CONTENTS
Friday, March 7, 1997
ORAL QUESTIONS
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8779
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8779
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 8781
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 8781
Consideration of motion resumed 8785
Consideration resumed of motion 8790
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata) 8791
Mr. Hill (Prince George-Peace River) 8803
8765
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Friday, March 7, 1997
The House met at 10 a.m.
_______________
Prayers
_______________
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
Translation]
Mrs. Monique Guay (Laurentides, BQ) moved:
That this House condemn the federal government's lack of political will in
refusing to take positive action in its areas of jurisdiction to promote economic
equality between women and men and cutting transfer payments to the provinces by
$4.5 billion, including $1.3 billion to Quebec between 1996 and 1998; and
That, moreover, this House remind the government of the formal commitment it
made on March 8, 1994, to take specific measures to improve the socio-economic
status of women.
She said: Mr. Speaker, I will be sharing my time with the hon.
member for Laval East, each of us using 10 minutes. It is indeed a
great pleasure for me to speak today on this motion. I would like to
take this opportunity to say a few words about my vision of
International Women's Day.
Many hold the-in my opinion unfounded-belief that
celebrating March 8 is unnecessary. Why a special day for women?
I must say right off that this day is intended as a day of reflection. It
is an opportunity for women of all backgrounds, walks of life and
faiths to take stock and see not only how far we have come, but also
how long a way we still have to go. This is both a day of celebration
and a day for taking charge aimed at examining and improving the
social, economic and professional status of women worldwide.
Think that, not so long ago, women did not have the right to vote
in Canada. But today, a number of us hold elected office at various
levels of government. This is a step in the right direction, but there
is still a long way to go.
International Women's Day has its origins in women's demands
for decent working conditions. The new realities of the labour
market, which are becoming the lot of a growing number of
women, are best described by the words insecurity, instability,
short term contracts and underpaid work.
The social safety net that had ensured, so far, that women in both
Quebec and Canada could keep their heads above water is under
direct attack by the federal government, which, under the guise of
restructuring, is in fact using social program funding to reduce its
deficit. Thus, the government is the primary cause of increased
poverty among women and children in Canada because, instead of
closing tax loopholes, as requested time and time again in this
House by the Bloc Quebecois over the past three years, the
government chose to drastically reduce transfer payments to the
provinces, restrict UI eligibility and cut benefits, not to mention
downsizing, as it just did at Canada Post, by laying off an
unprecedented number of employees, the majority of whom were
women.
I would like to quote a few statistics on women, poverty and
employment. It is very important to acknowledge these statistics
today, as this may be an annual review we are doing here. In 1994,
70 per cent of all Canadians living in poverty were women or
children; out of 4.8 million poor people, there were 2 million
women and 1.3 million children. That is a lot of people. There are
now 1.5 million children living in poverty, 200,000 more than
when the Liberals took office. That is a clear setback.
(1010)
Of all the industrialized countries, Canada is the one where the
proportion of women in low paying jobs is the highest, at 34.3 per
cent, with the exception of Japan, which has a rate of 37.2 per cent.
Let us look at more figures. Only 20 per cent of women have a
full time job, throughout the year, for which they earn more than
$30,000 per year, compared to 40 per cent of men.
The vast majority of part time jobs are held by women. In 1994,
69 per cent of all part time workers in Canada were women, a
figure that has not varied much over the last two decades.
Again in 1994, 1.6 million women, or 26 per cent of those who
had a job, were part time workers, compared to only 9 per cent of
8766
men holding a job. Moreover, an increasing number of women are
working part time because they cannot find a full time job.
In 1994, over 500,000 women, that is 34 per cent of all women
working part time, said they would like to have a full time job. The
unemployment rate among certain groups of women is higher than
the national average. For young women under 24 years of age, that
rate stands at 15.6 per cent.
Here are more figures. The majority of working women hold
jobs that have traditionally been women's occupations. In 1994,60 per cent of all working women were teachers, nurses, or had a
similar job in the health sector, were office workers, or were in
sales and services. By comparison, 31 per cent of the working men
had jobs in these areas.
Statistics show that 57.3 per cent of single mothers with children
under 18 are poor. Regardless of women's level of education, their
earnings are lower than those of men. Even female university
graduates working full time throughout the year only earned 75 per
cent of what their male counterparts made in 1993.
These statistics show that women are not moving forward, they
are losing ground. Women are getting poorer year after year.
Moreover, the number of jobs for women is decreasing. We also
have to realize that, given the number of divorces and separations,
there are more and more single mothers. These women find
themselves in charge of a family, but without a job. Sure, they get
support payments, but these are never enough to provide children
with all they need for education, health, etc.
We are therefore in the process of taking a net step backwards. It
is unacceptable when we realize that today in 1997 after all the
progress women have made, all the work done by women's groups,
all the work done by unions, by all the groups working to advance
the cause of women and develop job markets for women that, today
in 1997, we are losing ground.
At this point, I would like to remind you of the promises the
Liberals made in the red book, and I will tell you what they were.
The Liberals gave us universal health care, unemployment
insurance, old age benefits, the guaranteed income supplement, the
Canada Pension Plan, the Canada Assistance Plan, the Canadian
Human Rights Commission and the Charter of Rights and
Freedoms.
The failure of the economic and social policies of the
Conservatives is obvious: there are 1.6 million unemployed; 4.2
million Canadians, including 1.2 million children, live in poverty;
62 per cent of single mothers live under the poverty line, and their
incomes are slipping.
Since 1984, the Conservatives have systematically chipped away
at the social safety net built up over the years.
(1015)
They have cut health care, and assistance to children, seniors and
the unemployed by billions of dollars. They have encouraged the
development of a two tier society that separates the rich and the
poor, those with education and those without, with middle classes
gradually disappearing. Most Canadians do not want this kind of
country.
It is well known that not nearly enough money is being spent on
research into breast cancer, which affects one woman out of nine.
Many single mothers would like to find work but, for lack of
quality day care, must settle for welfare. They must rely on meagre
welfare payments, food banks and inadequate housing. They
cannot receive training or find jobs that would make them
financially independent. If we look at the cuts made by the federal
government in social housing alone, it is truly shocking.
In conclusion, for I see I have used up all my time, I would like
to mark this day. I would like to pay tribute to all the parliamentary
women who are working today and who, I hope, will see, today,
tomorrow and Sunday, in their various regions and fields of activity
what remains to be done to advance the cause of women.
[English]
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
thank the member for kicking off debate on this issue. I think it is a
very important issue and there are some dimensions that I hope the
member and other colleagues will raise in the debate because it is
not just men and women and how they live in our country
separately. The issue for me is how the family survives, men and
women together raising children. Society as we know it would
cease to exist without the family and without those children.
A report from the Vanier Institute on the Family stated that there
is one divorce for every two marriages in Canada, according to the
latest statistics; a 50 per cent divorce rate in Canada.
In addition, the member would know that 23 per cent of all
families in Canada are lone parent families. I want to make sure the
member hears this; lone parent families, not single mother
families. That 23 per cent of lone parent families account for 46 per
cent to 53 per cent, depending on the research, of children living in
poverty.
In my view, a significant portion of the member's argument has
ignored the fact that the crisis of the family in Canada, particularly
the breakdown of the traditional nuclear family, has been a major
contributor to the poverty of women in Canada. Half the marriages
break down and the vast majority of arrangements give custody of
children to the women and in any family breakdown if both
8767
parents' income stays the same that is going to result in poverty for
no other reason other than there is a second residence and second
living costs.
Does the member not believe that the crisis of the family in
Canada, the breakdown of the family, is a major consideration in
terms of dealing with the issue of economic independence of
women?
[Translation]
Mrs. Guay: Mr. Speaker, if I understood the Liberal member
properly, he was telling me that women are to blame for divorce.
Divorce is very common these days, and women and children are
the ones who pay the price when there is a divorce.
Who looks after the children? The women who become single
parents. They often do not even have any support payments
because the husbands disappear into the woodwork and they cannot
manage to get any help from them in raising their children. I am not
saying that everyone is in the same boat here, but there are many
women who are forced to clothe and feed their children, finance
their educations, help them get as far ahead in the world as
possible. We see this every day in our ridings. And if there are
divorces, this is a choice. A divorce is a choice made by a couple to
live apart. People cannot be forced to live together.
(1020)
I have already spoken to my hon. colleague on this, because I
was so angry at this idea of wanting to force people to stay together
for the sake of the children. Children would not be any happier
living with parents who detest each other, who would happily tear
each other's eyes out, than living in a divorced family. It is far
healthier for them to grow up with parents who, although divorced,
are rebuilding their lives and see eye to eye about their education,
their diet, their health and so on. Women's situation is, therefore,
precarious. We need to open our eyes.
I referred to social housing. The federal government has
completely cut funding to social housing. Today, social housing is
being cut back more and more, and the problem is being dumped
onto the provinces. Today, we find women living in run-down and
poorly heated housing. Is this any good for their health and the
health of their children? Really, Mr. Speaker.
Something has to be done somewhere, then. This government is
responsible for some of the actions that have been taken in the past
three and a half years, and today is the ideal time, perhaps, to wake
up to reality and to make the necessary changes.
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Madam Speaker,
International Women's Day is celebrated annually in many ways.
For women, it is a time to consider what they have achieved, which
has been significant over the years, especially thanks to the battles
they have fought.
It is also a time to consider what remains to be done, and in this
respect, the figures show that although women in our country now
have equal rights, they still have a long way to go in terms of equal
opportunities.
Earlier, the hon. member for Laurentides mentioned a few
statistics that were self-explanatory, and I think they bear repeating
again and again. I am referring to the fact the battle is not won, that
women are still poorer than men and more vulnerable when the
economy falters, and that governments are letting this situation
continue.
These issues were again in the news this week when the Canada
Labour Congress released a study that concluded that women's
equality is a myth. According to the study released on Wednesday,
only 20 per cent of Canadian and Quebec women have a full-time,
steady job which pays about $30,000 annually, compared with40 per cent of the men. Of all industrialized countries in the OECD,
Canada, after Japan, has the highest percentage of women in low
paying jobs. Women have less than 20 per cent of the highest
paying jobs and more than 70 per cent of the lowest paying jobs.
The unemployment rate is incredibly high among many groups
of women. Among young women under 24, it is 15.6 per cent.
Among women who are members of a visible minority, 13.4 per
cent. Among native women, 17.7 per cent. And among women with
a disability, 16.6 per cent.
In less than 20 years, the number of part-time female workers
has increased 200 per cent. During this period, women represented
70 per cent of the part-time labour force. More than one third of the
women employed in part-time jobs would prefer to work full-time
but can only find part-time employment. That is one of the reasons
why they are severely penalized by employment insurance reform.
So, one job out of ten is now temporary.
The myth of women's equality is everywhere. Although
women's demands for wage equity have a long history, there is still
more talk than action in this respect. There is still a 26 per cent gap
between the wages of a man and those of a woman, both working
full-time.
(1025)
On her latest income tax return, Mrs. X will report an average
income of $29,700 and Mr. X a salary of $40,600. Even with a
college or university degree, women earning a good salary are on
average paid 10 per cent less than their male counterparts.
Women make up half the population, have the same democratic
rights as men, and their contribution to political, social and
economic life in Canada and Quebec is a recognized fact. However,
although many women are actively involved in our society and are
highly qualified, they are still under-represented in executive
positions. This low representation of women in positions of
authority may not only prevent a real understanding of the
8768
problems that specifically affect women in Quebec and Canada but
it also deprives the institutions that wield this authority of a range
of views and experience that would be a real asset to the way they
conduct their business.
Women may have succeeded in opening the doors to the
corridors of power, but to achieve any kind of recognition, they
must struggle to adjust to a political and organizational culture that
evolved at a time when women were excluded. Furthermore, they
must often be far more resourceful than their male colleagues to
reconcile the various aspects of their lives.
Economic equity is the key, in a society that calls itself
egalitarian. Today's employment market for women is
characterized by insecurity, instability, short term contracts and
underpaid jobs.
The social safety net that in the past helped Canadian and
Quebec women manage, as my colleague for Laurentides
mentioned, is now being sabotaged by the federal government on
the excuse of eliminating the deficit. And the effect is greater
poverty among women and children. We must not forget that one
child in five in Canada lives in poverty.
By choosing to reduce transfer payments to the provinces, by
limiting access to unemployment insurance and lowering its
benefits, the federal government is the one responsible for the
unravelling of the social safety net.
It was, however, the Liberal government that established the
Canada assistance plan and made the commitment with the
provinces at the time to cover the costs of health care, social
assistance and higher education. It was the same Liberal
government that broke all its election promises to not touch social
programs-and this is verbatim from the red book-and decided to
use the money set aside for social programs to reduce the deficit.
Thus, between 1996 and 1998, the federal government will take
$4.5 billion away from the provinces, including $1.3 billion from
Quebec. During this time, the insecurity of the job market and the
cuts to unemployment insurance will increase the welfare load of
the provinces. In 1995, Quebec had a record number of households
on the welfare rolls.
When now, more than ever, women need income assistance
between two jobs, the federal government is tightening its
unemployment insurance eligibility criteria, thus making it less
accessible to part time women workers.
In the past, 300 hours worked entitled an individual to benefits.
Now the figure is 910. The Council on the Status of Women pointed
out that it is reasonable to assume that the first hour worked will
not, in many cases, improve access to the plan.
(1030)
Women will be paying into a plan they may never benefit from.
Moreover, while the government is tightening criteria and
shortening the benefit period, it is building up surpluses in the
unemployment insurance fund that might reach a record $12 billion
by 1998. We are told that these surpluses will be used to artificially
lower the deficit instead of creating jobs.
I would also like to say a couple of words about the Employment
Equity Act passed in 1977 by this Parliament. The Liberal and
Conservative governments in power since it was enacted have done
everything in their power to stall its implementation. Despite the
fact that the Employment Equity Act has been in force since 1977,
some 80,000 civil servants, mostly women, have been waiting for
Treasury Board to act on this problem.
We could also mention the broken promise to create 150,000 day
care places, the dismantling of the Advisory Council on the Status
of Women, the cuts to funding for women's groups. Instead of
helping the women and children in this country, the heritage
minister is trying to make us believe that the Canadian flag can turn
into pizzas in Canadian elementary schools. Whether we are
Canadians or Quebecers, I do not believe that a flag is a good
substitute for milk, fruit and vegetables.
To conclude, I would like to salute all the women in the riding of
Laval East and the women's groups who are striving, with what
little resources they have, to improve living conditions for women
in Laval.
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, first of all, I
would like to commend the member for Laval East for her speech
which was, as always, well documented, clear and soberly
delivered.
Even if tomorrow is International Women's Day, it is appropriate
for some men to rise in this House to voice their support for the
women's movement, for improved living conditions for women
and for some aspects of this movement, this progression toward
greater economic autonomy, equality and equity.
For two years now, the efforts made in Quebec, under the
stewardship of the Fédération des femmes du Québec, which
coordinated the two Bread and Roses marches, have increased
Quebecers' awareness of the plight of many women among them.
Unfortunately, the tight economic situation and, as the member
for Laval East reminded us, the non-application of legislation on
employment equity in the public service, added to all the cuts that
were made, created a situation where some women will have to
wait longer than they normally should before they can enjoy equity.
Among the measures which could improve the status of women,
one is a greater presence in politics. I do not want to annoy my
colleague from Laval East, but I would like her to tell us if she
8769
agrees that more women in politics would be a solution, if
stressing the importance of women's involvement in politics would
improve things.
Mrs. Debien: Mr. Speaker, I would like to thank my colleague
for his question. Would it make a difference if there were more
women in politics, in power and in decision making circles? I think
it would. As I said earlier, women make up 50 per cent of the
population. Men and women complement each other. There is what
is often called in Latin the animus and the anima. This is an old
theory which, I think, was developed by Teilhard de Chardin during
the course of his work.
(1035)
So the animus and the anima complement each other. I do not
want to turn this issue into a battle of the sexes, but I do think that
the presence of women in politics must be considered from that
perspective. Women bring with them 50 per cent of mankind's
knowledge and experience. Their contribution is different from
men's contribution, and this is why their presence in power and
decision making circles is so important.
I would like to come back to an something my colleague from
Mississauga-South talked about a while ago because I feel
compelled to respond to his comments. He talked about family
policy and he talked about the fight against poverty. That is the
problem with this government as it was with its predecessor: they
confuse a comprehensive and consistent family policy with a
policy to fight poverty. These are two completely different things. I
will use the child tax benefit proposed by the government as an
example.
We know that the child tax benefit is part of a family policy.
Right? Well, that is one thing. The government is using poverty as
an excuse-
Must I conclude my remarks, Mr. Speaker? It is very
unfortunate. I would have liked to talk at length about the
distinction that must be made between family policy, which should
be under provincial jurisdiction-and Quebec has already
developed such a policy-and a policy to fight poverty.
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I rise to speak to the motion on
women's economic autonomy that is currently before the House. I
am pleased that my hon. colleague attaches such a high importance
to the enhancement of women's economic autonomy, because there
is still a great deal that we still must do. She is extremely right.
Let us remember where women have come from. Women only
got the vote federally in 1918. In Quebec, women only got the vote
in 1940. Aboriginal women have had the vote only since 1969.
Women were only considered persons in 1929. We have a long way
to go.
Some of the things that need to be done to ensure women taking
their full place in society, economically, socially, politically and
culturally are going to mean embarking on some very long term
measures that will take time. Women have only just, in the later and
middle part of this century, actually come into their own.
Women's economic security and independence affect every
single aspect of women's lives. Why? Because women are made up
of all the things that contribute to their lives. If we talk about
women's economic autonomy, we have to talk about the impact
that women's poverty and women's dependence have on violence
against women.
We have to talk about the fact that 80 per cent of single parent
families are headed by women. We need to talk about the diversity
of women. We need to talk about the fact that many women face
triple barriers, not just the barrier of their gender. Therefore, we
cannot present a simplistic solution to women's economic
autonomy. They must, necessarily, be comprehensive as they must
cross every single segment of women's lives.
[Translation]
As Secretary of State for the Status of Women, I am very proud
of what our government has done to promote women's economic
independence and equality between the sexes in general in Canada.
Although there is still a lot to do, we are determined to advance the
cause of the equality of women.
[English]
Therefore, the government has taken an approach to women's
equality that is multi-faceted and comprehensive. Its
accomplishments are many and varied. In a little over three years it
has moved forward on a wide range of issues of importance to
women.
(1040)
While the federal government moves to strengthen employment
equity, certain provinces are moving to cancel employment equity
measures. It has moved to deficit reduction because a stable
Canadian economy gives the ability to assist and to move forward
with good social strategies to assist women.
Firearms control, child support reform, Canada child tax benefit
and job creation and growth are all things that must and will impact
on women's economic autonomy. The government has moved on
education and training, prenatal nutrition and women's health
issues, because health is an economic resource. It has moved on
youth employment because the young girl child will become the
woman of tomorrow. Reproductive technologies, outlawing female
genital mutilation, action on child poverty and more are all
measures which the government has moved on.
8770
All of these may seem unrelated but they have an impact on
women's economic autonomy. The foundation of women's
equality must be built on a composite of positive actions which
touch on all aspects of their lives. One issue interacts with another.
The actions of one government department impacts on another.
Policies must be shaped, which is what the government is doing
with a careful eye to their full implications for all Canadians, no
matter whether they are women or men, young or old, rich or poor,
recent immigrants or long time Canadians.
As Secretary of State for the Status of Women, I have focused
my work therefore on three key priority areas: economic
independence and autonomy for women, eliminating violence
against women, and women's rights as human rights, with
particular emphasis on the role of the disadvantaged.
We have moved first and foremost to secure the future of
Canada's social programs, many of which are vital to the economic
well-being of women. We know that women's incomes do not only
depend on paid work, they depend on transfers from governments
and transfers from individuals such as alimony and child support.
They depend on the amount of unpaid work that women do. And
they also depend on whether women have children or not.
There are fewer and fewer jobs for women which speaks to a
discrimination that is rampant against women. That is why we have
moved forward to deal with these issues with a short term and a
very long term holistic strategy. The 73 cents that many women in
full time jobs earn to the $1 that every man earns has to do with the
fact that many women have children and that impacts on their
ability to secure full time work.
What has the government done? In this budget it has
strengthened literacy programs because women need to be assisted
to become literate. In this budget access to training and work has
been improved. Slowly an infrastructure has been built over the
past three years.
Look at the EI system. Everyone has heard talk about the EI
system. What has not been said is that over 270,000 women will
have work insured for the very first time in their lives. The
reinvestment of $800 million in employment benefits will help
women to find jobs. Sixty-seven per cent of the people who receive
family income are women. The average benefit for the single
parent, given that 80 per cent of them are women, will be increased
by 13 per cent.
Seven hundred thousand women, including 495,000 who pay
premiums today are going to have their premiums refunded under
the EI benefit. We do not hear about these things. We also do not
hear about the fact that under the new EI benefit women will now
have choices, especially when we consider that women with
children have problems in the workforce. With the new EI benefit,
women will be allowed to make a choice to stay at home and look
after their children for up to five years and still have access under
the employment insurance to go back to training.
Labour market support. Look at the Employment Equity Act
which has targeted women as a very high group in terms at looking
at employment equity for women.
The Canada student loans program, which gives grants to part
time students, such as single women, will fund increased day care
and tax credits to women in high school now. These things are all
new. They may seem to be small things but when they are stacked
one on top of the other, they become a holistic, long term, bit by bit
infrastructure which can be built on to help women achieve
economic autonomy.
(1045)
[Translation]
Among our accomplishments, we might mention consolidation
of the Employment Equity Act and a series of measures aimed at
improving access to post-secondary education.
[English]
We have now improved the ability of women to go into post
graduate programs, specifically in science and mathematics,
because these are where the new sustainable long term jobs will
come from in the next century.
These are some of the things we talk about. They are not
grandiose gestures because centuries upon centuries of women's
inequality cannot be fixed with one single move. It must be built
with a strong, solid infrastructure.
This is why we have looked at the issue of unpaid work. For the
first time in the history of the country there have been questions
about unpaid work in the census forms. They will define exactly
how much unpaid work women do in terms of nurturing and care
giving. They will look at how that is factored into national accounts
so we can realize that unpaid work supports the economic
structures of the country.
We need to look at the child support programs. Many women
who head single parent families do not have the ability to support
their children properly. These children live in poverty. That is why
scheduled to come into effect on May 1, 1997 will be the new child
support payments act to ensure that women do not have to fight
tooth and nail for every penny they receive to support their
children. These children will finally get the support they need to
help them get an education and to have the quality of life they need
to become strong and secure adults.
There is practically no dispute that the federal government has
put its fiscal house in order. That meant spending restraints. We
could not exempt transfers from the spending restraints because
transfers make up 20 per cent of all federal funding.
8771
We have been a lot tougher on ourselves than we have been on
the provinces. Between 1993-94 and 1998-99 Quebec's transfer
entitlements will decrease by 10.9 per cent. During that same
period the federal government transfers will be reduced by 15 per
cent. The government of Quebec knows very well that the
reduction of budgetary deficits imposes difficult choices. The
Quebec government also knows it must bear its share of the effort.
Premier Bouchard made very clear that restraints involve tough
choices when he said in the National Assembly on March 25, 1996:
``To those who say not in my backyard I reply that there must be
something in everyone's backyard''.
Then there was Bernard Landry who told the National Assembly
on December 9, 1996 that it must nevertheless be admitted there is
a sense of responsibility that binds us to do our share to help get
Canada out of a debt we helped create.
In the current fiscal year federal transfers to provinces for health,
post secondary education and other social programs will be $26.9
billion. In addition, provinces like Quebec receive well over $8.5
billion in equalization payments. Quebec is getting federal
transfers of approximately $11 billion a year or 31 per cent of all
transfers. Where that province chooses to spend its money will
depend on the goodwill of the province and its commitment to
women. If it chooses to spend the money on women then it will. It
is the provinces' choice as to what they cut and not ours.
For the provinces to be able to build some long term goals into
their programs for the future of women and children, we have
stabilized the transfers to a five-year program that in the last two
years will see an increase. There will also be an $11 billion cash
flow so the federal government can continue to keep a set of
national standards to ensure that women have the social programs
and the health care they need.
We talk about women's economic well-being and the health of
women. We have set up five centres of excellence for women's
health across the country to deal specifically with helping to form
good policies to assist women to be healthy so they can contribute
to the economic growth of the country.
This is what we mean when we talk about economic autonomy.
We do not limit it to whether or not a women has a dollar in her
pocket. Some of the things we have done in the last budget will
assist about 1.4 million families to get more money in their
pockets, and 2.5 million of them have children.
(1050)
Women are the heads of households, the majority of whose
children live in poverty. When we attach money to children who
live in poverty we assist the well-being of women and their
families. They are interdependent.
It is important when we are talk about women's equality,
Women's International Day and Women's International Week, to
remember those who say we do not need to have programs, that we
do not need to look at women as disadvantaged group, or that many
women like aboriginal women, lesbians, disabled women and
women of colour continue to be triply and doubly disadvantaged. If
we do not understand that then there are those of us in the House
who are out of touch with the real lives of women, who do not
understand that women are the poor, that women are among the
most illiterate and that women are the ones who need access to
good training programs.
As a Liberal government we realize it. We have specifically
targeted women so that they have access to training and that
because they have children they are able to find work within their
homes, to be able to set up their own businesses. Since we have
come into power women's enterprise centres have been targeting
women, assisting them to get money to start their own businesses
and assisting with work plans so their businesses can be successful.
Over 46 per cent of new businesses are headed by women and they
are the most successful businesses that have given women the
choice to have economic independence.
When we speak about women's economic independence and
about violence against women, we speak to women and their
human rights. One of my colleague's across the way talked about
women in politics. Women make up over 50 per cent of the
population. If we do not understand that getting women into
political structures where they can play a part in decision making is
simple democracy then we do not understand democracy. If we do
not have appropriate representation from over 50 per cent of our
population in decision making we do not factor in the reality of
how the country is structured or the reality of the gender
differences that make up the country.
The Minister of Finance said that helping women to achieve
their full potential was simply a matter of good common sense. If
women make up over 50 per cent of the population they must have
a key role to play in forming the important human resource
development that is necessary. The Minister of Finance also said
resources for the country in the 21st century would not lie in the
ground on which we walk but would lie in the people who walk on
it. Those people make up 50 per cent of our population. They are
women. They are still disadvantaged. They are still not equal.
The government has dedicated itself to ensuring that a strong
infrastructure for the long term development and enhancement of
women's economic equality is starting. We started it. We will
continue to build it. It will be strong. In the 21st century we can be
assured that, with many of the initiatives we have taken, women
will be well on their way to fulfilling their place in Canada.
8772
[Translation]
Mrs. Monique Guay (Laurentides, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I am
very pleased to see that the minister realizes that much remains to
be done for women, politically, socially and economically.
But I would like to see, first of all, how much influence the
minister has in cabinet. Her speech was very eloquent, very
passionate, but is such a strong stand taken on the status of women,
the issue of women and children, in cabinet meetings? What I
would give to be a fly on the wall and see how much importance is
given to these issues.
I have a question for the minister. She mentioned a number of
initiatives she feels the federal government has taken to improve
the economic situation of women and, therefore, of children.
(1055)
Does she realize that, by totally eliminating transfer payments
for social housing, making billions of dollars in cuts and cutting
10,000 jobs at Canada Post, the government is affecting a growing
number of women, who end up on UI or welfare? Does she realize
also that, by abolishing the Canadian Advisory Council on the
Status of Women, the government has impeded the advancement of
women?
I would like her to elaborate a bit on this, because what we on
this side of the House are noticing is that this government is tearing
the social safety net to shreds. Promises are made that are not kept,
except for cuts, cuts, and more cuts. They keep cutting transfer
payments.
She mentioned earlier that it was up to the provinces to decide
where the money went, but let me tell you that, with no money
coming in, it is almost impossible to make up for the shortfalls
created by the federal government.
I would like her comments on this.
[English]
Ms. Fry: Mr. Speaker, I will address the first question about my
influence as Secretary of State for the Status of Women in cabinet.
The issue of women's equality is too important to be left to
personal influence. That is why the government has embarked on
gender based analysis, a clear government tool to ensure that every
policy, initiative and piece of legislation being considered by every
federal department, institution, agency and crown corporation is
looked at through the eyes of how it affects men and women.
That is how much importance the government has placed on
women's equality. It is too important to be left up to the influence
of one person. We have written it into a tool kit so that gender
analysis is being done by every department on everything they do.
The second question concerned transfer payments. It is a bit
ironic that the Bloc Quebecois should be raising this issue and
opposing measures to bring Canada's fiscal stability into order as
the government has done.
[Translation]
I would like to remind the members of the Bloc Quebecois of
what the PQ government did in Quebec. The PQ has reduced
financial assistance to the poor while at the same time cutting the
social programs intended for these people. They have also cut
transfer payments to the municipalities.
[English]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): There will be questions
and comments to the minister when we resume orders of the day
later this day.
_____________________________________________
8772
STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
[
Translation]
Mr. Antoine Dubé (Lévis, BQ): Mr. Speaker, for the first time
since the creation of the Quebec Games, in 1971, the provincial
finals were organized by a RCM, that of the Chutes de la
Chaudière, located in my riding.
Thanks to the joint efforts of eight municipalities, the 32nd
Quebec Games are being held in the riding of Lévis this year. I take
this opportunity to congratulate the 3,000 volunteers who made a
success of these games, as well as the athletes from all over the
province who are taking part in the competitions that will conclude
this weekend.
However, I must also deplore the attempt made by the federal
government to make political gains out of this event. Indeed, the
government made its financial contribution conditional to the
flooding of federal material promoting Canadian unity.
Again, congratulations to the organizers and athletes of the
Quebec Games, but shame on the federal Liberals for associating
the performances of young Quebec athletes with the promotion of
the Canadian identity.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Bill Gilmour (Comox-Alberni, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, while
the Prime Minister was on his last trade mission to Asia he took the
liberty of renaming a local landmark in my riding. Our local
landmark was known as Radar Hill. It has now been arbitrarily
renamed to Kap'Yong Hill and my constituents are furious.
8773
The Prime Minister did not even have the courtesy to review
the issue with the local residents in Tofino and Ucluelet before
he went ahead with his announcement.
(1100)
Radar Hill was named for its prominence during World War II
and has significant historical meaning to British Columbians. The
national park staff along with many other organizations has
recommended to the Prime Minister that he allow Radar Hill to
keep its name and instead establish a memorial site on Radar Hill
dedicated to Kap'Yong. This is a fair compromise arrived at and
supported by local communities.
On behalf of my constituents in Comox-Alberni, I ask that the
Prime Minister agree to this compromise, reinstate the name of our
historical landmark and establish a memorial site on the hill
instead.
* * *
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, there are
over 30,000 nuclear weapons on earth posing a threat to the health
and survival of humans and the global environment. It is for this
reason that our government strategy has been a progressive effort
to establish international norms and to lay the foundation for peace
and nuclear disarmament.
Canada co-sponsored the resolution to reaffirm the UN Treaty on
the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons and we were among the
first to ratify and implement the chemical weapons convention.
A peace organization in my riding, Ploughshares Ottawa, has
recognized the importance of working with the international
community for nuclear disarmament, and its members would like
to see the abolition of all nuclear weapons.
I commend groups like Ploughshares Ottawa and the Peace and
Environment Resource Centre for their work in this area. I know
that our government will continue to work to make the world a safe
place to live in.
* * *
Mr. Larry McCormick (Hastings-Frontenac-Lennox and
Addington, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, today millions of people across
Canada and around the world are celebrating the World Day of
Prayer. This year the women of South Korea have prepared the
service which is being observed in over 170 countries around the
world.
I am particularly honoured to share this information because I
feel a personal bond with the people of Korea. Since coming to this
House I have participated in the Canada-Korea Interparliamentary
Friendship Group and was elected president.
I believe our links with Korea are very important. The hands of
friendship that are extended across the ocean are peaceful. Peace
has brought friendship, trust and respect. In this context trade is
occurring, providing jobs and growth for both our countries.
Today Korean voices and the voices of people around the world
are joining with my constituents and other Canadians in more than
3,500 communities from Newfoundland to Yukon. Prayers on the
theme ``like a seed which grows into a tree'' will be offered.
Let us add our prayers with theirs. May crime and starvation be
eradicated.
* * *
Mr. Bill Blaikie (Winnipeg Transcona, NDP): Mr. Speaker,
tomorrow is International Women's Day, an occasion for the
Liberal government to take note on the report on women's work
released this week by the Canadian Labour Congress. It revealed
the sobering statistic that Canada has the second worst record
among industrialized countries for the percentage of women in low
wage employment.
In exactly the same way we have seen with Canada's shameful
record on child poverty, Canadians now have before them the
evidence of the terrible social damage being inflicted on Canadian
families by this Liberal government's economic policies.
The Liberal cuts have made the situation worse for women, as
some 64 per cent of the public sector jobs lost have been women's
jobs. Think of the thousands of well paid jobs lost by nurses and
other health professionals in the latest round of health care cuts in
Ontario, cuts jointly sponsored by Mike Harris and the Prime
Minister.
The Liberals are fond of saying how they got the economic
fundamentals rights. They dare not say this on International
Women's Day.
* * *
Mr. Maurizio Bevilacqua (York North, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
last night I hosted my 34th town hall meeting. The people of York
North dealt with the politics of surplus, life after a balanced budget.
They were happy to note that for the first time in a long time
Canadians were in a position to debate priorities for the future.
They were pleased that we had regained our economic
sovereignty that clearly outlined a vision for the future. They want
a nation with a highly skilled, highly paid and highly trained
workforce that produces value added products. They want
accessible, affordable medicare. They want to be the lowest taxed
jurisdiction of all the industrialized countries, reduce child poverty
and build an efficient government. That means a clarification of
8774
federal and provincial responsibility and lowered trade barriers
between the provinces.
They view the sectors of education, science, technology and the
environment as engines of growth and they want a government that
invests in these areas to generate economic growth and expansion.
Town hall meetings have been a tradition in our riding since
1988 and on behalf of the Government of Canada I would like to
thank all the contributors.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Stéphane Bergeron (Verchères, BQ): Mr. Speaker, we
have often mentioned in this House the terrible genocide that took
place in Rwanda. Over half a million people, mostly men, have
been killed, and over 250,000 women were not only raped, but
often mutilated and tortured.
(1105)
It is important to condemn this situation, because women
currently account for 70 per cent of the Rwandan population. Even
more tragic is the fact that 60 per cent of these women are widows,
because of the genocide, and cannot inherit their dead husbands'
assets.
Even though the international assistance to Rwanda in the last
two years has totalled $2.5 billion, of which $75 million is from
Canada, these women only received a meagre part of that amount.
In addition to condemning this terrible and unacceptable
situation, I wonder how we could possibly ignore such a large
group of the population, and I also wonder if the Canadian
government intends to finally take action to help these forgotten
women.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Murray Calder (Wellington-Grey-Dufferin-Simcoe,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, among the many myths that the Reform Party
has continued to rant and rave about is the supposed 73 per cent
increase in the Canada pension plan.
I have been asked by constituents what the actual increase in
CPP premiums is to the average taxpayer.
The truth is that the increase in CPP premiums, together with the
reduction in EI premiums, will by the year 2006 result in an
additional cost of little more than $125 annually, or 35 cents per
day.
Everyone wonders why Reform is making such a fuss over
nothing if this is all it will cost to solve the problems with the CPP
and put it back on strong financial footing.
All I can say is Reform members are not interested in the facts.
All they are interested in is the politics of opportunism, the politics
of envy and greed.
The Liberal government is committed to saving the CPP for
future generations.
* * *
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, this is the
first time I have heard a Liberal $10 billion tax hike as being
nothing.
At the launch of the tobacco bill, the Minister of Health made a
mistake. Twice the minister spoke ill about the effects of a
particular type of tobacco. Twice he got his facts wrong.
When the minister was threatened with a libel suit because of his
comments, he took the quick and easy way out. Instead of the
minister apologizing himself, he passed the buck and forced his
deputy minister to issue an unqualified written apology.
The minister did not have the courage, the integrity or the
parliamentary morality to stand up and take the responsibility for
his own words.
The minister alone is accountable for his actions and the actions
of his department. When staff members are right, he is happy to
take the credit. When they are wrong, he hangs them out to dry-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Order. I know the hon.
member knows it is improper to use Standing Order 31 for an
attack on another member. He is getting very close to the line. I
urge him to be more temperate in his remarks. He has 10 seconds
left.
Mr. Williams: Mr. Speaker, I want to point out the convention
of ministerial responsibility says that the minister is accountable
for what happens in his department and for what he says.
* * *
Mrs. Beryl Gaffney (Nepean, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have been
very fortunate to work closely with several Nepean residents who,
as disabled persons, face real barriers in their everyday lives.
I have always been especially concerned with the challenges
faced by people with disabilities and I had the privilege to work on
their behalf when I chaired the Standing Committee on Human
Rights and Persons with Disabilities.
I am very pleased to see that the budget has allocated $230
million for Canadians with disabilities, including more eligible
expenses for medical expense tax credits, duty free entry into
Canada for goods designated for persons with disabilities, the
elimination of a limit on attending care expenses for disabled
workers and the opportunities fund which provides $30 million a
8775
year in partnership with service organizations to help disabled
workers.
The two key thrusts of the task force on disabilities are
increasing tax recognition on the cost of disability and reducing
barriers to employment. I am pleased to see these as well in the
budget.
Through these initiatives persons with disabilities who want to
work can do so and, as such, can become financially-
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Robert Bertrand (Pontiac-Gatineau-Labelle, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, while separatists continue to scare away investors and
to weaken Montreal by fuelling divisions among Quebecers, our
government is taking concrete measures to help Montreal.
This morning, the federal Minister of Industry and his colleague,
the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and member for
Saint-Laurent-Cartierville, announced a $32 million investment
by the Canadian government.
This repayable contribution will help CAE Electronics Ltd, a
world leader in flight simulators, develop its VISTEC project, a
name that stands for visual technologies. The VISTEC project
should lead to the manufacturing of ultramodern image generation
and display devices.
(1110)
This commercial investment by the Canadian government in the
development of a promising technology will result in the creation
of 200 jobs over five years at the Montreal plant. This is another
concrete example of federal development assistance for Montreal.
* * *
Mr. Mark Assad (Gatineau-La Lièvre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
International Women's Day is an important occasion, and the
Canadian government has made concrete, albeit modest, efforts
with regard to women.
Since 1993, the Liberal government has appointed 18 senators,
10 of whom were women. Of the 173 judicial appointments made,
59 went to women, which means that 34 per cent of all appointed
judges were women. It is a respectable start.
The Prime Minister of Canada did not hesitate, in the last
election campaign, to support women by nominating eight women
as official candidates for our party. Four of these women were
eventually elected and are now serving their constituents in this
House.
These are all concrete and positive measures that really help-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Order, please. The
member for Argenteuil-Papineau has the floor.
* * *
Mr. Maurice Dumas (Argenteuil-Papineau, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, tomorrow, March 8, is International Women's Day. I
would like to say a few words about this event.
Women make up more than half the population, but they do not
hold half the power, particularly not half the political power. Some
countries do not even allow women to vote. In Canada, the
proportion of women in the various legislatures varies between 15
and 20 per cent.
The percentage of members of Parliament who are women
comes as a surprise. It is 11 per cent in the United States, 10 per
cent in the United Kingdom, and only 6 per cent in France.
Although there has been some improvement, a new electoral
dynamic must be found that is more favourable to women.
Progress is certainly under way towards the equal access of men
and women to political office, but it must continue if there is to be
real democracy throughout the world. Scandinavian countries have
almost achieved this representation and I express my hope this
March 8 to all women that this objective will be attained as quickly
as possible.
* * *
[
English]
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, International Women's Day is an important opportunity to
speak out for all women and all concerns.
Government policy and priority focus solely on equal workforce
participation and economic autonomy for women. I speak today for
many women caught in the time crunch of competing demands. I
speak for the ultimate concern of many women, their communities,
their homes and their children. I speak for their right to make
choices and be free from economic and social penalty in raising
their own children. I speak for the many men and women who
recognize that some of the greatest architects, engineers and
scientists are those who build and work not in the marketplace but
in the shaping of our future generations.
Today I salute their right to be heard by a government that has
been deaf to their concerns. Today I am proud to stand with the
Reform Party whose fresh start policies include their voice.
8776
Mr. Derek Lee (Scarborough-Rouge River, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I rise to express sadness at the passing of His Excellency
Dr. Cheddi Jagan, President of the Co-operative Republic of
Guyana, who passed away yesterday at age 78.
Dr. Jagan was a political leader in his native Guyana for a period
that spanned 50 years. His prominence and experience gave him a
presence far beyond his homeland, particularly in the western
hemisphere.
In addition to his lifelong contributions to the citizens of
Guyana, a country of several cultures, he was a leader in the
evolution of democratic left of centre politics, in the evolution of
Guyana's economy and social state and in the transition from
colony to independent state.
In a meeting in Ottawa last fall Dr. Jagan made it clear how
Guyanese and Central American and Caribbean politics has
affected us all in North America. With the more than 100,000
Guyanese Canadians and all the people of Guyana, we mourn the
passing and the loss of Dr. Cheddi Jagan.
* * *
Mr. Stan Keyes (Hamilton West, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it is a
privilege to rise in the House today in recognition of the
achievement of McMaster University in my riding of Hamilton
West.
McMaster consistently ranks in the top five medical doctoral
universities in Maclean's magazine's annual university rankings. In
the fall of last year the UN flag was raised on campus, instituting
McMaster as North America's first campus of the United Nations
University Network on Water, health and the Environment.
(1115)
Now McMaster has been honoured in Newsweek magazine's
annual guide to graduate schools as one of six innovative medical
schools in North America. McMaster is credited with being the
birth place of problem based learning where medical students
worked on real or simulated patient cases in a clinical setting.
McMaster president, Dr. Peter George, says that the Newsweek
honour is a fitting tribute to the leadership of then university
president Dr. Harry Thode and the founding dean of the new
medical school, Dr. Jean Evans.
Since its inception in 1965, the McMaster approach to teaching
and learning medicine has attracted worldwide attention.
On behalf of my constituents of Hamilton West, I applaud
McMaster for its leadership in this field and congratulate the
president, Dr. Peter George.
[Translation]
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Mr. Speaker, Quebec
organizations working for the status of women called on women to
unite and keep up their efforts on the occasion of International
Women's Day.
From all corners of Quebec, women have worked together to
create a cloth chain of messages, with each of the links
symbolizing the solidarity that unites them. In addition, a human
chain will surround the Montreal stock exchange, the hub of
economic and government decisions, next March 12.
Women hope to show, by means of this demonstration, that
economic equity and the fight against poverty are the cornerstones
of an egalitarian and fraternal society.
I would like to pay tribute to all the women from Laval who are
here today to weave this great chain of solidarity.
_____________________________________________
ORAL QUESTIONS
[
Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the Canada Labour Congress has just released a study on
women's work.
The study shows, using OECD statistics-as you know, the
OECD represents major industrialized countries throughout the
world-that Canada is the industrialized country with the highest
percentage of women in low-paying jobs, after Japan. The report
tells us that only 20 per cent of women have full-time jobs paying
more than $30,000 annually. In other words, poverty has a gender.
Poverty is female.
My question is directed to the Acting Prime Minister. Does this
government, which promised not to touch social programs, realize
today that the consequences of its decisions are that millions of
women are doomed to even greater poverty?
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, that question is exactly why this
government has embarked on certain initiatives to deal with
economic autonomy of women. It is precisely why we have started
to build a strong infrastructure that will assist women to get
sustainable jobs in today's economy and also in the information,
technology and science economy of the 21st century.
It is the beginning of every federal department's ensuring and
looking at the sustainability of women's equality and economic
8777
equality with gender based analysis as one of the key and most
important levers to help women in Canada to become economically
autonomous.
[Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the answer is somewhat surprising, because as far as the
infrastructure program is concerned, the main criticism from
women's groups was that the program did not give any jobs to
women. It had practically no impact on women because it was not
even intended for women.
So the answer was very surprising, but surprises seem to be the
order of the day.
The labour market situation is deteriorating. Today in particular,
we see that the number of jobs is decreasing: 14,000 jobs were lost
last month, while existing jobs are less dependable, do not last as
long, and pay less, and women, who have 70 per cent of part-time
jobs and 70 per cent of the lowest paying jobs, are bearing the brunt
of this situation.
Does the government agree that the term highway robbery
applies to the way women have been affected by employment
insurance reform which, in their case, has meant reduced access to
unemployment insurance, reduced benefits and reduced benefit
periods, at a time when the unemployment insurance fund has a
record surplus of more than $5 billion a year?
(1120)
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I would draw the attention of the
hon. member to some of the very important initiatives that the
government has taken since it came into power.
In its strengthening of employment equity it has targeted women
as a key group for employment equity strategy.
Second, when we talk about the infrastructure program, I think
the hon. member should know that some of our youth strategies are
aimed at helping young women into non-traditional jobs like
construction work, which will be part of the infrastructure
program.
Finally, the employment insurance bill changes ensure that
women can now make choices. Women can get back into the
workforce under EI five years after maternity leave and well over
300,000 women will be able to get benefits for the first time in their
lives.
[Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I agree with the hon. member that the government has
targeted women, but the trouble is, it regularly misses the target,
and when it scores a hit, it is for the wrong reason.
I may remind you that Canada Labour Congress vice-president
Nancy Rich said this week that, since the Minister of Canadian
Heritage had resigned when the Liberals reneged on their promise
to abolish the GST, today the whole cabinet should resign for
reneging on the promises made in the red book and by the Prime
Minister regarding social programs.
Again, I want to ask the Acting Prime Minister how she thinks
Canadian and Quebec women judge their government which, in
spite of its promises, has savagely torn the social safety net they so
badly need, since women and children represent more than 70 per
cent of the poor in Canada, according to Statistics Canada?
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I will reiterate.
In the new employment insurance bill over 700,000 women,
including 495,000 women who pay EI premiums today, will not
have to pay EI premiums. That is a major breakthrough for women.
Second, when we talk about cuts not benefiting women, the child
benefit that has been put in place by the government will make a
difference to women. Eighty per cent of single parents are women.
Sixty-five per cent live in poverty. By targeting women with small
children a lot of women are being helped.
Child support benefits assist women to improve incomes to help
them look after their children. Dealing with women's economic
autonomy is not only dealing with the issue of employment
because women depend on many other things to assist them in
getting economic autonomy. We are addressing this in a
comprehensive holistic way, not simply in a one shot linear
unilateral way.
[Translation]
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, it is very
hard to listen to these words without anger, knowing that women
were the hardest hit by the cuts to employment insurance and to
social transfers.
My question is for the Acting Prime Minister. The government
has gazed into its crystal ball and predicted more than 300,000 jobs
in 1997, but this morning's figures hardly support its enthusiasm.
Instead of creating new jobs, Canada has lost 14,000 jobs since the
beginning of the year. As we approach March 8, women have still
less to celebrate, for 44,000 full time jobs have been lost since last
month.
How can the Acting Prime Minister explain that her government
is still predicting such a rosy future, when the employment
situation of women continues to deteriorate?
8778
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I think the issue that my hon.
colleague is talking about has to do with transfer payment cuts.
I would like to draw the hon. member's attention to some
comments made by Lucien Bouchard when he made it clear that he
knows that restraints involve tough choices. He said in the National
Assembly on March 25, 1996: ``For those who say not in my back
yard I reply that there would be something in everyone's back
yard''.
(1125 )
In the current fiscal year, federal transfers to provinces for health
and other social programs will still be $26.9 billion. In addition,
equalization payments will top that up. Quebec is getting federal
transfers of approximately $11 billion.
How Quebec determines to place its emphasis and its priorities
on what it does with its money is Quebec's business, and it should
consider whether women are a priority.
[Translation]
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, the
problem is that it is mostly women who pay the price.
Since the end of 1994, or since the Liberal Government's
reforms have come into full effect, the number of full time jobs for
women has increased by only 10,000, whereas the number of part
time jobs has risen by 140,000.
How can the Acting Prime Minister deny such a deterioration in
the employment situation, particularly for women?
[English]
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, again the hon. member does not
understand the full and holistic component of what is done for
women's jobs.
Many women cannot have sustainable full time jobs because
they have children, a fact which statistics support. We are looking
at how to assist women with children. One of the most important
things to help women to get training for long term sustainable jobs
is the new EI benefit where women can take five years off for
maternity leave. Five years is a massive increase which will allow
women to still go back and get training.
We have talked about levering money into literacy programs so
women can get into the job market. We have talked about levering
money so women can have post-graduate training in sciences and
math. Those are the things that create an infrastructure for women
to build their economic autonomy.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the
Liberal-Tory years have been hard years for the one and a half
million unemployed in Canada. StatsCan announced today that the
unemployment rate for February was 9.7 per cent. That is the 77th
straight month, or six and half years, that unemployment has been
over 9 per cent. It is the worst string of job numbers since the Great
Depression.
I ask the Minister of Finance, where are the jobs, jobs, jobs that
the Liberals promised Canadians in the last election?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr Speaker, we are concerned about the February
figures which the hon. member mentioned.
I point out to him that the unemployment rate has not risen but
has stayed the same. The trend over the the last four months has
been strong job growth. If he had read this morning's papers he
would have seen articles by a number of analysts who clearly stated
that while this is disappointing, all the prospects for continued job
growth are there.
This morning's papers were full of indications of increased
house starts, increased house resales, increased purchases,
increases confidence. As private sector forecasters assert, those
indicators will lead to 300,000 to 350,000 new jobs in the coming
year when Canada will lead the industrialized countries in growth.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, great
words, but no jobs. I cannot believe the government is actually
trying to justify an unemployment rate of 9.7 per cent.
Let us look at the numbers: 38,000 full time jobs disappeared
last month; 44,000 more women are out work; the lowest number
of young people working in 20 years. What is more, CIBC Wood
Gundy and Canadians who had given up looking for work say that
the unemployment rate is up to 13.9 per cent.
Why has the government broken its red book promise? Why
have the Liberals failed completely and miserably to create growth
and opportunity?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, it is simply untrue to leave the
impression that the government does not care about employment.
We care very deeply about it. Our strategies which are reflected in
our budgets support that.
(1130)
First and foremost we have, as the hon. member and his
colleagues have insisted we do, maintained the course on deficit
reduction. That has kept interest rates low, leading to investment.
8779
That is going to translate into greater job growth this year. We are
not stopping there and not sitting back.
The hon. member represents a party whose approach to all these
questions is simply cut taxes for their friends, sit back and wait for
everything else to happen. Canadians want a government that takes
action so not only is it acting on deficit reduction but it is investing
in short term growth and providing immediate impetus for jobs
through infrastructure, foreign trade, youth employment measures,
unemployment insurance reforms, reform of the CPP. It is also
investing in long term growth in jobs through the Canadian
Foundation for Innovation, through higher education support for
that and investing in a stronger society, something we care very
much about.
Mr. John Williams (St. Albert, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is another
story of more talk and more taxes and fewer jobs. In Canada 1.5
million people are unemployed, two million to three million
underemployed, 800,000 moonlighting to make ends meet, the
lowest number of young people working in 20 years, and one in
four who are worried about losing their jobs. That is the Liberal job
record.
What is the Liberal answer to this crisis? A 73 per cent hike in
payroll taxes that its own department is saying is going to kill even
more jobs.
With an unemployment rate of 9.7 per cent, with 1.5 million
Canadians unemployed, why is the government introducing a73 per cent payroll tax hike that is going to kill more jobs?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the Canadian people know which side
of the House is talking and which side of the House is acting.
On the question of the CPP contribution increase, it is somewhat
irresponsible of the hon. member opposite to talk about something
as a job killer when it is an investment in the public pension plan
shared risk that all of us share to ensure a decent retirement, a
foundation for retirement. It is contributions toward a fund that is
invested for the benefit of the workers, the present retirees, the
future retirees. It is something that we will continue to support and
make sure is viable and sustainable.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Solicitor General.
On October 4, 1995, the Minister of Justice and the Solicitor
General gave Judge Lynn Ratushny the task of examining the files
of the various women who were sentenced for killing their abusive
partner. The judge has just released her findings and concludes that
four women should be freed, one should be given a lighter sentence
and another should be given a new hearing before the court of
appeal.
When does the minister intend to implement the judge's
recommendations?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
we have received Judge Ratushny's preliminary report. It is being
studied by a working group of officials in the Department of Justice
and the Department of the Solicitor General. They are also
consulting with the provincial attorneys general.
Because this matter raises some rather novel juridical concepts
we have to proceed with all due deliberate speed. I look forward to
having a response from the Minister of Justice and myself before
too long.
[Translation]
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, it is perhaps important for the Solicitor General to take his
time. This is a report he himself requested with his colleague in
Justice.
I would like to know at what point the women prisoners are
likely to get out of prison, because you are going to act on the
recommendations. How long will it take to examine the files? How
long should these women expect to wait: a week, two weeks, six
months? What hope are you giving them?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I have great respect for Judge Ratushny's work. I think she would
be the last person to say that her report should be simply treated as
something with a rubber stamp.
(1135 )
Instead, what is involved in her report is something quite novel
and that is applying a ruling of a court to a trial in a decision of
another court that took place quite a while before the judgment that
has led to the study by Judge Ratushny.
Under the circumstances, when we are talking about either
asking for a new trial under section 690 of the code or using the
royal prerogative of mercy, certainly we have to think carefully
about the implications for the justice system. We also, in that
connection, have to take into account the views of our provincial
counterparts.
We want to proceed with all due deliberate speed but we want to
do it in the right way.
8780
Mr. Grant Hill (Macleod, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, this week I had
occasion to visit two of the Ottawa hospitals that are slated to close,
the Montfort and the Riverside.
In the case of the Riverside, it is closing because the Liberal
government chose to give its entire budget, $97 million, to a
corporate buddy, Bombardier. How can the government possibly
justify its choice of corporation subsidies over Canadian hospitals?
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the hon. member opposite continues to make reference to the
situation in the province of Ontario with regard to the decisions that
the Ontario government and Premier Harris have made.
I wish to quote for the hon. member a statement by the Minister
of Finance on March 6, 1997:
In other words, he should understand that if hospitals are being closed in Ontario
it is as a result of a political choice. Tax cuts are being made. I will not dispute them,
but they are not the result of a reduction in transfers from the government.
Mr. Grant Hill (Macleod, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, maybe the health
minister could then explain how Harris has cut the hospital beds in
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Saskatchewan and Alberta?
These cuts are the direct responsibility of the Liberal
government. Maybe the health minister should listen to what Dr.
Tony Wade, president of the New Brunswick Medical Society,
thinks about the Liberal's attack on health care. He stated: ``I don't
need a dictionary to know that they spell abandonment''.
Can the health minister tell Dr. Wade of New Brunswick why the
Prison Art Foundation gets $100,000 that should go to the hospitals
in New Brunswick? Explain that.
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
again I thank the hon. member for the lob ball question.
The hon. member should be aware of the situation in the great
province of Alberta. I wish to quote again the federal Minister of
Finance who said on March 6:
At the same time the province of Alberta is declaring surpluses and cutting taxes.
He cannot say that it is reductions in federal transfers when Alberta is cutting taxes
and declaring surpluses.
And at the same time it is closing down hospitals.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Monique Guay (Laurentides, BQ): My question is for the
Minister of Health.
The red book states on page 81, and I quote: ``It is well known,
for example, that research into breast cancer, which afflicts one
woman in nine, has been seriously underfunded.'' As a result of the
parliamentary report on breast cancer, the Conservative
government had committed significant investments for research on
this issue, but the program is coming to an end in 1998.
On the eve of International Women's Day, is the Liberal
government able to tell us that it intends to renew for another five
years its commitment to research on breast cancer in Canada, as did
the Canadian Cancer Institute and the Canadian Cancer Society?
[English]
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I thank the hon. member for the question because it is substantive
and important to women all across the country.
Earlier this week I met with a number of representatives from the
Canadian foundation, the breast network association across the
country, as well as other representatives to discuss with them their
proposals and ways in which to work together in order to continue
financing this initiative.
We have also contributed $2.7 million over five years to the
breast cancer information exchange pilot projects. The hon.
member is aware that Canada and the United States had the first
ever women's health forum whereby one of the clear priorities of
Canada and the United States is to focus research on breast cancer.
(1140 )
I assure the hon. member that this a serious issue and that we are
taking it very seriously.
[Translation]
Mrs. Monique Guay (Laurentides, BQ): Mr. Speaker, this
evaluation report states that research is often disconnected from
reality and recommends that women who have survived breast
cancer play a more active role in research.
Does the Minister of Health intend to follow through with this
recommendation by modifying the research funding criteria?
[English]
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
that point is very substantive and has been made to me. It deserves
very serious consideration.
I have asked my officials as well as the various funding bodies to
examine that to accommodate what I believe is a very legitimate
request made by the hon. member and by other members as well.
8781
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, the Reform Party is committed to publicly funded health
care in Canada.
I will speak very slowly so that the Minister of Health and
members on the other side will understand real life examples of my
experience in the emergency department.
A young woman came in needing urgent dialysis. She could not
get it because the hospital has had its funds cut. She went into
cardiac arrest after three days and almost died. On an average night
8 out of 13 hospital bays are filled with patients. There is no room
in the hospital and the hospital does not have any money.
Is the minister's version of better health care management to
give $97 million to Bombardier or to give money to health care so
that Canadians can get urgent treatment when they medically need
it?
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I do not think any member on this side of the House would want to
debate or argue the sincerity of the hon. member opposite,
particularly in relation to his preamble.
In Hansard in 1995 he said the following:
Let us allow the provinces to experiment with alternative funding models such as
private clinics, private insurance and the like.
I know the hon. member is doing flip flops, huffing and puffing,
but I suggest that he, his friend from Macleod and the leader of the
Reform Party get their acts together and come to the floor of the
House of Commons with a reasoned, well thought out health
policy.
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, yes, let the provinces deal with health care but do not cut
the legs out from under them.
Why has the government chosen handouts over health care?
Why has it chosen to give $97 million to Bombardier when patients
are absorbing the $4 billion in health care cuts with their own flesh
and blood and sometimes by their own lives?
Will the minister tell patients and the hospitals how the
government will provide urgent health care to Canadians when they
medically need it?
Hon. David Dingwall (Minister of Health, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
the member underlines the significance in every substantive
provincial and federal report by royal commissions and by
quasi-royal commissions. The issues affecting health care are
primarily under the jurisdiction of provincial governments as they
relate to hospitals. It is not an issue of funding; it is an issue of
management.
What is the hon. member talking about? He is talking about
management issues which are the sole responsibility of the
different provinces.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the President of the Treasury Board.
Under the Liberal and Tory governments, the Treasury Board did
all it could not to give women employees their due as far as pay
equity was concerned. Showing an evident lack of good faith, the
Treasury Board used all the stalling tactics it could find to postpone
the day when it would have to meet its obligations and comply with
the Human Rights Act on the issue of pay equity.
(1145)
Why did the President of the Treasury Board insist on delaying
equity, why did he spend millions of dollars on legal quibbling,
refusing to give female government workers the money they were
owed and perpetuating pay inequity within the federal public
service?
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
unfortunately, my colleague echoes some of the myths that are
being spread, especially by her colleagues, and that are
diametrically opposed to reality.
Not only did the federal government pass a law, in 1978, well
before most of the provinces, stating-
Mrs. Tremblay: It was in 1977.
Mr. Massé: Check your dates. Not only did that legislation
establish the principle of pay equity, but since then, we have spent
more than $1 billion to implement that principle, to turn it into
reality, and we have succeeded.
We have even negotiated with some of the unions, with the
professional employees, an agreement granting pay equity. Let me
add that we are willing to implement pay equity. We have already
indicated that we are ready to negotiate the pay equity issues.
The unions chose to go before the courts. We are awaiting a court
ruling. There is no doubt that we have established the principle,
that we have put it in place and that we will continue to adhere to it,
as we must.
Mrs. Maud Debien (Laval East, BQ): Mr. Speaker, the
President of the Treasury Board spoke about myths.
I could remind him of all the stalling tactics used by Treasury
Board from 1990 to this day, simply to avoid implementing the
legislation on pay equity. I have a list here and I could table that
document. The President of the Treasury Board talked about
hearings before the Canadian Human Rights Commission, which
should render its decision shortly.
8782
Will the President of the Treasury Board commit humself to
abiding by the decision of the commission and, this time, really
implement the legislation as quickly as possible?
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
truth is that in this field the federal government provided leadership
to the private sector and the provinces.
I repeat, we have paid over a billion dollars since the legislation
came into force to implement pay equity. Not only do we believe in
pay equity, but we have negotiated agreements with a number of
unions. Therefore, in those cases, the unions were in agreement
with us. We negotiated agreements to implement pay equity.
However, when demands reach $2 or $2.5 billion, you would
expect any good government, especially if the process is flawed, to
say the equity principle requires that we serve all taxpayers, not
just the ones in the public service, and that is what we have done.
I repeat, we are willing to negotiate with the unions and settle the
issue, even before the court makes a decision.
* * *
[
English]
Hon. Charles Caccia (Davenport, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Transport or his parliamentary
secretary.
According to the Transportation Safety Board rail tanker cars
presently used to haul dangerous chemicals are vulnerable to
breaking apart in accidents, putting people, communities and the
environment at risk.
Would the Minister of Transport proceed with the safety board's
recommendations and ensure that tanker car standards are
strengthened for the protection of the public?
Mr. Stan Keyes (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Transport, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the member for Davenport asks an
important question. I want him to take comfort in the fact that
safety is and will always be Transport Canada's number one
priority.
(1150 )
Even before the recommendations by the Transportation Safety
Board, Transport Canada limited the carriage of 80 dangerous
goods in the tanker cars the member is concerned about.
With respect to the recommendation made by the TSB, Transport
Canada has already eliminated two of sixteen dangerous goods and
is doing a thorough examination of the remainder. Work is already
in progress to upgrade the strength of the tanker cars.
* * *
Mr. Bill Gilmour (Comox-Alberni, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
British Columbia has a law in place called the senatorial selection
act which allows British Columbians to elect their own senators.
B.C. Senator Len Marchand was to retire March 1. However now
the Prime Minister has coaxed the senator to stay on until after the
next federal election. Despite Marchand's postponed retirement,
we can be sure that B.C. will have a vacancy in the Senate very
shortly.
Will the Prime Minister allow British Columbians the
opportunity to elect their next senator?
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
we all appreciate the tribute paid to Senator Len Marchand. I for
one would like to see him serve the people of British Columbia and
Canada in the Senate for a very long time.
However, if he chooses to step down, I am sure the Prime
Minister will be very careful about following his constitutional
responsibilities to the utmost.
Mr. Bill Gilmour (Comox-Alberni, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, Glen
Clark, the premier of British Columbia, indicated that he will back
an elected senator. Where do we stand?
The people of B.C. want to elect their next senator. The premier
of B.C. says he will back electing the next senator. The B.C.
senatorial selection act allows that to happen in law. The only
person preventing British Columbians from electing their next
senator is the Prime Minister.
Will the Prime Minister recommend to the Governor General the
individual chosen by the people of British Columbia to fill the next
Senate vacancy?
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
there is one problem among others in the hon. member's
suggestion. Once the senator is elected how does one bring the
senator's term to an end? What if the people of British Columbia
decide that the person they elect no longer has their confidence?
The Reform scheme does not deal with that point at all.
Furthermore Reform Party members, if I am not mistaken,
rejected a package of constitutional reforms that called for an
elected Senate. It is rather strange that today they are doing
something exactly the opposite to what they followed when they
had a chance to speak for constitutional reform. Who can take them
seriously on this important subject?
8783
[Translation]
Mr. René Laurin (Joliette, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my question is
for the Solicitor General.
Spokepeople from the correctional service of Canada have
announced the transfer of 47 women prisoners to men's
penitentiaries. Yet, the Arbour commission concluded last year,
with regard to similar events, that there was at least an appeance of
oppression in incarcerating women in an institution that inevitably
houses many sexual offenders.
Since the correctional service just finished building five new
penitentiaries for women, including one in Joliette, and in light of
the conclusions of the Arbour report, how does the minister explain
this service's decision?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
it turns out that there is a small number of disruptive, high security
women prisoners for whom the new regional women's prisons do
not offer adequate facilities. Until a permanent solution to the issue
is worked out the correctional service has decided to set up a
limited number of special units for these women.
They are in facilities originally intended for male prisoners, but
it is my understanding these special units will be quite apart from
male prisoners and will offer special services and programs for
women of a high security nature, pending the working out of a
more permanent solution.
(1155)
[Translation]
Mr. René Laurin (Joliette, BQ): Mr. Speaker, what guarantee
can the minister give that correctional services will take all the
necessary steps to remedy the situation and to provide women
prisoners with detention conditions that respect the spirit and intent
of the Arbour commission's recommendations?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
we are talking about a small number of women prisoners who are
of a high security nature and have potentially disruptive tendencies.
We are not talking about all women prisoners. We are talking about
having them in special units where they receive the programming
necessary to help them get back into normal society.
In any event, as I have said, this is an interim step. It is not a
permanent step. It is being supervised by the new deputy
commissioner for women's corrections.
* * *
Mr. Ken Epp (Elk Island, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, we have a
conundrum in the finance department. Over and over and over
officials in that department have said the Canada pension plan is a
payroll tax. Yet yesterday the Minister of Finance said he received
advice from that department to act quickly with the provinces so it
would not appear to be a tax.
Furthermore the department has stated on a number of occasions
that payroll taxes kill jobs. Yet now we are being asked to believe
the 70 per cent increase in CPP will create jobs. How does the
Minister of Finance reconcile these 180 degree out of phase points
of view?
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, not surprisingly the member opposite
continues to confuse a number of different things.
Under the government payroll taxes have been reduced. UI
premiums have been reduced significantly putting $1.7 billion back
into the economy.
When he tries to roll in the CPP package it is really quite
incredible. Canadians will not be fooled. What is going on with the
CPP is a serious attempt, in conjunction with the provincial
governments, to make that program sustainable so that it will be
there for those who are retired and for those who will be retiring in
the future. It is not killing jobs. It is saving for people's retirement.
Mr. Ken Epp (Elk Island, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the conundrum
continues. Over the last 30 years the Liberals and the Conservatives
trusted members of the Department of Finance, or they deliberately
distorted or whatever what members of the department were saying
by saying the CPP plan as proposed was sustainable.
Now suddenly it is not sustainable. How can that be reconciled?
How can we reconcile that it is sustainable on one hand and
Canadians were to believe? Now it is not and they are to pay 70 per
cent more.
Mr. Barry Campbell (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Finance, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, now I have a conundrum. If I can read
between the lines the hon. member is saying that we should never
look at a program over time and decide whether or not it should be
changed.
We have done that with the provinces. It is the responsible thing
to do. Canadians told us to make sure the Canada pension plan was
8784
there for them when they retired and that if it required adjustment
we should have the courage and the fortitude to provide the
leadership to do it. We have done it.
* * *
Ms. Marlene Catterall (Ottawa West, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the President of the Treasury Board. On the eve of
International Women's Day around the globe economic equality for
women still remains an elusive goal.
In Canada it has been over a decade that federal employees in
female dominated groups have been seeking equal pay for work of
equal value. Unfortunately many of them now believe the human
rights tribunal has ruled and our government is refusing to
implement the ruling.
Would the President of the Treasury Board clarify the situation
with the tribunal to make clear what our government is prepared to
do to end pay discrimination and to give women the pay they
deserve for the work they do?
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
thank the hon. member for her question. She is well known for
having defended the questions of pay equity and rights of women in
the community and in Parliament, and she continues to do so.
She should be proud of being in a party, in a government, that
has done so much for pay equity and the full rights of women.
(1200)
Not only have we been among the first to accept the principle but
we have been the first to have paid over $1 billion in order to
implement it. At present there is a case in front of the tribunal and
in that case the pleading has stopped a few months ago. We except
the judgment to be as soon as possible in the next few months.
We have already solved the question with some unions and I am
prepared to offer to the unions involved, if they want to get a
settlement quickly rather than having to wait for the judgment in
court, to tell them let us sit down at a table and negotiate the issues
so we can have a quick judgment.
* * *
Mr. John Solomon (Regina-Lumsden, NDP): Mr. Speaker,
my question is to the acting Prime Minister.
According to labour force statistics released today, 44,000 full
time jobs for women disappeared in January. Medical technicians,
educators, clericals and other women's jobs in the public sector
have led the cuts. This Liberal government cut 45,000 jobs and
thousands more were lost as a result of a $7 billion cut to health
transfers to the provinces.
Will the acting Prime Minister acknowledge that women's jobs
have never been a priority for this government, or have the Liberals
entirely written off women as productive workers in the economy?
Hon. Hedy Fry (Secretary of State (Multiculturalism)(Status
of Women), Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I find it very interesting that hon.
members across only seem to ask questions about women's
equality and women's economic autonomy on International
Women's Day. What happens to the rest of the year?
We spent a whole year as a government dealing with issues of
women's economic autonomy in terms of training, literacy and
looking at women's transfer payments from their custodial parents
for their children, sustainable training for women, bringing women
into the real world where construction jobs are open to them. We
spent every single day analysing in every single department
through gender based analysis the issues of the reality of women's
rights and how our government impacts on it.
It is very strange that the members of the opposition only seem
to think about this on International Women's Day.
_____________________________________________
8784
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
Translation]
Hon. Don Boudria (Minister for International Cooperation
and Minister responsible for Francophonie, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 32(6), I have the pleasure to table, in
both official languages, the 1995 report on Canada's participation
in regional development banks.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
two petitions today. The first comes from St. Catharines, Ontario.
The petitioners draw to the attention of the House that our police
and firefighters place their lives at risk on a daily basis as they
serve the emergency needs of all Canadians. They also state that in
many cases the families of officers killed in the line of duty are
often left without sufficient financial means to meet their
obligations.
8785
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to
establish a public safety officers compensation fund to receive
gifts and bequests for the benefit of families of police officers and
firefighters killed in the line of duty.
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
second petition comes from Welland, Ontario. The petitioners draw
to the attention of the House that managing the family home and
caring for preschool children is an honourable profession which
has not been recognized for its value to our society.
The petitioners therefore pray and call on Parliament to pursue
initiatives to assist families that choose to provide care in the home
for preschool children, the chronically ill, the aged or the disabled.
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I have three petitions to present today.
The first calls on Parliament to amend the Criminal Code of
Canada to raise the age of consent for sexual activity between a
young person and an adult from 14 years to 16 years.
(1205 )
I support this petition and call on the government to-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): The hon. member will
know it is out of order for her to indicate either opposition to or
support for a petition. In the presentation of petitions, the practices
of the House require that a member state a summary of the petition
and may indicate where the petitioners are from but it is not normal
to indicate support for or opposition to a petition. I invite her to
comply with that portion of the rules.
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, the next petition I present is from my riding and contains
76 signatures. The petitioners call on Parliament to not increase the
federal excise tax on gasoline.
The third petition, containing 260 signatures, is again from my
riding and other lower mainland constituencies. The petitioners
urge all levels of government to demonstrate their support of
education and literacy by eliminating the sales tax on reading
materials.
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have a
petition sponsored by the Canadian Automobile Association. The
petitioners call on Parliament to urge the federal government to
join with the provincial government to make the national highway
system upgrading possible beginning in 1997.
Mr. Bill Gilmour (Comox-Alberni, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36, I am pleased to present the
following petition which comes from my riding of
Comox-Alberni and contains 274 signatures. The undersigned
bring attention to the fact that British Columbia has a senatorial
selection act which allows the election of B.C. senators. They also
draw attention to the fact that British Columbia Senator Len
Marchand will resign his seat in the Senate shortly.
Therefore the petitioners call on Parliament to urge the governor
general to appoint a duly elected person according to the
forthcoming vacant British Columbia seat in the Senate of Canada.
I fully concur with the petitioners and endorse this petition-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): I hoped the hon. member
had heard me indicate to one of the other members earlier that it is
out of order for the member to indicate his opposition to or support
for a petition. I invite him to comply with the rules in his use of the
time during presentation of petitions.
Mr. Derek Lee (Scarborough-Rouge River, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I have a petition signed by 45 individuals in the greater
Toronto area. While recognizing the change in government policy
to fully rebate goods and services tax on books purchased by
educational institutions and libraries, they call on the government
to pursue the policy further and remove the tax from books,
magazines and newspapers.
* * *
Mr. George Proud (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Labour, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I ask that all questions be allowed to
stand.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
_____________________________________________
8785
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
English]
The House resumed consideration of the motion.
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I am indeed pleased to rise today to speak to this motion
put forward by the Bloc which condemns the federal government's
lack of political will in refusing to take positive action in its areas
8786
of jurisdiction to promote economic equality between men and
women, and so on.
Today, as I speak to this motion, I would particularly like to
dwell on the elements of the motion that deal with economic
equality between men and women and the government's place in
that.
It certainly is a discussion that is appropriate for this, the day
before International Women's Day, and in the period of
International Women's Week.
As I speak to this idea of economic equality between men and
women, it is an issue that affects those in Quebec as well as in the
rest of Canada. As I go forward, I want to address two issues. First,
what has the government done on each of these parts of the
question, and what has the government done specifically on the
economics of this country? Second, what has the government done
in terms of equality issues in this country?
(1210)
Lately the government came forward with its budget. This is a
government that has been in power for the last three and a half
years. I would like to put to this House that the Liberals are hiding
the facts of their record within that time period.
We now have in Canada record consumer debts. We have in
Canada record personal bankruptcies. Today there are 1.5 million
Canadians unemployed and 76 months straight of unemployment at
over 9 per cent. This is the worst record since the depression.
Today two to three million Canadians are underemployed. Today
one in four Canadians is worried about losing their job. We have to
show for the last three years over $100 billion more in debt and
now we have a record $600 billion debt to pass on to our children as
they come into the workforce. In this time, average family incomes
have been cut by $3,000.
Earlier today I heard Liberal MPs saying that it is up to
Canadians who have had to make tough choices. There have been
cutbacks. I want to talk about those in a minute.
I hear Liberal MPs talking about tough choices to other
Canadians while increasing payroll taxes by approximately 73 per
cent and making the tough choice to maintain their own pensions. It
is five times greater than what other Canadians can have. Is that
making tough choices on that side of the House?
Most of the deficit fighting this government has done has been
on the backs of taxpayers with 36 tax increases since 1993. Most of
the rest has been on the backs of the provinces with $7.5 billion
reduction in transfer payments.
About 92 per cent of the reduction in the deficit to this date has
been a direct result in tax revenue increase. As I have mentioned,
they are ready to kill more jobs with the CPP tax increase of 73 per
cent.
While with the transfer cuts they have cut funding to health and
post-secondary education funding, the government will spend $4.2
billion to subsidize its crown corporations like the CBC and
Canada Post.
This government's vision, the Liberal vision, is a country where
average taxpayers send $10,200 to the federal government each
year, and $3,400 of that every year from every taxpayer is to
service the debt alone.
The Liberal vision is a country where 7.3 million Canadians
earning less than $30,000 pay 17 per cent of their incomes to the
federal government.
What has this government done in terms of economics? It has
slashed transfer payments. It has made choices that have not been
the priority of Canadians, like health care. It has increased our debt.
It has made no commitment to deficit elimination and it has done
poor service to Canadians.
What has this government done on equality issues? I would like
to spend most of my time, as other speakers have, on this area.
Canada has taken a leadership role. I saw that firsthand at the UN
Beijing conference. It has taken up the standard of gender equality
along with other nations. With this gender equality stance, it has
promoted the theme of equal outcome for men and women.
The Reform Party looks at this theme and says equal outcome is
not the issue. Individuals, regardless of who they are, should have
equal opportunity in the job opportunities.
Success in terms of gender thinking is measured by full
workforce participation and economic independence and
autonomy, as we have already heard from the secretary of state
many times today.
(1215 )
I ask, is this true equality? I say to the House that a person,
whether male or female, who has equal protection under the law of
the land and the equality of choice and opportunity in society: that
is equality.
If we look at the history of the women's movement there have
been equality seekers, first in the fight for the right to vote, the
opportunity to put their name on a ballot. There has been equality
of entry into occupations. There have been pioneers throughout the
years who have put forward arguments to put women in certain
occupations. There has been equality for entry into positions of
leadership. Women have been elected to the House who are helping
to lead the country politically; there are women business leaders, in
teaching and in the sciences.
8787
The history of the women's movement is the fight for equal
opportunity, for their place in society and they have done well.
The history of the women's movement is the freedom to make
economic and political choices according to their own desires and
dreams. Women want freedom to make those choices. True
feminism is a belief in women and in the choices and in the
wisdom of the choices they will make. As I have travelled through
Canada and through my own riding of Port Moody-Coquitlam
my belief in that kind of feminism is strengthened by what I see.
The majority of students graduating from university are women.
They are taking positions of leadership with great success.
More women than men are starting up their own businesses.
Statistics show that the likelihood of their success is greater than
that of their male counterparts. They have shown excellence in
non-traditional roles. Yesterday I learned of an insurance company
that in four of its six regions the top sales persons were women.
There is also excellence in the traditional roles.
The Liberals are out of touch with the real women, with their
potential. In their very policies they deny women the respect for the
abilities they possess.
The greatest concern I see in gender analysis and equality
philosophies is the rejection of diverse opinion. In gender analysis
there is a blindness to constructive alternatives to ways of doing
things in society. The main theme of gender analysis and policy
making, as I saw in Beijing and I see in government policies, is that
it drives always and ever to economic independence and autonomy
for women. It drives to equal outcome and equal participation in
the workforce. It would demand a social revolution, a remaking of
society, and a mandate for people to follow in its dictated choices
in order to do so.
In the last 20 years we have been witness to the progress of this
agenda. In the last 20 years the movement has been toward two
working parents. Presently it is seven out of ten households, up
from three out of ten. However, within that time the total household
income is virtually the same.
Seventy per cent of women are now in the workforce. In the last
30 years divorce has increased 800 per cent. In fact, Canada has
one of the highest divorce rates in developed countries. As we have
heard, the tragedy of that is the poverty rate. It is greatest among
the single mothers who are very often the product of those family
break-ups. It is shown that the economic impact of divorce is the
greatest on women.
(1220)
Federal taxes of the average family, according to the Globe and
Mail, November 1992, was $1,894 more in 1990 than in 1984.
Recent statistics have told us that the after tax earnings of an
average household have actually fallen by $3,000 since the
government came to power. As I have mentioned, 36 tax increases
have been implemented by the federal government alone to help
make that happen.
These kinds of things happening in society have very real results.
They are not just numbers. According to government statistics
child poverty has increased by 40 per cent since 1989. Youth
violent crime has doubled in the last nine years. Canada is among
the highest in the world in youth suicides. Today we have less
money because of cutbacks to direct toward needed programs for
those who actually need government help because of debt servicing
charges and wasteful government spending.
In the last couple of days we have heard about government
spending going toward a prison art foundation in New Brunswick
of $100,000; $87 million to Bombardier; $300,000 to friends at the
Shawinigan Industrial Centre. Are these the choices of the men and
women in Canada? Is this compassion? Do these programs reflect
the priorities of most women?
Who sets the goal? Who defines the standard of success for
women? Do most women define success as equal workforce
participation? Or do most women define success for themselves,
that of their friends and of their communities as safety in their
streets, an opportunity to achieve for all Canadians, a government
that can provide help for those who cannot achieve hope for their
youth and for their children and strength in their homes. This is
what most women and men define as success, not equal workforce
participation.
The government, as I mentioned, rejects diversity in its
definition of gender equality. The government has chosen to follow
a gender feminist philosophy. Quoting from the government's
material: ``Status of Women works to ensure women's equality is
integrated into all federal government legislation, policies,
programs and initiatives'' .Women's equality is defined as
autonomy and equal workforce participation. What is the price of
that? The simple dollar price for the status of women in the main
estimates is $17 million of tax funds every year plus $8 million
more in grants both in 1996 and 1997, and that was tripled from the
previous year, 1995-96.
The price of the status of women policies goes far beyond the
dollars that go into that program. I will quickly give three
examples. First, the government's commitment is to women
working. The finance minister in a letter refused to even consider
tax change proposals that might be a disincentive for a spouse to
work.
I have with me today a letter from a constituent who supports the
fresh start platform of our party which increases the spousal
exemption from $5,380 to $7,900, thereby levelling the field for
parents who choose to stay home to care for their children and
extending the child care deduction of $5,000 to every preschool
child, including children whose parents stay at home to care for
them.
8788
My constituent states: ``Before my child was born in 1994 I was
employed as a social worker for the B.C. government. I saw the
effect of parental absence from the home in young and teenage
children and decided that to raise a child properly I needed to be
in the home caring for my child. My husband and I have faced
extreme financial hardship as a result of this decision but still feel
that children and family are the most important factor in our
lives''.
(1225 )
She goes on to say: ``I hope that all women and men merely have
a choice to be parents first, and to find this role to be of equal
importance to a career''.
The Liberal Party rejects Reform's proposal of a child care tax
credit to all parents, and instead chooses to reward only those who
put their children in receiptable day care.
The government shows zero tolerance feminist style. It seems
appropriate that I mention a Vancouver planning meeting at the the
Vancouver status of women location which was held last
November. I have the notice for that. It says: ``Come help organize
for the 1997 International Women's Day event''. This meeting was
held on November 19 at 7.30 p.m., at the Vancouver Status of
Women, Grant Street, ``all women welcome''.
Two women were refused entry at that meeting. They were
identified by the people there as pro-lifers. Not only were they
refused entry but there was attempt made to forcibly remove them.
Police were called. By the time the altercation was finished,
medical attention was required. Cameras were broken and bruises
were received.
The Vancouver police have recommended to the crown
prosecutor that charges be laid because of this event at the
Vancouver status of women location. The Vancouver status of
women has received federal grants which total $917,000 since
1984. When the Secretary of State for the Status of Women heard
of this, she gave her apologies but replied in a statement that this
was not in her backyard. This mind-set is in her backyard.
Last year she made this statement: ``This government believes
each and every individual, group and community in Canada must
be treated equally and with respect''. Yet what has she done to
address this very real event that occurred at the Vancouver status of
women location which is connected with her department?
Status of women and the gender equality thing is no equality of
choice and no recognition of various sentiments or ideas of many
women. It does not recognize the importance of parenting. It does
not recognize the importance of other opinions.
Another example of rejection of other opinions is what we saw
lately in Bill C-41, a bill that spoke to child support and access.
Like so much of what the Liberal government does, it referred to
one side of the argument and forgot that there are two players. In
fact in Bill C-41, which dealt with divorce and child support, there
are more players. There are the custodial and non-custodial parents
and the children.
This bill gave rights to the custodial parent, responsibilities to
the non-custodial parent and basically left the ball there. Who will
pay for unequal treatment? Who will pay for a bill that does not
address the real needs of those who are involved in child support
and access issues? Who will pay for the unequal treatment of
Canadians in Bill C-41? Not only the non-custodial parent but the
children involved in the process of a divorce procedure which will
not serve their purposes.
I will reiterate. We have a society that would like to recognize
the uniqueness and the freedom to make choices for all Canadians.
It is not equal workforce participation but things like safety on the
streets, incentives to achieve, help for those who cannot, hope for
our youth and strength in our homes which is where most
Canadians feel the priorities of government should be.
(1230)
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I was quite
surprised by the comments of my colleague, the fact that she
skipped away from the main subject matter, which is to recognize
that there is a lot more work that still needs to be done in order to
ensure there is equity in our society.
Simply put, all she had to do is look at the latest Statistics
Canada report which shows that women still earn less than their
male counterparts. They earn only 73 per cent of what males earn.
As well, there is a lot more work that needs to be done in
particular for women with disabilities, women from visible
minorities and aboriginal women. Opportunities for those women
are still not there.
I want to also indicate that my colleague did not take into
account what this government did in terms of action taken,
particularly in the area of the Employment Equity Act which
recently was introduced by this government. How handy that
Employment Equity Act is. It is incredible.
On the occasion of International Women's Day, this new
legislation would extend coverage to include federal public
servants, agencies and commissions in ensuring that employment
equities are a must. It would increase the legislative authority of
the Canadian Human Rights Commission to initiate investigations
of employment equity issues and subject federal contractors to
mandatory compliance with the principles of the act.
As well, I would like to inform my colleague in case she is not
aware that a total of 350 large private sector employers, crown
8789
corporations and industries such as banking, communications and
transportation are covered by the legislation.
Under the act, these organizations have to satisfy their
obligations in terms of employment equity. For example, they have
to conduct a workforce analysis to determine the degree of under
representation of the designated groups, as I mentioned earlier.
They have to review employment systems, policies and practices
to define employment barriers to members of these groups. They
have to prepare a short term plan, one to three years, with measures
to remove any barriers, make reasonable accommodation and
institute positive policies and practices by setting goals and
timetables for hiring and promotion.
Finally, they have to set longer term objectives and strategies to
increase the overall representation of designated groups in their
workplace.
These are examples of what this government has done over the
past three years in order to address employment inequities that
exist in our society. These are some of the measures that this
government has taken in order to ensure that women receive the
treatment and equality they deserve and which they have earned
and which is their right in our society.
To that extent, my colleague made reference to the government
initiatives on attacking child poverty. The government should be
very proud of what it has done on the whole notion of child poverty
and trying to deal with the question of child poverty.
We will not cease to continue our work to ensure that children
who need assistance and support will receive the support and
assistance they need.
Members opposite, particularly in the third party, were up on
their feet opposing the vast majority of initiatives taken by this
government in trying to address issues of equity, equality, fairness,
support for people who need support and assistance.
Now we stand up and talk about initiatives that the third party
has proposed. Let us put them on the record. Let us examine some
of those initiative. In fact, none of those initiatives will seriously
and effectively deal with the issue of poverty, particularly child
poverty.
(1235)
I would like my colleague to tell me what her difficulties are
with the latest federal government initiative dealing with child
poverty, and specifically what part of the federal government's
proposed legislation in dealing with child poverty does she
disapprove of. How would she replace it and with what?
Mrs. Hayes: Mr. Speaker, I am not sure where to start with what
I have just heard. From employment equity to child poverty, this
government's policies are abysmal. It has caused the very child
poverty it is talking about. It used to take 40 hours a week to
maintain a household on an average wage. Now it takes over70 hours a week to maintain a household in this economy.
How in the world can a single parent on an average salary not be
in poverty with what this government has done to our Canadian
families? Is it any surprise that single parents are in the highest
percentage of poor people in this country? It is simply because they
cannot survive on what this government has done in the
marketplace.
We have a policy that we brought forward that is very different in
concept and philosophy to what the Liberal government has done.
In our fresh start program we state that we must first reduce the size
of government. We must go through government programs that
have duplication and are wasteful. Let us take $87 million to
Bombardier, for instance. That may be a good start. We have
programs that give money to crown corporations which waste
Canadian tax dollars. It is taken from programs that it wants to
have and it is taken from the pockets of taxpayers.
We must first reduce the size of government and then give tax
relief to families. Our tax relief proposals will take 1.2 million
Canadians off the tax rolls altogether. Right now, why should
someone earning $30,000 a year pay any tax at all? We would take
the vast majority of those same Canadians off the tax rolls
altogether. That is how you help the poor. Do not tax their families
and say we are helping the children. That is Liberal logic and
makes no sense at all.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I want to
thank my colleague from Port Moody-Coquitlam for her
comments and for what she has contributed to the debate. I would
like her to comment on some observations I have made during this
whole debate.
I would like to quickly touch on three or four gifts that the
Liberals have given to women in this country and their children.
The first gift is that 50 cents of every $1 a working woman and man
makes in this country goes to taxes in one form or another because
of this Liberal government's contribution to that high rate of
taxation. How can we expect families not to live in poverty if50 cents of every $1 that they earn is taken away in taxes in one
form or another?
This government's policies have created the very child poverty
and family poverty it is now recognizing and pretending has
suddenly appeared. It has appeared because of the misguided,
reprehensible policy directed at reducing the economic power and
stability of families.
We look at the double digit unemployment that has hovered in
that area for the last three years which includes women. We look at
the $100 billion addition to our federal debt and the enormous
amount of interest we have to pay in addition to the tax revenue we
have just to pay the interest on that debt.
8790
We also, of course, look at the latest statistics, another gift from
this Liberal government, 44,000 women unemployed this month
alone. That is the gift from this Liberal government to working
women and their children. I wonder if my colleague would care
to comment on some of those points.
(1240)
Mrs. Hayes: Mr. Speaker, simply put, I think my colleague has
addressed some of my concerns very well.
The government that thinks it has the solutions to all Canadians
rather than leaving those solutions and those choices in their hands
is a government that is headed for disaster and is heading our
country and our children into disaster.
* * *
[
Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): The hon. member for
Mount Royal informed me in writing that she would be unable to
present her motion during private members' business, on Monday,
March 10, 1997.
[English]
It has not been possible to arrange an exchange of positions in
the order of precedence. Accordingly, I am directing the table
officers to drop that item of business to the bottom of the order of
precedence.
[Translation]
Therefore, private members' business will be suspended and
government orders will begin at 11 a.m.
* * *
The House resumed consideration of the motion.
Mrs. Francine Lalonde (Mercier, BQ): Mr. Speaker, on the eve
of International Women's Day, it is appropriate to take a look at the
current situation. I would love to be able to tell you that I am
pleased that progress has been made. Unfortunately, I cannot do so
in reference to women, and the children for whom they are
responsible, in Quebec and in Canada.
In fact, the new unemployment figures released this morning
reflect a situation that women have been experiencing for the last
three years. Indeed, this morning we learned from Statistics
Canada that 44,000 full time jobs were lost last month, while-and
this is no compensation, far from it-14,000 part time jobs are said
to have been created. The net loss for women is 30,000 jobs.
It would be one thing if this was just a blip, just a bad month in a
period during which the situation was improving for women, but it
is not the case. Since this government came to office, in fact since
one year after the beginning of its mandate, only 10,000 full time
jobs have been created for women, compared to 140,000 part time
jobs. The reality for women is that a large number of them are part
time workers because they have no other option.
In Quebec and in Canada, the majority of part time jobs are held
by women. Also, the unemployment rate for certain groups of
women is higher than the national average. We know that women
are in jobs that have traditionally been reserved for them, and for
which they are often paid less than the average salary for men.
In 1993, women's earnings represented 75 per cent of the
average salary for men, a proportion which remains basically the
same year after year. Given these conditions, and knowing how
hard it is to find full time jobs-with these being usually low
paying occupations that pay less than men's occupations-one
realizes the importance of social programs for women.
(1245)
But what have we seen since this government came to power?
Not just an erosion, because ``erosion'' is a word suggesting slow
breakdown; and ``illusion'' does not really describe the situation
either. What we have seen is a radical decrease in the coverage
provided by social programs to women and women with children.
Whether it is employment insurance, the successor to
unemployment insurance, slashed deeply by this government, or
the equally radical decrease in social transfers that forced the
Government of Quebec to cut social services, education and
welfare, social programs have been very hard hit.
I was struck by a passage in the finance minister's budget
speech, enthusing how proud he was that Canada had gone from the
bottom spot among the seven richest countries, the G-7, to the top.
Why was he proud? Because of the fight to bring down the deficit.
So Canada is congratulating itself because it is the most successful
in bringing down the deficit.
But I asked him the other day why he was content to be near the
bottom, not this time of the richest countries, but of the 28
developed countries in the OECD. Canada is bringing up the rear,
with New Zealand and the United States. And this is on the basis of
the 1990 figures, which do not take into account the radical cuts we
have seen over the last three years.
There is a widespread myth in this country that Canada's social
programs are extremely generous. This is not the case. Compared
to other developed countries, our social programs are anaemic. So
when we see the Minister of Finance crowing because Canada now
tops the list of countries that are making cuts in order to lower their
deficit, with no concern for the effects on women and children in
particular, on families, on the most disadvantaged in society, when
8791
Canada was already lagging behind in this social protection, there
is cause not just for concern but for real distress.
There is also the fact that many women are poor, not only women
who are heads of single parent households, but also women who are
in a relationship and who are obliged, because of the many cuts to
the social programs, to invest more of their time in addition to the
effort they put into looking for a job, even a part time one.
What they find is that unemployment insurance is less accessible
than it used to be, that the tax benefits for children the government
promised will in fact increase by only $33 per child in poverty this
year and that, as far as the rest is concerned, this election promise is
just as empty as the promise of a national daycare service, for
which not one single cent has been forthcoming.
When we see the effect of the measures on the poor and the
reduction in welfare because of cuts, the life of women who are
heads of households and those who live with a partner, who may be
just as poor or who is a part of the middle class, and they want to
have children or are having a difficult time giving the child a
reasonable education, we realize that the situation for women has
deteriorated. It is distressing. It is worrisome. I have a hard time
swallowing the government opposite's smugness in the face of the
void that women are having to face.
(1250)
Employment is hard to come by and it is poorly paid.
Employment insurance is hard to get and available for a shorter
time. Maternity leave is not so readily available, and welfare has
been cut and is hard to obtain. I hope next year's status report is
different.
Count on us to be a vigilant and effective opposition. We will not
let you out of our sight. The women we represent today have
enormous needs.
[English]
Mr. Paul Szabo (Mississauga South, Lib.): Madam Speaker, I
think all members would agree the economic autonomy of women
is an important issue, not only to talk about but also to act on.
I raise for the member's consideration another aspect of the
consequences to women and to children. We talk in this place about
child poverty. The member will know according to the Vanier
Institute that 50 per cent of marriages break down in divorce. When
we consider the breakdown of common law relationships which are
not reported in those figures we could conclude the Canadian
family is in crisis. We need to address family issues as part of a
strategy to address the economic issues related to women.
The reason for this is that children are involved in 60 per cent of
divorces. The custody arrangements by the courts are basically
automatic. Women are awarded the custody of the children. The
courts and society as a whole have decided that women are in the
best position to care for children.
We know that 23 per cent of all families in Canada represent lone
parent families. What is worse is that those 23 per cent of families
account for 53 per cent of all children living in poverty.
Would the member care to comment on whether she feels the
Canadian family is in crisis and the role or the economic condition
of women might be helped if we were to help find ways to make the
Canadian family stronger?
[Translation]
Mrs. Lalonde: Madam Speaker, I must say I am somewhat
surprised by what the member opposite has just said. Tomorrow is
International Women's Day and I would have liked him to address
this issue for once. What concerns him is that so many marriages
end up in divorce and that there are so many common law
relationships.
A caring society provides families, single families and couples
alike, not only with emergency help but also with the means to
meet their needs. Down through the centuries, the family has
evolved, and if it is evolving now it is largely due to the fact that
the industrial society has become post industrial and disruptive.
It is not up to society or to the government to decide what
constitutes a family, and to spare no effort to make sure it remains
that way. In any event, even if it tried, the government would not
succeed. What we have to expect is that society will evolve to
adjust to changes, and that the elements therein will follow suit.
(1255)
I agree with those who say we must help couples, but we cannot
prevent society from evolving. We could mention education too;
and I agree. Obviously, since relationships are not forever, we
should teach men and women to put the well being of children first.
I did say men and women. But this will never be an excuse for not
providing a minimum of help to find employment, get an
education, and support women and children. This will never release
society from providing the bare minimum.
Mrs. Suzanne Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata, BQ):
Madam Speaker, I am pleased to take part in the debate on the hon.
member's motion, which deals with the government's lack of
action to improve women's living conditions.
I want to put this issue in a global context and go back to the
federal cuts and their harmful effects on health, social assistance,
employment insurance, old age pensions-not to mention the
forgotten promises made regarding employment and health-be-
8792
fore finally discussing the federal government's inaction regarding
the problems women are facing, particularly violence, poverty and
children.
The federal government cannot merely appoint a Secretary of
State for the Status of Women and think that women's problems are
automatically going to be solved. In spite of the valiant efforts of
the secretary of state, any government action to help women must
get the support of all the ministers, particularly the Minister of
Finance, otherwise it is doomed.
Recently, we noticed problems in several departments, including
national defence, where a woman, who might have become
Canada's first woman to reach the rank of general, was forced to
leave the military because her colleagues were giving her a hard
time. Women know how hard it is to be a woman in a woman's
world, and even more so in a man's world. When it comes to work,
we all know that women must do more to find their place in the sun.
I feel strongly that concerted action by the government is
necessary to further the cause of women. What we see is that the
government has unfortunately failed to deliver. It has not really
undertaken any concerted action and has considerably reduced
funding for various social programs that might have helped
improve the cause of women in this country.
Some cuts and their effects: there are still, theoretically and
legally, one and a half years left in the Liberal government's
mandate, and we are hearing a lot more about the likelihood of a
spring election than about new programs to try to keep a few
promises.
Has the government kept its promises to protect and to promote
the rights and the cause of women? Unfortunately not. Women
were the first to be hit by the Liberal government's never-ending
cuts in funding for health, social assistance, unemployment
insurance and education, as well as by the announced reform of the
pension plan.
In the area of health, in 1995 the federal government announced
a revolutionary new program: the Canada Social Transfer. What
this program really boiled down to was $7 billion in cuts in
transfers to the provinces for health, social welfare and education.
These federal health cuts are coming at a time when the aging of
the population requires an increase in resources aimed at seniors,
such as home care. Older women will pay the cost of lowering the
government's deficit.
As for social assistance, tighter eligibility criteria for
employment insurance and continued high unemployment have
forced many women to go on welfare. In 1995, Quebec held the
dubious record of 485,000 households receiving income security
benefits.
(1300)
As for employment insurance reform, which bases eligibility on
the number of hours, not weeks, worked, this penalizes part time
workers, and we must keep in mind that 70 per cent of these are
women. These workers will now contribute to the system from the
first hour worked, but will have little chance of accumulating
sufficient hours to qualify for benefits if they lose their job.
By depriving numerous women of a replacement income
between jobs, while the unemployment insurance fund surplus will
total $12 billion in 1988, the federal government is choosing to
make women who are working, and women who are unemployed,
foot the bill for part of its deficit reduction.
As for seniors' pensions, the federal government plans to bring
in a system for calculating pensions according to family income in
the year 2001. The calculation of how much pension a woman will
receive will, therefore, depend on her husband's income.
This measure will mean less money for couples, but also less
independence for women. After all the years of struggle to obtain
the recognition of women as persons in their own right, seniors will
be treated differently depending on how much their husband's
income is.
Yet, 44 per cent of women over the age of 65 are living below the
poverty line, compared to 25 per cent of men. Why, then, reduce
women's pensions?
A few promises have been forgotten. On March 4, 1994, the
government voted in favour of the Bloc Quebecois motion urging
the government to recognize the principle of economic equality
between women and men and to implement measures to guarantee
equity in employment, wages and living conditions for women. But
the federal government has never put its money where its mouth is,
despite its great eloquence on the matter at the time.
A federal pay equity bill was passed, in 1977 according to our
sources, but in 1978 according to the minister's, and the
government is dragging its feet unduly on its implementation. The
Public Service Alliance estimates that women may be owed in
excess of $2 billion.
The federal government's inaction in the area of job creation
affects women in particular for they are, more often than not, the
ones in precarious, underpaid, temporary or part time jobs. Women
hold 69 per cent of part time jobs, but not by choice, for 500,000 of
them would like to have full time work. Only 20 per cent of women
have a full time job which pays more than $30,000, compared to40 per cent of men. Women, whatever their level of education, earn
less than men. Even female university graduates make only 75 per
cent of the salary paid to their male colleagues.
8793
In the health and employment sector, the Liberal government
also failed to keep its promises. It considerably reduced transfers
for health care and did nothing to create jobs, although in its red
book, it said on page 81, and I quote: ``The social and economic
experiences of women provide the context within which their
health needs must be reviewed. Canadian women are poorer than
Canadian men, and there is a clear link between poverty and poor
health''.
The government's inertia continues. The government has done
nothing about certain major problems that affect women, including
violence. Community agencies that provide support and
counselling for women who are victims of domestic violence, as
well as the shelters for women and children have been severely
affected by federal cuts in community assistance. The very fact that
this sector was not spared by the government proves that violence
against women is not a priority concern for the Liberals.
In 1994, 70 per cent of poor people in Canada were women or
their children, which adds up to 2 million women and 1.3 million
children, and under the Liberals, the situation continues to
deteriorate. We now have 1,600,000 poor children, and the average
family income dropped by about $1,000 between 1994 and 1995.
The government, instead of taking vigorous steps to deal with this
problem, has reduced transfers to the provinces for social
assistance, plans to provide minimal amounts that would be barely
enough to survive and suggested that disadvantaged citizens go
begging in the streets.
When the latest budget was brought down, the Minister of
Finance realized all of sudden that child poverty was a problem. I
would like to point out that to fight child poverty, we must first
help families with employment policies, social security and
community support.
(1305)
The Canadian Institute of Child Health calculated that the best
way to improve the standard of living of our children would be to
develop a national job creation strategy for adults who have to
support a family. That is pretty obvious. To improve the
circumstances of women and their children, the government should
listen to the suggestions coming from the official opposition and
many women's groups, and act on those suggestions, and act
positively by creating jobs for women and stopping cuts in social
programs. Although theorically and legally women have equal
rights, only economic equality will make them truly equal. Then
maybe we will no longer need March 8.
[English]
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I thank my
colleague from the Bloc for her comments and concerns in this
area. We all have a vested interest in the whole question of the
equitable standards that women live and work in.
There are three women in my family whom I love very much.
Two of them are working. They would like to see from government
a greater reduction in the taxes they have to pay. They look at their
paycheques and they would like to see more expendable income
left for them to support their children and buy the goods and
services they need. I believe every working woman in the country
would like to see that. That is how to strengthen the economic
stability of working women.
What has happened? The government participated in taking50 cents in taxes in one form or another from every dollar a
working woman earns. I think this is wrong.
In addition, in the next six years or so working women will have
to pay another 9 or 10 per cent on their Canada pension
contributions. This is what is weakening the economic stability of
working women. Over the last month these policies have resulted
in 44,000 women becoming unemployed and their children living
in poverty.
When I hear the minister across the way speak as she did this
morning about all the wonderful things the government is doing for
women, I cannot help but fight the feeling and thoughts of
hypocrisy that well up in my mind. It was reprehensible, pathetic
rhetoric.
The best way to help working women and the children living
poverty is by examining the policies that led to the situation. What
policies over the last two and a half decades led to child poverty
and were recognized by the government?
One child in five is supposedly living in poverty. If the child is
living in poverty the family is living in poverty. How could we
expect anything but that when the three levels of government are
taking 50 cents from every dollar they earn? How can we expect
anything but poverty for these women and their children?
I listened very carefully to my colleague's comments. I would
like her to address the policies of the government that have led to
family and child poverty which the government recently
recognized exists directly as a result of the policies of the
government.
[Translation]
Mrs. Tremblay (Rimouski-Témiscouata): Mr. Speaker, it is
all too clear that the government opposite is arrogant and has a
certain disdain for the people of Canada because of its absolute
majority in the House. It may continue to think it has no opposition
across from it. The papers continue to say that the opposition is not
playing its role and that the government continues to do what it
likes.
8794
(1310)
There will be a Grand Prix Sunday, because negotiations went on
all night and all morning to reach an agreement with the
government, which did not want to lose face and change things.
It is always the same with this government. It makes the policies
it likes. It rises in this House to defend the health of children. We
are not allowed to use the word that comes to mind. I have little
time left and I do not want it taken away from me. To be able to
claim to be protecting children's health, the government should
have made fewer cuts. When it decided to cut transfer payments to
the provinces, it decided to increase poverty. It would bust its
britches with its own self importance and continue to make
everyone poorer.
[English]
Mrs. Beryl Gaffney (Nepean, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am very
proud to rise in my place today to speak to the motion by the hon.
member for Laurentides concerning the socioeconomic condition
of women.
In the course of the debate I hope the House will not lose sight of
the government's role to help women support their families. The
issue of how Canadians care for their families should not be
separated from a discussion about the socioeconomic condition of
women.
I will outline how the government is moving on three fronts to
improve the well-being of women who care for families. Maybe
this will respond to the previous questioner's concerns. They are
assessing the value of unpaid work, reforming the national child
benefit system and ensuring that child support payments are made
when a family breaks up.
The first issue is the unpaid work many women perform. It
includes housework, care of children and care of other dependants
such as the elderly. Most of this work is done by women, two-thirds
according to Statistics Canada. This unpaid work provides the
foundation of society. It keep our families strong. It serves as the
bedrock of the social order upon which our paid economy can be
built. This unpaid work is extremely valuable to society.
In 1994 Statistics Canada placed a monetary value on it of$285 billion. Even while it contributes so much to society and the
economy, unpaid work often has a detrimental impact on the
socioeconomic well-being of women. For many it means they do
not have the choice of entering the workforce. For others it means
their chances of advancing in their careers is limited. For some it
means a double shift that can wear them out.
We need a better understanding of the role unpaid work plays in
helping us promote the equality of men and women. It would help
Canadians rebalance the sharing of family responsibilities.
The government has established an overriding, long term
initiative to measure and value unpaid work. In 1996 we counted
unpaid household work, child care and elder care for the first time
in the census. We expect to see the results in 1998 and will add the
information to the time use surveys and evaluation methods that
have already been conducted.
Our efforts are now being directed toward a framework for
evaluating the policy implications of unpaid work. Part of this is
being developed through joint research with other OECD countries.
In the years ahead we will use the information to improve our
initiatives and to promote the socioeconomic equality of women.
While the government takes long term steps to promote better
policy it has also taken immediate action to improve the
socioeconomic impact of how women care for their families.
Nowhere is that more important than in the case of child poverty,
the second broad issue I will outline before the House.
Children's poverty is intricately linked with women's poverty.
Many children live in poverty because they are under the care of a
lone parent. That parent is usually a women and that woman
usually has to make ends meet for herself and her children with a
low paying job or with the support of the social safety net.
The government has moved on all these fronts. In the last budget
the Minister of Finance introduced an historic initiative, the
national child benefit, which will provide more money to families
where lone parent mothers must care for children. It builds on the
child support reform introduced last year.
(1315)
Under the benefit system, a Canada child tax benefit worth $6
billion will be in place by July 1998. That is one step in a two step
process to create the new system.
Every step involved in the working income supplement, which
will increase in July 1997 from $500 per family to $605 for one
child, $1,010 for two children and $330 for each additional child, is
good news for low income families with children who want to get
into the workforce.
In July 1998, one year after we increased the working income
supplement, we will combine it with a child tax benefit. Benefits
will increase to all low income families in which the parents have
paid work as well as those who receive social assistance.
As a result of these measures, more than 1.4 million Canadian
families will see an increase in federal child benefit payments by
July 1998. That represents 2.5 million children. Many women will
see their socio-economic condition improve and find themselves
able to take better care of their families.
8795
The third broad area where the government has moved to
improve the socio-economic condition of women through family
initiatives involves the support payments for children should a
family break up.
Recently this House passed child support legislation based on
the premise that when parents separate or divorce, a child's
standard of living should reflect the means of both parents.
Children are a shared responsibility. Both parents have an
obligation to support their children.
The legislation changed the way that child support payments are
taxed. Child support paid under a written agreement or court order
made on or after May 1, 1997 will not be deductible to the payer or
included in the income of the recipient for tax purposes. Therefore
the new tax rules will apply to all new orders or agreements made
on or after May 1, 1997.
The legislation also introduced measures to complement
provincial and territorial efforts to enforce court orders. As a result,
in a province's effort to enforce a court order, federal licences can
be suspended and federal pensions can be diverted.
Federal data bases, including Revenue Canada's, can be used to
track defaulters. Passports can be suspended if a debtor is in
persistent arrears.
We also introduced child support guidelines to make the system
more predictable and offer a simpler means to update awards. They
have three main elements: child support payment schedules, rules
to adjust the award to reflect four types of special child related
expenses, and rules to adjust the award in cases of undue hardship.
Part of the reason for introducing these guidelines was to cut
down on the legal costs of determining child support. Money that is
spent on lawyers would be better spent to support these children.
These changes in child support legislation were long overdue.
Soon lone parents will begin to benefit from them. In many cases
these parents will be women, many of whom must struggle to keep
their children fed and clothed.
The burden of caring for a family under these hardships adds an
enormous strain to the health and well-being of these women. It is a
burden that contributes greatly to the socio-economic inequalities
that women face.
This is International Women's Week. It is a time to rededicate
ourselves to the challenge of creating socio-economic equality of
women. We acknowledge that much remains to be done to advance
women's equality.
The advances must be an inclusive process that engages all
sectors and individuals to make changes happen. Governments
cannot do it alone, but this government under the Prime Minister
has taken some very important steps to help ensure that we will all
get there together.
[Translation]
Mrs. Monique Guay (Laurentides, BQ): Mr. Speaker, I
listened with interest to the speech by my hon. colleague, for whom
I have great respect and who has given considerable thought to
social concerns in general.
I would like her comments on the fact that, in Canada, one in five
children still lives under the poverty line and the number keeps
growing. I would like her comments on the 10,000 jobs cut at
Canada Post, the majority of which were held by women.
(1320)
I would also like to know what she thinks of the cuts in social
housing made since this government took office, the fact that
housing used to be subsidized but now government no longer
spends a red cent on developing social housing. It has passed the
buck to the provinces. Add to that cuts in transfer payments, which
interfere with the provinces' capacity to maintain their own social
safety net.
As she pointed out earlier, initiatives like the child tax benefit
were indeed put forward. But, for a single mother raising two or
three children, an extra $800 per year is not enough, when the time
comes to pay rent at the end of the month, pay telephone bills or the
groceries, if she wants her children to be well fed. Without
adequate housing, when cuts are made, there is less for health,
food, and so on; that is where the money has to come from. I would
like to know what the hon. member thinks about this.
I sincerely believe that all the policies that have been put in place
will never compensate for the lack of focus on the needs of women,
and therefore children, because they are the ones looking after the
children. I sincerely think that the provinces should get more, they
should get their fair share. The provinces are not asking for
handouts. They want what is supposed to be theirs, the transfer
payments they are entitled to, and to be able to meet the needs of
women and children, within their jurisdictions.
[English]
Mrs. Gaffney: Mr. Speaker, I thank the member from the Bloc
Quebecois for her kind comments.
I do not think any government in history has been as concerned
about the lives of women as this government in trying to improve
the lives of women and to decrease the amount of poverty among
women and children.
When the finance minister was preparing his budget every
government department was asked to look at every issue where
there was a proposed cutback or whatever it was with regard to
gender equality and gender issues. It was one of the most important
things a government could be concerned about. It is too important
to leave to one person, as the minister responsible for women's
8796
issues said this morning. We have to draw in all government
departments.
Maybe the member from the Bloc Quebecois was not listening
too carefully to me. I outlined many areas where this government is
concerned with women's and children's issues and the poverty in
this country.
I have time to expand on a couple of them. When one in five
lives under the poverty line that is not acceptable, I agree, but if she
had listened to what I said there are many measures that we are
putting in place to try to decrease that amount.
With regard to transfers to the provinces I can only speak for the
province of Ontario, the area I am most familiar with. In terms of
transfers to the province of Ontario, and I assume it is the same
with the province of Quebec, the federal government has decreased
the transfers since 1993 to today by as little as $1.5 billion. That is
less than what our government departments were asked to cut back.
I think it is around 11 per cent. Each government department has
been cut back by 15 per cent.
Why would a premier of a province then initiate a tax benefit to
the people of Ontario? Who does this tax benefit or tax cut go to? It
goes to the wealthy in the province of Ontario. They are the ones
who are benefiting. Who are the ones who are being hurt in the
province of Ontario? It is the poor people who are not benefiting. In
addition, why has the premier cut back in education and hospitals?
He must come up with $4.5 billion to cover his tax cut in the
province of Ontario.
Let us not blame this on the federal government. It is not our
fault. That is four times the amount of money that the federal
government has cut in transfers to the provinces. It is about time to
put the onus where the onus should be, back on the premier of the
province of Ontario.
With regard to the 10,000 jobs lost at Canada Post, I have to
assume the member is referring to junk mail.
(1325 )
It is my understanding that that those 10,000 jobs will be picked
up in another area with regard to the private sector which will then
be providing the same quality of service. I hope that will be the
case.
With regard to the cutbacks in social housing, it is not my
understanding that there are cuts in social housing. We are working
with the provinces to increase social housing in this province. In
fact, we are very concerned about some of the aspects of what
different provinces are doing. Again I cannot quote on Quebec, but
I know that in Ontario there is talk about privatizing and we are
very concerned about any effort to privatize social housing in
Ontario.
I hope I have responded to her concerns.
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I just want to ask my hon. colleague a couple of questions
specifically about gender analysis.
I am aware that because of the fourth UN conference on women,
to which Canada was a signatory, it was recommended that there be
a review in every federal department. It was interesting to note that
the hon. member suggested that it was going forward and was in
place at the present time.
We should review all legislation as to how it affects women in
particular, which is called gender analysis, although I think the
secretary of state would say it is men an women, but it specifically
goes to issues dealing with women.
I know my hon. colleague is very concerned with families in
Canada and certainly realizes their importance. I would ask if she
feels that a similar kind of review should take place as to how
government policies affect families in Canada. Are they not as
important an institution as any other in this country? Should there
not be a similar kind of government activity addressing how
government policy affects family units in Canada?
Mrs. Gaffney: Mr. Speaker, I thank the member for Port
Moody-Coquitlam.
I addressed in my speech how the child tax benefit helps
families. I outlined the different amounts of moneys. Maybe the
member was not in her seat at the time but I would be delighted to
repeat what I said.
Through the working income supplement and the enriched
Canada child tax benefit program, the 1997 budget will help to
improve the assistance available to children in low income families
who are the ones who most need help. This will be increased by
$195 million in June 1997. This will provide a maximum
supplement of $605 for the first child, $405 for the second and
$330 for each additional child.
If this is not a major benefit and a major expense that this
government is putting forward to help children, families and moms
and dads, then I cannot understand her question. This is a major
effort on behalf of this government.
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, just for the
record, this has been a great day where we all had a chance to make
some brief and some lengthy comments concerning International
Women's Day. However, we certainly all recognize the fact that
notwithstanding what every government has done over the years, a
lot of work still needs to be done.
As my colleague from the official opposition very eloquently put
it, in Canada, the richest country on earth, where we still have over
one in every five children living below the poverty line, it is clear
that our work is not done.
8797
However, one could say that at least we know the task has not
been completed.
Over the past three years the government-it has only been in
power for about three and a half years-has done a tremendous
amount of things in order to address many of the concerns that were
raised by my colleagues. It has taken a number of initiatives to
restore confidence which was one of the most important elements
and concerns that faced Canadians over the past nine years. That
was done.
The second initiative undertaken by the government was to put
its house in order. I would suggest, and my colleagues would agree,
that our house is in order. The deficit is controllable. It is below$19 billion. The economy has grown at an incredible rate, higher
than any other country in the western hemisphere. Interest rates are
low and inflation is low.
The next move is to invest. I would suggest with the budget
discussion that was initiated by the Minister of Finance the
government is now moving toward investments. Before I sit down,
I would suggest that with another mandate I am sure many of the
concerns raised by my colleagues will be addressed.
[Translation]
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Since debate has now
ended, the proceedings concerning the motion before the House are
completed.
[English]
It being 1.30 o'clock p.m., the House will now proceed to the
consideration of Private Members' Business as listed on today's
Order Paper.
_____________________________________________
8797
PRIVATE MEMBERS' BUSINESS
[
English]
Mrs. Sharon Hayes (Port Moody-Coquitlam, Ref.) moved:
That, in the opinion of this House, the government should consider, in
conjunction with the provinces, the active promotion and implementation of the
Unified Family Court in order to emphasize mediation in family law issues, and to
improve the administration of the interjurisdictional aspects of family law.
She said: Mr. Speaker, for the record to be complete, I am
pleased to speak to this motion and I will repeat the motion now:
That, in the opinion of this House, the government should consider, in
conjunction with the provinces, the active promotion and implementation of the
Unified Family Court in order to emphasize mediation in family law issues, and to
improve the administration of the interjurisdictional aspects of family law.
I brought this motion forward because the landscape of family
life in Canada is changing dramatically and radically. Many factors
are involved in this change.
Those factors range from changes in technology to the mobility
of persons, changing expectations even within society. But I would
put to this House that perhaps the most notable change of all has
been the change in marital breakdown within society.
Divorce in Canada is too important to be ignored. It is too
important for government to step aside and let what is happening
happen. The patchwork legislation such as Bill C-41 is simply not
enough, so I am pleased again to bring forward some suggestions
that are in the process and relate to this very important item of
divorce.
Divorce is under federal jurisdiction and was made so in the
British North America Act in 1867. At that time divorce was
granted only if it could be proven that one spouse committed
adultery. The jurisdiction was shared between the federal
Parliament that enacted the law and provincial legislatures that
gave courts the authority to grant divorce.
In 1968 the grounds for divorce were expanded to include
marital breakdown and marital offences where breakdown was
defined as such things as desertion, imprisonment and separation
for at least three years. Marital offence was defined as physical or
mental cruelty. It was quite a span of time from 1867 to 1968
before any changes were made at all to the law.
In 1985 the Divorce Act was opened again. It was amended so
that marital breakdown was deemed the only ground for divorce.
That was defined as separation of at least one year, adultery and/or
physical or mental cruelty.
It is interesting to note that the no fault provision, that is
separation for at least one year, was used in 91 per cent of the
divorces in the first year after the passage of that bill in 1985.
(1335 )
Between 1965 and 1988, before the first change to the bill and
after the second, Canada has the record of going from one of the
lowest rates of divorce to one of the highest in the industrial
countries. The latest statistics state that approximately one in every
two marriages today ends in divorce, showing another increase.
This eight fold increase in divorce since the changes in 1968
underlines a fundamental shift in our understanding of the basic
concepts of marriage, children, relationships and others. They
reflect a change in things like social mobility, lower birth rates,
equality rights and entry of women into the labour force.
8798
Even though divorce is rampant, it is true that seven out of ten
Canadians remarry. Marriage is not forgotten. However, the
process of divorce takes its toll.
As a society our concern is the major effect of this process on
children and, therefore, the social and economic effects that result
from that.
Children are our country's most valuable resource. Scientists
have said that there are certain developmental and cognitive
predictors we can look at to see how successful they will be and
how they will contribute to society.
Scientists have noted life changes that affect children and have
listed and quantified them. Some of the life changes that have
dramatic effects on children are negative economic circumstances,
particularly of women after divorce; erratic or no contact with the
non-custodial parent; ongoing parental conflict or less availability
of the residential parent because that parent may have to work.
In contrast, the top factors that work toward positive
consequences in the event of divorce would be the extent to which
parents resolve the conflict surrounding the divorce, the quality of
the custodial relationship and the extent of not feeling rejected by
the non-custodial parent. These all have positive effects on
children.
As the government looks at legislation relating to divorce it has a
responsibility in these areas, not in just one or two of them because
they all affect children, the products of the marriage, and all too
often the victims of the divorce.
The signs of stress from this epidemic are everywhere. Youth
suicides are escalating, teen pregnancies are escalating, youth
violent crimes doubled in the last few years. Even such things as
academic achievement, which has been shown to relate specifically
to the security of the child and the feeling of belonging, in recent
days has shown to be lacking in Canadian standards.
When I think back to what the government did in Bill C-41, I see
it as a dismal failure. Bill C-41 will create renewed legal wrangling
between custodial and non-custodial parents and that will work
directly against the best interests of children.
The Liberal government is out of touch with the realities faced
by Canadian families in their homes and in the process of divorce.
Bill C-41 essentially relegates the non-custodial parent to the role
of a money machine. The guidelines lack any recognition or
encouragement of special circumstances or commitments of time
or resources unless it is above a 40 per cent access threshold. It
encourages an all or nothing mindset as to whether someone is a
custodial or non-custodial parent. The justice minister has claimed
that this legislation is designed to reduce conflict. Because of this
legislation, the battle lines will be drawn earlier and the battle will
go on longer.
(1340)
Other factors are that access to the non-custodial parent are
ignored and the non-adversarial atmosphere that is recommended
is ignored. The government is blind to the real needs of Canadians
and has refused to consider support and access together, despite the
testimony of many Canadians and experts.
One thing the government can do is move in the direction of a
valuable change to promote more aggressively something that
came through in 1974 from the Law Reform Commission of
Canada. This was a suggestion to establish a unified family court
system across the country.
Federal officials say that the government has supported the idea
of a unified family court ever since the law commission issued this
report. Yet 27 years later we have very little to show for it. In 1974,
the Law Reform Commission said: ``In some provinces, as many as
five different courts may handle family problems. Overlapping and
fragmentation occurs in the areas of custody, wardship, adoption,
maintenance and divorce. This not only leads to multiplication of
effort, but can produce irreconcilable decisions''. Twenty-seven
years later, this is still the case.
The commission also said: ``The most distressing effect of the
present state of affairs is the despair, confusion and frustration it
causes to the participants''. I would add, to the children of the
participants. Divorce and separation are traumatic enough without
being made more difficult by the court system. Yet little has been
done to remedy the situation.
Shortly after the commission report in 1977, Ontario
implemented a unified family court pilot project in Hamilton. In
1978, Saskatchewan set up a unified family court. Today,
Saskatchewan has a family court in three urban centres and Ontario
has it in five. Also, Manitoba and Newfoundland provide province
wide access to a unified family court. Previous debate in B.C. and
Alberta about the implementation of a unified family court has
collapsed.
Twenty-three years after a commission report, we have a
convoluted variety of family court systems with no visible national
commitment to establish a nation wide family court. Meanwhile,
those who are suffering from the lack of action are families,
especially the children.
Stronger leadership is needed from the federal government to
encourage all the provinces to establish unified family courts for
the sake of children.
A unified family court, according to the Law Reform
Commission, should have the authority over most family matters,
including the formation of marriage, divorce, judicial separation
and separation orders, alimony and maintenance, custody, access,
adoption and child neglect. The commission recognized
differences of opinion over such matters as interspousal or
interfamilial torts and contracts, guardianship of the property of
minors in interspousal or
8799
interfamilial offences of a criminal nature including, of course,
family violence.
A unified family court offers several clear advantages for
litigants over the present system. First, it will eliminate the
problem of overlapping and fragmentation in many present rulings
along with the confusion and frustration litigants face with this
state of affairs. It can also save time and money.
As the Law Reform Commission said: ``Present systems cause
duplication of effort by judges, lawyers, witnesses, court
administrators and the parties themselves''. This naturally leads to
increased costs.
Consolidation of family law jurisdiction in a single court would
reduce the cost of legal services to the litigants. Not only are initial
costs lowered but future costs can be as well.
(1345)
A spokesman for the Hamilton unified family court said:
If you come back to the court, say, five years later to seek a variance on a ruling,
you can apply for it in the unified family court through a motion, which is simpler
and less costly than the usual application that is required in other courts.
The Hamilton unified family court has also implemented case
management, a more efficient way of processing court cases. A
case is assigned to one judge who is responsible for seeing it
through to completion. He can deal with the various aspects of the
case and while doing so develop a familiarity with the litigants and
their problems which will help him to guide them through the
process as quickly as is helpful to them.
Further to these benefits is the commitment in unified family
courts to consider the dynamics of family conflicts. Judges in a
unified family court specialize in family disputes and therefore can
more effectively work with them on a personal and individual
basis. A judge having developed a familiarity with a case can often
offer advice. Also the litigants are saved the confusion of having
various judges involved in different aspects of their situation
offering contradictory advice.
Family court judges also look differently at situations than
criminal court judges. For example, they are responsible to take
into consideration the best interests of the child. In the case of a
wayward child, if the judge knows the child is involved with social
workers from within the same court he may well treat the case
differently from one in which the provision of help for the child is
less clearly defined.
Unified family court can also facilitate more effectively the use
of mediation, an alternative to the adversarial and more destructive
litigation process. Mediation is becoming increasingly popular as
people experience the benefits of this approach to conflict
resolution.
I will speak specifically to mediation. Last year the civil justice
task force report by the Canadian Bar Association made strong
recommendations for increased use of alternative dispute
resolution instead of litigation to resolve civil cases. Noting the
increased use of dispute resolution methods such as mediation in
place of litigation that is already taking place, the Canadian Bar
Association urged even more dedicated commitment to pursue that
such methods be made.
It recommended that every jurisdiction make available as part of
the civil justice system opportunities for litigants to use
non-binding dispute resolution processes. While it did not advocate
mandatory mediation it did suggest the use of incentives to
encourage litigants to use dispute resolution methods and to do so
as early in the process as possible.
The Ontario government has recently launched a pilot project
that imposes mandatory mediation as the first stage in all civil
disputes. Interestingly enough it has accepted family conflicts.
Why do we want to stop and look at mediation in family
disputes? The Canadian Bar Association did not go specifically to
matters of family law, but the principles and recommendations
made by the bar have also been used effectively to resolve family
disputes and are being used to one degree or another in different
jurisdictions in Canada.
The main concern about family conflicts that led to their
exemption from the mandatory mediation pilot project was that in
some cases it could involve domestic violence and other power
imbalances in family relationships that some say would
disadvantage women in the mediation process. However all
provinces have had quite a bit of experience with mediation already
and screening systems can be implemented to filter domestic abuse
cases out of the mediation channel.
The Divorce Act already requires lawyers to make their clients
aware they can pursue mediation in place of litigation and to
different degrees provincial governments encourage the use of
mediation.
Let us consider mandatory mediation. The commitment to
mediation in family disputes must be stronger than simply a
suggestion. Extensive documentation already exists about the
negative effects of divorce on children. The adversarial nature of
litigation and common battles over child custody leave even more
scars on these innocent victims.
As the Canadian Bar Association stated, court trials should be
seen as ``an option of the last resort''. Rather than mediation being
an option within the hands of lawyers I suggest that lawyers
become an option only if mediation becomes unworkable.
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(1350)
Is mediation the entire answer? Should consideration be made
for counselling as well? The idea of courses before divorce,
premarital courses, marriage and parenting courses has some real
validity. The government minimizes by neglect the implications in
societal contribution of strong marriages and so ignores such
suggestions. The government minimizes by neglect the devastating
effect of marital breakdown on children.
As usual government policy is working against families without
these recognitions being in place. Financial incentives for
counselling such as tax credits or at the very least a GST exemption
for counselling services would be a step in the right direction.
Whether we make mediation mandatory or simply offer strong
incentives which make it or counselling a more appealing
alternative in most cases, the federal government needs to urge
each Canadian jurisdiction to take seriously the importance of
providing Canadian families with a practical alternative to
litigation.
The Law Reform Commission of Canada report calls for reform
in our court systems to aid families. The recent Canadian Bar
Association task force suggests dispute resolution approaches that
are already proving effective in resolving family disputes in some
jurisdictions. The benefits of unified family court and mediation
process offer families something that is not now there in the
process.
Due to the growing concern over family conflict with today's
level of divorce, due to the non-partisan nature of concern for
Canada's children and due to the recognition there is much that can
be done to prove their lot in society the motion deserves more than
just one hour of debate. I therefore ask for unanimous consent to
make the motion votable.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): Is there unanimous
consent?
Some hon. members: No.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): There is not unanimous
consent.
Ms. Shaughnessy Cohen (Windsor-St. Clair, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak on the issue
of a unified family court although it took a long time to get around
to that in the hon. member's address. It occurred to me that perhaps
she was trying to use Motion No. 147 as a way to go back over Bill
C-41. It is interesting that would be the case.
It is also interesting since we are so close to International
Women's Day that the member would again promote an
anti-feminist agenda which promotes the interest of the boys and
not of women as the Reform Party usually does.
She suggests the federal government has somehow failed in the
area of unified family courts when these courts virtually exist all
over the country. We are talking about a court system that requires
a lot of provincial co-operation. She should return to her own
province and speak to them about the importance of unified family
courts and of co-operating with us on that process.
It is unfair to suggest the federal government has failed here. A
simple reading of the Constitution by a child would indicate that
the court system is the responsibility of the provincial government.
Unified family courts as they exist now have provided a model
of co-operation in the administration of justice. Governments,
providers of professional and community services, the judiciary
and the bar have all co-operated to establish these in some
provinces. Unified family courts send a strong message of what can
be accomplished through the development of partnerships and the
sharing of ideas. The federal government is ready, willing and able
to be at the table but not all provinces co-operate. The federal
government has supported the establishment of unified family
courts for over 20 years.
It is interesting the hon. member would cite the 1974 Law
Reform Commission of Canada report. When we recently
reinstated the commission the Reform Party voted against it. In any
event she is relying on their old work and I suppose we should be
thankful for that.
(1355 )
Discussions followed shortly after that report with all
governments. What we found out at that time is that all
governments were concerned over the division of jurisdiction of
family law matters between two and sometimes more levels of
court.
In some provinces as many as five different courts were handling
family problems. There was overlapping, fragmentation and
different judges for custody, wardship, adoption, child maintenance
and divorce. This led to a multiplication of efforts but also
sometimes to irreconcilable decisions. This complexity also had an
effect on the ability of families to resolve their disputes quickly and
at reasonable cost.
An additional concern for governments was the provision of
adequate support services for family litigants. It was agreed that
intake services, including referral to community based professional
services, was essential for the effective operation of a unified court.
Family counselling and family life education programs were
recommended by the Canadian Law Reform Commission and
enforcement services were also recommended that could take on
the responsibility for ensuring that court orders were respected.
In Ontario those enforcement provisions have fallen apart
because Ontario wants to put in a multi-billion dollar tax cut which
results in their not having enough money for their enforcement
proceedings. My office and the office of other Ontario MPs are
receiving requests for assistance every day to enforce their orders.
8801
The hon. member might want to keep that in mind when she is
talking about tax cuts.
There was wide agreement in 1974 that these kinds of services
were important in ensuring that those who sought help could get it
in the form most appropriate to their needs. In July 1975 Prince
Edward Island became the first province to create a unified family
court. Then, in May 1976 a funding program administered by the
Department of Justice, under which the federal government agreed
to cost share the operation of unified family court initially for three
years, was instituted. Four other provinces then participated,
Ontario, Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and New Brunswick.
The first unified family court was in Hamilton-Wentworth,
established in July 1977, 20 years ago. In August 1995 the family
court became a separate branch of the Ontario Court general
division and expanded to London, Barrie, Kingston and Napanee.
Saskatchewan established a unified family court in December
1978. In December 1994 those services which started in Saskatoon
were expanded to Regina and Prince Albert.
A unified family court in St. John's, Newfoundland was
established in June 1979, providing services to St. John's and the
surrounding area.
New Brunswick established a unified family court in 1979. In
September of that year a court was created to provide family
services at Fredericton. In 1983 a family division of the Court of
Queen's Bench in New Brunswick was established to provide those
services province wide.
Manitoba did not participate in the pilot projects but in 1983 it
established a family division of its Court of Queen's Bench to serve
greater Winnipeg.
All these courts, including one in Nova Scotia which is now
being established, have been set up with the co-operation and
financial support of the federal government. A unified family court
will be one of the options considered in discussions on court
structure for the new territory of Nunavut.
Progress on the creation of a nationwide system of family courts
has proceeded at a steady pace. It has been aided since 1981 by the
maintenance of a pool of judicial salaries, pre-authorized by
Parliament, that can be used as the need arises to fill positions
created by provinces and territories.
With respect to the unified family courts and the structure and
the need they fill, I would like to talk a bit about the philosophy
behind the unified family court as it exists. It is to able families to
resolve their differences to the greatest possible extent in a single
forum. This can only be done if the courts are given both federal
and provincial powers to deal with all aspects of family law. This is
something the Reform Party seems to forget.
Since a large part of family law, including divorce and custody,
falls within federal jurisdiction, unified family courts have to be
established at that level. This ensures that the single court concept,
one stop shopping, is maintained. Unified courts de-emphasizes the
adversarial approach normally associated with courts of law in
favour of a more informal dispute resolution approach.
Alternatives to legal resolutions are sought where practicable. A
wide variety of professional and community services are made
available to court users.
(1400 )
This model is seen as a way of making the court system more
accessible, less threatening and more responsive to the needs of
family members. It has wide acceptance among the public, family
support professionals and organizations as well as the legal
profession.
There has been high degree of co-operation between provincial
and federal governments in the process of identifying women and
men who are best suited to exercise the role of judge in these
courts. There has been co-operation on funding. For example, when
Ontario expanded its court in 1995 the federal government required
that the salary savings realized from the federal government paying
judges' salaries instead of the province be funnelled back into
support services for the court.
Nova Scotia is willing to accept or has at least suggested a
similar arrangement to assist in the funding of its courts. The
obvious benefits for both governments are that we take over the
payment of judges' salaries and the province uses that money that it
has saved and it does not have to find new money to pay for
important services.
All the things that my hon. friend is suggesting are going on,
while the federal government then has the assurance that it requires
that adequate funding will be made available to support the court
once it is established.
All governments are wrestling with the problem of maintaining
court services in attempting to reduce overall costs. To suggest,
though, that the federal government is not doing its share is quite
unfair. The hon. member talks about case load management like it
is something new.
Case load management in Hamilton-Wentworth grew out of a
system in Windsor, Ontario in the federally appointed court which
was applied to family matters and other matters. All courts are
working with this.
Mandatory mediations, all the things that the hon. member is
suggesting, exist. They may not be mandatory but they do exist.
After all, I would suggest to the hon. member that it is up to the
litigants, the people who are involved, to decide whether they want
to slug it out in court or whether they want to go to mediation. It is
not up to the hon. member who, I would suggest, is following an
8802
agenda which is more suitable to the support of men's rights than to
the support of the rights of families.
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I listened to the hon. member's motion on the creation of a
unified family court. After reading her motion and listening to her
speech, I am convinced the hon. member's intentions are good.
The Reform member surely has valid amendments to propose in
order to deal with family breakups, the increasing number of
divorces, and the problems experienced by children following their
parents' divorce. However, creating a unified family court would
not solve these problems.
In fact, it would create another problem. Whenever a change is
made to a system, particularly the judicial system, the objective
must be to improve that system. I do not believe that creating a
court which would overlap existing tribunals would improve the
system.
It must be understood that, in the current system, as the Liberal
member pointed out, the majority of provinces already have their
own family court. In Quebec, the Superior Court's family division
deals with all family related issues.
So, establishing a unified court over the structure already in
place in some provinces would be interfering in areas over which
the federal has no jurisdiction. My main objection to the motion is
that, once again, it ignores the respective jurisdictions in this
country called Canada. The government is deliberately imposing
national standards, or a very federal view, on anything that moves
in this country.
I am sure the member means well, but I think she should have
examined this issue more closely. There is no reason at this time to
create such a court, which would merely duplicate what already
exists.
(1405)
I will give you an example to show how it would create more
problems than it would solve. I am thinking of the famous trial and
appeal divisions of the federal court. This is a court specifically for
cases involving the federal government, when each of the
provinces is equipped to settle these differences.
But no, the federal government felt the need to have a court with
trial and appeal divisions in order to complicate Canada's judicial
system. It would be exactly the same thing if it were to institute a
federal unified family court.
I think that if we look at what is being done in the provinces, and
I will refer to Quebec because I practised there for at least eight
years, I know that in the case of family law, which is handled by the
Superior Court, there are weaknesses, but there are also some
things that work very well.
I think that, if we want to help soften the blow of a separation or
a divorce on families, we should perhaps try to find a way of
actually helping affected family members. In Quebec, one of the
methods we have adopted is compulsory mediation.
The hon. member says that the unified court would be able to do
mediation, but here again, this is already being done in a number of
provinces, including Quebec, which has compulsory mediation
services. This means that individuals involved in a divorce or
separation are invited to meet with professionals in this field to try
and reach an amicable arrangement. We do not need the unified
court to do this. I think we should let the provincial legislatures try
to find the right way to deal with the problem of divorce.
At the present time, there is no evidence that the system is not
effective, so I suggest we let the system be and try and find ways to
improve it. Let me give you another example to show why Quebec
cannot consider having a unified family court, and I am referring to
Bill C-41, a bill that was discussed by the two members who spoke
earlier.
According to this bill, and I may remind you that the Bloc
Quebecois was against this kind of legislation since in Quebec we
already had a support payment tax rate structure that could be
either federal or provincial. The criteria were not the same, the
amount was not the same, and some aspects were perhaps
important to people in English Canada, while others were more
important to Quebec, so that the party making the payments could
negotiate on which basis support payments would be paid. He
would opt for the tax rate that suited his particular case, and it
could be either federal or provincial.
Still on the same subject, if a unified family court is established
in Canada, this will open the door to various interpretations, to
decisions that might be at odds with a family policy developed in
Quebec, for instance, by the National Assembly.
Clearly such a motion exposes the real cost of centralizing
federalism. Everything possible is to be directed toward Ottawa.
The aim is to take over provincial jurisdictions as much as possible
in order to reduce the power of provincial legislatures as much as
possible.
In Quebec City, they want as much of that as they can get. As
regards the family, if Quebec wants a structured view of the 2000s,
it will first have to recover all its powers in family matters,
including divorce. The Quebec Civil Code contains a part that
provides for recovering all facets of divorce proceedings, and we
are waiting for the federal government to decide to withdraw from
this area.
8803
(1410)
You will understand that, with Quebec claiming more and more
powers in this area, we cannot support the motion by the Reform
member.
I repeat, I am sure her intentions were good in moving this
motion, but they will not take her to the objective she set with such
a motion. The result would be duplication, overlap and higher
administrative costs in an area of jurisdiction that is exclusively
provincial.
[English]
Mr. Jay Hill (Prince George-Peace River, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, despite a severe cold it is a pleasure for me to rise today to
speak to Motion No. 147 brought forward by my colleague from
Port Moody-Coquitlam.
This motion calls on the government to work together with the
provinces to actively promote and implement unified family courts
and to emphasize mediation of family law matters.
It is a sad reality that in 1990 about 30 per cent of all marriages
in Canada ended in divorce. In 1990 the average length of marriage
was shorter than ever before.
Out of all divorced and separated Canadians, 350,000 are
parents. We know about the emotional toll that divorce and
separation takes on adults, but the impact of family law battles on
children is even more traumatic. It should be of great concern to
everyone in this House.
The system, as it stands now, does little to alleviate children's
pain. The administration of family law is a mess. This country
seems to have forgotten the value of parenting and the importance
of preserving the child-parent relationship in the context of family
break-up. Instead, we have an adversarial system that creates
winners and losers. Inevitably those who have the most to lose are
the children.
The administration of family law in Canada as it exists today can
be summed up in three words, inconvenience, confusion and
frustration. We know that family conflicts are seldom cut and dry.
They involve many different issues. The break-up of a marriage
that involves children can lead to issues of child support, spousal
support, custody and property division.
In most provinces, people who are separating are forced to go to
different courts for different issues that come up. Divorce, custody,
access and support issues cross over federal and provincial
jurisdictions and create a tangled web of red tape that
inconveniences, confuses and frustrates.
For example, in most provinces if a couple decides to split up but
not divorce and they want to deal with custody, access or support
issues, they must go to one court. Then, if they later decide to
divorce, they must go to another court. Then there is enforcement,
which is generally a provincial matter. The list goes on and on.
When will the confusion end? Is the whole process not stressful
enough without aggravating matters by this sort of nonsense? What
kind of impact is this having on our children?
I can say what kind of impact it is having. There are studies out
there telling us that the emotional toll that long, protracted family
law litigation has on our children is simply devastating.
This psychological damage is the root of many of the social
problems we are seeing today, youth crime, suicide and poverty.
This raises serious concerns about the future social health of our
country.
Anyone who has ever been involved in any kind of lawsuit will
say that litigation should be the last resort. It is not as though this is
news to anyone either.
In 1974 the Law Reform Commission of Canada reported that
the main goals of government should be to encourage resolution of
family matters without resorting to litigation and to lessen the
confusion by vesting jurisdiction over all family law matters in
single, unified family courts.
Here we are 23 years later. The Liberal government has spent a
good part of its mandate reviewing family law issues. Yet it still
does not have it right. This government has done nothing to address
this sad state of affairs.
We are still left with an adversarial system that destroys any
chance of ongoing healthy relationships after the smoke clears in
the courtroom.
(1415 )
While there are presently unified family courts in Saskatchewan,
Manitoba, Ontario and Newfoundland, not all are province-wide
and the matters they deal with vary from one province to another.
Some provinces do not even have unified family courts. We heard
earlier from the hon. member for Windsor-St. Clair as she took us
through the history of the present unified family court system, that
it is working in some provinces and that we have made substantive
progress.
However, the question that must be asked and which has failed to
be answered is why is it so slow to get this process in place across
the country. Why is it taking so long? It is because it is a very low
priority for this government.
Equally troubling is the fact that nowhere in Canada is mediation
mandated as the preferred method for resolving family law
conflicts. When relationships end it is only natural for people to
blame each other and feel a sense of hostility. But if these people
can be assisted and encouraged to respect each other as loving
caring parents, this can only be good for the children involved. This
government owes the children at least that much.
The advantages of mediation are undeniable. The financial cost
is much less than litigation. Most family law conflicts can be
resolved in five to ten one-hour mediation sessions. Mediation
costs an average of $100 to $150 per hour. Compare this with the
8804
millions of dollars pumped out to family lawyers each year to
battle it out in court.
Mediation can allow parents to work out amiable solutions to
parenting and support issues without being forced to use their
children as pawns. This is better for everyone involved. It has been
shown that compromises that tie access and support issues together
will not only be emotionally better for children but also financially
better.
Several studies have linked non-payment of support with the
non-custodial parents' frustration at being deprived of participation
in their children's lives. For example, a study in 1995 showed that
79 per cent of non-custodial parents with access paid their support,
while only 59 per cent of those without access paid.
It makes good sense that people are more willing to go along
with decisions they have made themselves than with decisions that
have been imposed on them. But the Divorce Act takes a weak
approach to this issue. All it does is require lawyers to inform their
clients that mediation is available, hardly an encouragement. The
Bill C-41 disaster does nothing to address these procedural failures
or to help families on an emotional level either. It is just a
piecemeal approach which does more for lawyers and judges than it
does for average Canadians.
The list of problems with Bill C-41 is endless but what concerns
me most as a parent is the fact that this government has not even
dealt with the suffering of children, children who are denied the
right to enjoy relationships with both parents, not just the custodial
parent. Divorce is meant to end the marriage bond, not the
child-parent bond. It is disturbing to realize that in 1992 Canadian
courts awarded sole custody to mothers approximately 72 per cent
of the time, and yet joint custody was only awarded 16 per cent of
the time.
I do not know if the government understands the impact of this,
but in the words of the Canadian Council for Co-parenting, there's
no hurt like it. Kids need both parents and both parents need their
kids.
I offered a solution to this problem. In March 1996, I tabled Bill
C-242 which would make joint custody automatic unless not in the
child's best interests, as in cases of abuse. Psychologists have also
offered a solution called joint custody mediation which has been
used with success in some American states. I call on this
government to look closely at these options because so far this
government has missed the boat on this issue.
Bill C-41 misses the boat by only dealing with outcomes, not
with actual process, a process that is leaving deep emotional scars
on anyone who has the misfortune of being involved in it. If this
government were more concerned with the process and especially
with what it is doing to this country's children, the social cost of
divorce would not be what it is today.
Canadians are looking for some real procedural reform here,
reform that addresses the current jumble in the administration of
family, reform that lets Canadians actively participate in the
resolution of problems in a way that is best for all involved. That is
why I urge all members to support this motion. It is time the House
demanded some action from this government. It is time we called
on this government to work together with the provinces to
encourage and implement reforms to the administration of family
law in Canada.
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Milliken): There being no further
members rising for debate and the motion not being designated as a
votable item, the time provided for the consideration of Private
Members' Business is now expired and the order is dropped from
the Order Paper.
[Translation]
It being 2.20 p.m., this House stands adjourned until next
Monday at 11 a.m., pursuant to Standing Order 24(1).
(The House adjourned at 2.19 p.m.)