nature”, “harassment of a sexual nature” and “crimes of a sexual nature”. Sexual assault is also included as a distinct definition in relevant policies. These changes will provide better coherence and clarity, reduce confusion and better capture the range of inappropriate conduct.

The minister also announced the repeal of the duty to report regulations in response to recommendation 11. Madame Arbour found that these regulations, while well intended, took away the agency and control of survivors in the reporting process, potentially leading to the revictimization of those they were meant to protect.

The repeal of the duty to report came into effect on June 30, 2024. As we see with Bill C-66, the department is seeking to remove the CAF's investigative and prosecutorial jurisdiction over the Criminal Code sexual offences committed in Canada, which would address a part of recommendation 5 of the IECR. Since December 2021, all new Criminal Code sexual offence charges are now being laid at the civilian justice system and no new sexual offence charges are being adjudicated in the military justice system. Bill C-66 would also address recommendations from the third independent review of the National Defence Act.

In November 2020, the hon. Justice Fish was appointed to conduct an independent review of specified provisions of the National Defence Act and their operation. In June 2021, the minister tabled the report before Parliament. Justice Fish provided the minister with 107 wide-ranging recommendations that support the ongoing modernization of the military justice system, military policing, military police oversight and the grievance process. This is the most comprehensive independent review and far-reaching examination of the military justice system since the reviews led by former chief justice of Canada Brian Dickson in the late 1990s.

Bill C-66 would address eight recommendations from the review. The amendments would seek to, among other things, modify the process for the appointment of the Canadian Forces provost marshal, the director of military prosecutions and the director of defence counsel services. They would also expand the class of persons who are eligible to be appointed as a military judge to include non-commissioned members, and change the title of the Canadian Forces provost marshal to the provost marshal general, to align with the titles of other senior designations in the CAF. The amendments would seek to strengthen trust in the military justice authorities operating independently from the chain of command and to bolster the trust and confidence of Canadians in the military justice system.

DND and CAF are also building on previous external and internal reports and recommendations focused on racism and discrimination. The minister's advisory panel on systemic racism and discrimination was created to identify ways of eliminating racism, prejudice, discrimination and gender bias within the military. Through the report, DND and the CAF have established the director of anti-racism implementation, formerly the anti-racism secretariat, under chief professional conduct and culture to inform and focus our institutional efforts to address racism and discrimination. We are also collaborating with other government departments in the development of Canada's anti-racism strategy and expanding the availability of anti-racism resources.

There are many intersections between this report and the national apology advisory committee report, which included eight recommendations for the Government of Canada. These included an apology for the treatment of the No. 2 Construction Battalion, the largest all-Black military unit in Canada's history. The government made this historic apology in July 2022.

The Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces maintain an unwavering commitment to implementing the recommendations of former Supreme Court justices Arbour and Fish, as well as the recommendations from the minister's advisory panel on systemic racism and discrimination and the national apology advisory committee. The legislative changes proposed in Bill C-66 would play a critical role in helping us implement some of the recommendations from former justices Arbour and Fish and help rebuild trust in the military justice system.

Technology and Innovation in Southern Ontario May 28th, 2024

Mr. Speaker, it is my pleasure to rise today to speak about the good work that our government is doing through the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario. I know that my colleagues on both sides of the House will agree that supporting small businesses and entrepreneurs leads to strong local and national economies.

We are investing in EV suppliers and innovators, like ARC Motors in Peterborough, which turns vintage cars into EVs. Our Main Streets have the opportunity to thrive once again with investments in Main Street businesses.

I have visited some fantastic businesses and have met with the entrepreneurs and organizations behind them. It is amazing to see the innovation and growth that they are creating. I know that many business owners will be able to reach their potential and to unlock new possibilities for Canada with support from FedDev Ontario.