On 5 February 2016, the House of Commons Standing Committee invited
Canadians to participate in pre-budget consultations prior to the presentation
of the 2016 budget. To that end, from 16–19 February, the Committee heard
from 92 invited witnesses on a wide range of federal public policy topics. As
well, the Committee received an additional 175 written submissions from
individuals and groups that were not invited to make a presentation.
After hearing from witnesses, and examining both their briefs and
the submissions from those that did not make a presentation, the Committee
presented an interim report on its consultations on 26 February 2016. This
report, which was sent to the Minister of Finance in the form of a letter,
noted the importance of informing the Minister about the range of federal
public policy areas in which the Committee had received input from Canadians
regarding their priorities for the budget to be presented on 22 March 2016.
The interim report also highlighted the Committee’s intention to present a
final report on its consultations. This document is that final report. As
indicated in the interim report, the Committee’s consultations in relation to
the 2016 budget occurred over a very short period of time. In the future, the
Committee intends to undertake its pre-budget consultations in accordance with
more historic timeframes.
The input received by the Committee through testimony, briefs and
other submissions from Canadians falls into 27 broad federal public policy
areas. The proposals in each of these areas that were received by the Committee
through the testimony and any accompanying briefs from the 92 witnesses who
appeared, are presented below.
To the extent possible, the Committee has used the words spoken or submitted by
these witnesses who, often with very little notice, took the time to share
their priorities during the consultations. In some cases, the proposals have
been edited for brevity and to focus very narrowly on the substance of the
proposals, without the context or expected outcomes following implementation.
The recommendations that Committee members believe should be contained in the
forthcoming budget are presented following this summary. Appendix A provides an
indication of the federal public policy areas in which the additional 175
written submissions made proposals.
Under Canada’s Constitution,
responsibility for agriculture is shared between the federal and
provincial/territorial governments. In focusing on promoting the growth,
stability and competitiveness of the country’s agricultural and agri-food
sector, the federal government undertakes research, works to improve access to
foreign markets and provides financial support, among other actions.
Moreover, under the Constitution Act, 1867, the federal
Parliament has legislative authority for sea coast and inland fisheries, while
provincial legislatures have responsibility for matters of property and civil
rights, and the management of public lands. While the federal government has
retained final authority over all fisheries, court references have confirmed
provincial legislative responsibilities for inland fisheries; as a result, a
system of delegation of federal administrative authority over a number of
fisheries exists.
In speaking to the Committee about agriculture, food and fisheries
in the context of the consultations prior to the 2016 budget, witnesses focused
on the following issues: research and other supports; the cattle and beef
sector; and fisheries.
-
[The government should invest in] collaborative
research [on beneficial agricultural management practices] and … maintain and
modernize its research [facilities] infrastructure. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should provide] sufficient
funding to support incoming … foreign regulators to assess our regulatory and
inspection systems [for food products]. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should ensure sufficient funding
for] national Business Risk Management programs … [and] flexibility in the
government’s contribution to regional and provincial livestock insurance
programs. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should] change … the AgriInvest
program [to allow] account holders to withdraw producer contributions (Fund 1)
without first withdrawing taxable government contributions (Fund 2). …
[D]irect access to producer contributions should be limited to priority
investment targets identified in partnership between industry and government. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[The government should] set the stage for
[G]rowing [F]orward 3 … particularly by aligning the vision of agriculture with
the principles of food sovereignty and supporting agriculture's efforts to
mitigate and adapt to climate change. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should] support … new and young
farmers by lowering the cap on the government's support programs; making
effective, affordable financing programs available to new farmers, including
micro loans and small grants; providing funding for farm apprenticeship
programs and training; and using tax penalties to effectively prohibit foreign
investor and absentee farmland ownership. (National
Farmers Union)
-
This budget should re-establish the Prison Farm
Program [since prison farms] provid[ed] effective rehabilitation for prisoners,
… produced wholesome food and provided valuable agricultural infrastructure
also used by the surrounding communities. (National
Farmers Union)
-
The 2016 budget should redirect all agriculture
research funding toward public and independent third party research in the
public interest and reinstate funding to the public agricultural research
institutions to allow them to recover and rebuild their capacity with a new
generation of scientists. (National
Farmers Union)
-
Funds should be allocated to public plant
breeding to develop varieties that are adapted to Canadian regional climates. …
The budget should support participatory breeding initiatives and enable new
varieties to be released without royalties. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should] fund research and
assessment of pesticides, including field crop trials on yields, monitoring of
soil quality and surface water contamination, and impacts on pollinator
populations. Funds should go toward assessment and implementation of farming
practices to increase biodiversity and integrated pest management to benefit
farmers, and both natural and agricultural ecosystems. (National
Farmers Union)
-
Budget 2016 should take concrete steps to
correct the damage caused by ending the Canadian Wheat Board’s single desk
[and] establish and fund a mechanism to regulate the grain system to ensure all
farmers have an equal opportunity to ship grain, to counteract the power of the
major grain companies, and to give priority in shipping to small grain
companies, producer rail cars, and short-line railways. (National
Farmers Union)
-
The budget should reinstate federal funding of
the publicly owned community pastures program originally established under the
Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration [and] restore funding to the Prairie
Shelterbelt program and tree nursery which provided free seedlings to farmers
across the prairies. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should adopt] measures to
safeguard … domestic food production for the long-term. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should] support ranchers’
conservation actions and ensure funds are available for the continuation and
expansion of agri‑environmental programs and the development of
market-based instruments. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should make permanent the pilot
program for] western livestock price insurance … [and increase the credit
limits on lending programs for] producers who purchase cattle for breeding,
backgrounding or finishing. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should examine significant]
market readiness barriers [that] exist in the Canadian seafood industry [and]
that impact [the industry’s] ability to fully leverage the potential of [recent
and upcoming] trade agreements as well as other global market opportunities. (Carey Bonnell, as an individual)
-
[The government should improve] market
intelligence to support the market development needs of the [fisheries sector].
(Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
-
[The government should invest] in innovation and
automation in the [fisheries] sector. (Carey Bonnell, as an individual)
-
[The government should develop] a strategy to
address the labour retention challenges in the [fisheries sector,] given
current demographic profiles. (Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
-
Regarding social licence, there's a need for
continued engagement and investment on the subject of science requirements for
eco-certification. (Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
-
Key public investment in fisheries and ocean
science, including sustainable aquaculture development, are critical to ensure
[that the fisheries sector] continues to meet and exceed best practices [in
relation to traceability and eco-certification]. (Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
-
[The seafood industry] should have equitable
access to public programming [including the Growing Forward 2 program] to help
improve its overall competitiveness. (Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
In relation to arts and culture, the federal government formulates
policies and delivers programs that help all Canadians participate in their
shared cultural and civic life. For example, it implements policies related to
copyright and broadcasting, as well as to arts, heritage, official languages,
sports, state ceremonial and protocol, and Canadian symbols. Moreover, the arts
sector is supported by a variety of federal tax and program spending measures.
Witnesses that commented on arts, culture, heritage and linguistic
identity during the Committee’s consultations in advance of the 2016 budget
expressed their views on the following topics: funding; and francophone
communities.
-
The arts and artists [should] be included in
[government] discussions that determine … present and future [funding or policy
directions that affect them.] (Canadian
Council for the Arts)
The federal tax system has several measures that are designed to
benefit families with children, and Children’s Special Allowances are paid to
federal and provincial/territorial agencies and institutions that care for
children. As well, the federal government provides a number of education- and
employment-related supports to youth aged 15 to 24 years.
During the Committee’s consultations ahead of the 2016 budget,
witnesses discussing children, youth and families commented on the following
subjects: tax measures; and early learning and child care.
-
The system of federal child benefits should be
reformed with a view to reduc[ing] income-tested benefit clawback rates as much
as possible. (C.D. Howe Institute)
-
[As the] new Canada child benefit … is a
potential life-changer for single mothers and all families living in poverty, …
[t]he federal government [should] ensure that provincial and territorial
governments refrain from deducting [the proposed Canada child benefit] from
social assistance payments, or counting [it] as income for access to
means-tested benefits. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[The government should] work with the provinces
and territories to develop and fund … [an] early learning and child care
framework … [including a] short term package [that] would have three elements:
[enhanced affordability, support for child care workers, and support for
hard-to-serve populations.] (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[Early childhood education and care] funds that
are part of the [anticipated social infrastructure fund should] be identified
specifically in the budget in the following way: … $100 million to empower and
resource Indigenous communities to design, deliver and govern … [early
childhood education and care] systems and services; and … $500 million to
provinces/territories committed to developing their own policy frameworks based
on principles of universality, high quality and comprehensiveness. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he federal government should work with the
provinces and territories to establish and fund a national, affordable, and
public non-profit early childhood care and education system with a distinct
system for [I]ndigenous communities. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
The social infrastructure fund should include an
allotment for [early childhood education and care]. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
Funding should … be made available to improve
wages, working conditions and training for child care workers, which will help
attract additional qualified workers to the sector. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should allocate] $500 million as
a federal transfer to provinces and territories for targeted child care
initiatives.... All federal transfers, whether they're short term or long term,
[should] be spent in ways that are evidence-based and publicly accountable. [A
distinction] between short-term funding and increased funding over the longer
term [is needed] because … the federal government [should] move along two
tracks simultaneously. (Child
Care Advocacy Association of Canada)
-
[T]he government [should] … take immediate steps to address urgent child care priorities, such as
affordability, developing the child care workforce and meeting the needs of
harder-to-serve populations, such as rural communities. (Child
Care Advocacy Association of Canada)
-
[The] federal government [should] collaborate
with other levels of government, [I]ndigenous organizations and child care
organizations to develop and implement a robust shared policy framework that
would guide increased public investments over time. (Child
Care Advocacy Association of Canada)
-
Federal budget 2016 should dedicate social
infrastructure funds to a short-term emergency-style fund for transfer payments
to provinces, territories, and [I]ndigenous communities for early learning and
child care during funding negotiations. (YWCA
Canada)
Corporations that are resident in Canada are
required to pay tax on all taxable income earned worldwide, and some are
eligible for size- and/or sector-specific corporate income tax rate reductions.
Capital cost allowance rates also reduce the amount of tax payable as the cost
of certain assets is deducted over their economic life. As well, the federal
government obtains revenue from Canada’s consumption tax – the Goods and
Services Tax – and the excise taxes applied on the sale and importation of
specific goods, including alcohol, tobacco, gasoline and diesel fuel. Customs
duties may also be applied on goods imported into Canada.
Moreover, governments use regulations to achieve
some of their policy objectives, and these regulations may impose costs on
businesses. In Canada, the primary federal policy framework requires
departments and agencies to maintain the net number of regulations imposed on
businesses, a practice that is known as the “one-for-one” rule.
When they appeared before the Committee during the
consultations preceding the 2016 budget, witnesses highlighted issues in the
following areas: the general corporate rate; Canadian-controlled private corporations;
the small business deduction; capital cost allowance rates; consumption and
excise taxes; and regulatory and other issues.
-
[T]he government [should] consider modest
increases to the corporate income tax [rate]. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
[Corporate] tax levels must be examined [, as
cuts] to corporate taxes have not resulted in private sector reinvestment but
have helped to starve the public treasury. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
[The government should] reverse the Harper-era
tax cuts by increasing the statutory corporate income tax rate. (Unifor)
-
[T]he federal government [should] affirm its
commitment to the existing framework governing Canadian-controlled private
corporations. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[The government should] broaden the tax base by
[reducing] the use of the small business deduction to shelter income by denying
its use by professionals and by restricting the hiring of family members. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should] retain the small
business deduction but reinstate a cumulative upper limit to prevent the
disincentive for small businesses to grow. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should increase] the income
threshold for the (11%) small business tax rate to $1,000,000 from $500,000 to
encourage small companies to continue growing. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] ensure continued access
to the small business corporate tax rate. (Canadian
Federation of Independent Business)
-
[The government should reinstate] the
accelerated capital cost allowance for oil sands and other energy related
projects and extend the allowance to include resource processing investment,
including integrated upgraders, merchant upgraders and petrochemical industrial
products. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should] modernize
the capital cost treatment for tax purposes for the unconventional oil and
natural gas resource wealth that we have in this country. (Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers)
-
[The government should accelerate] the … [capital
cost allowance] rates to 50% for a broad variety of capital equipment and
technology … to encourage greater private sector investment in technology. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] adjust depreciation
rates for mobile equipment purchases to a 50% declining balance, [which is a
rate similar to that for fixed machinery and equipment]. (Canadian
Construction Association)
-
[B]udget 2016 [should] include an accelerated
capital cost allowance from current rates to 50% for classes of depreciable
assets that relate to telecom network equipment, including broadband networks.
These classes include 8, 42 and 46. (Canadian
Wireless Telecommunications Association)
-
[The government should change] the [capital cost
allowance] rate for several classes of depreciable assets that relate to
communications network equipment, including broadband networks.... [In
particular, increases should occur] from current rates to 50% for capital
investments in most areas and 100% in those areas identified … as underserved
in [the] Connecting Canadians Broadband initiative. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should not implement] additional tax increases on tobacco products … because of the
impacts such increases have on illegal tobacco activity in Canada. (Canadian
Convenience Stores Association)
-
[The government should ensure that all] psychological assessments ... [are] considered a qualifying health
care supply under the Excise Tax Act and thus [are] exempt from the
[Goods and Services Tax/Harmonized Sales Tax]. … [It should] not be
retroactively applied. (Canadian
Psychological Association)
-
[The government should] avoid layering costs on … businesses in Alberta. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[T]he federal government [should thoroughly
consult] regional business communities and [conduct] sensitivity [analyses]
before implementing broad policy changes. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should analyze] all proposed new
policies applying a cost to business calculation, and where appropriate
implement those policies in a staged manner. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should focus] on outcome-based policies, with flexibility for businesses
to choose how best to meet these outcomes. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should work] with the
province[s] and territories to continue with the next phase of the Passport
Agreement, build on securities passport improvements that have already been
made by participating provinces and territories, and move towards national
harmonization by way of a well designed, well monitored, nation-wide passport
system for securities regulation that includes all provinces and territories. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should] allow a carry-forward of
[business] losses with interest. (Robin Boadway, as an individual)
-
In the longer term, [the government should] consider major
reforms to the corporate tax, such as those that have been proposed in the U.K.
and the U.S. and in many tax reform commissions around the world, and in
particular, what's called the allowance for corporate equity system that's been
introduced in some countries in Europe. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should avoid delays in
initiating infrastructure projects by ensuring] stringent but streamlined regulatory
processes so that the private sector can do its part [without delay]. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
The government should begin phasing out
[corporate welfare and regional development by] reducing total spending each
year. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
The government should [be] moving away from
unconditional [corporate] grants and towards loans. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
The government should creat[e] tougher
conditions for the acceptance of any public funds. In the case of corporate
welfare, this should include waiving any rights to confidentiality of repayment
terms. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
The government should [broaden] Access to
Information laws to allow third parties to better scrutinize subsidy recipients.
(Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government should] ease monopoly ownership
and reduce heavy regulation in key industries such as railways, airlines,
telecommunications and electricity. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
Primary jurisdiction over post-secondary education
and training rests with Canada’s provincial/territorial governments, although
indirect federal support occurs through the Canada Social Transfer, tax
measures for individuals, and a variety of grants and loans. The federal
government also provides grants to apprentices, and employment-related supports
for post-secondary students. Most federal spending on skills training is
delivered through Labour Market Development
Agreements, Labour Market Agreements and
Labour Market Agreements for Persons with Disabilities, which transfer funding
to the provinces/territories.
When speaking about education and skills training during the
consultations prior to the 2016 budget, witnesses informed the Committee about
the need for changes regarding the following issues: loans and grants; debt and
affordability; a post-secondary education strategy; and skills training.
-
[The government should] increase the value of
[Canada Student Grant Program] dispersals by 50%, at an estimated cost of $173
million per year … [and make] graduate and doctoral [studies] eligible for
[that grant], at a cost of $31 million per year. (Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations)
-
[The government should increase] the weekly …
[Canada Student Loans Program] loan limit to $245 per week … through an
investment of $44 million per year. (Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations)
-
[The government should] double
the maximum [Canada Student Grant] to $6,000 ... and significantly improve the
Repayment Assistance [P]lan. (Canadian Association of University Teachers)
-
[The government should redirect] the $750
million currently allocated [to] ineffective education-related tax credits and
savings schemes into the Canada [S]tudent [G]rants program [as it] would double
the already limited funds for the [Program]. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[The government should expand] the [CanLearn]
program so that psychologists who work in rural or remote communities can earn
up to $40,000 in Canada Student Loan forgiveness over a maximum of five years
($8,000 per year). (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should continue to make] investments in students through graduate scholarships,
internships, and fellowships. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should fund] an international
academic mobility program to enable Canadian college and institute students to
pursue global learning opportunities. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should reduce] and ultimately
eliminat[e] undergraduate university and college tuition fees. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[G]overnment expenditures [should ensure] that
post-secondary institutions have adequate funding to continue the upward trend
in the proportion of the population with post-secondary education, maintaining
Canada’s position as the [Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development] country with the highest proportion of post-secondary graduates. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[T]he federal government [should] work with the
provinces in order to develop and implement a national post-secondary education
strategy, with one of the pillars being increased funding to overcome all
obstacles, including financial ones, to access to and participation in
post-secondary education. (Canadian
Association of University Teachers)
-
[The government should establish a] Post-secondary Education Transfer ... [that] should be governed by
a Post-secondary Education Act, modelled on the Canada Health Act,
... [which would] outline responsibilities and expectations for the federal and
provincial/territorial governments, establish pan-Canadian guidelines, enact
enforcement mechanisms, determine long-term stable funding formulae, and
provide for a post-secondary education advisory council on which provinces
would be represented. (Canadian Association of University Teachers)
-
[T]he government should implement a federal
post-secondary education act modelled on the Canada Health Act and
create a dedicated cash transfer of $3.3 billion for post-secondary education,
primarily by redirecting existing government funding for inefficient
post-secondary education-related tax credits and savings schemes. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[The proposed post-secondary education act] would
be accompanied by a fifty-fifty cost-sharing model to eliminate undergraduate
tuition fees, making sure that provincial governments are also held to account
… to ensure that the transfers they receive from the federal government for
post-secondary education are spent on just that [and] to reward provinces that
come to the table with adequate funding to support universal access to
post-secondary education. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[The government should reform] funding of
post-secondary institutions from being mainly determined by enrolment to
providing incentives for quality of education outcomes. The goal should not be
enrolment, but successful completion leading to employment. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should support] policies that
will … ensure a supply of skilled workers to help Canada meet the demands for
its natural resource industries. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should establish] an expert
panel to make recommendations for the design and implementation of a mandatory [n]ational
[w]orkplace [t]raining [l]evy. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[At an estimated cost of $300 million, the
government should re-establish] federal funding and support for paid federal
student positions and doubl[e] the total funding dedicated to the Youth
Employment Strategy. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[The government should] invest in a green jobs
skills training program to ensure that workers are equipped and available to
perform energy-efficiency home and building retrofits. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should restore funding to] the
Office of Literacy and Essential Skills … [by recovering] $80 million in
unspent funds [from 2006–2007 to 2015]. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he federal government [should] restore and
maintain core funding for literacy and essential skills programs and
organizations across Canada, including the Office of Literacy and Essential
Skills…. Literacy and essential skills should be integrated in
pre-apprenticeship and skills training and be core parts of a well-funded
pan-Canadian training strategy and of [a] [p]overty [r]eduction [s]trategy. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
Additional amounts should … be invested in
training for youth and Indigenous Canadians, in partnership with unions. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should invest] in education and
skills development, particularly in areas which are expected to be in high
demand in the future. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Ontario and Canada [need a diverse and robust
jobs strategy,] with clear actions to address labour market reform through
skills training [and] apprenticeship reforms. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
[The government should ensure that] Canada has
the supply of skilled workers required to build and maintain public
infrastructure over the next decade by creating a High Demand Training Capacity
Fund to increase the intake of students and apprentices in the high demand
professions. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
Canada needs a national talent strategy … [that]
bring[s] programs for business innovation and skills training together, as has
been done in the UK with the Department of Business Innovation and Skills. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should take] an expansive and
inclusive approach to supporting the creation of more work-integrated learning
opportunities that are applicable to all [post-secondary education]
institutions. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should provide greater
flexibility] to use the surplus money [through federal immigration program
funding to provinces] for other training and labour market development
initiatives. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
Through direct funding, various national employment and referral
services, the Employment Insurance program, and a number of tax measures for
individuals and businesses, the federal government provides employment benefits
and labour market support measures. In particular, Part I of the Employment
Insurance program provides regular and special benefits, while Part II supports
beneficiaries’ transition to employment through skills training programs,
employer incentives to hire workers, employee incentives to accept employment,
guidance for starting a small business and assistance with job search.
In appearing before the Committee during the consultations in
advance of the 2016 budget, witnesses drew attention to the following topics in
relation to employment and labour markets: the Employment Insurance program;
Labour Market Agreements and Labour Market Development Agreements; labour
market information; internships, co-ops and apprenticeships; labour shortages
and labour mobility; and temporary foreign workers.
-
[The government should reduce Employment
Insurance] premiums to the seven-year break even rate of $1.49. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should introduce an Employment
Insurance mobility] grant [to be] provided to the unemployed to help them
offset some of the costs they will incur as a result of looking for work
outside their home region. (Canadian
Construction Association)
-
[The government should] either continue the
[small business job] credit or … implement a permanent lower rate of
[E]mployment [I]nsurance [premiums] for small businesses … on … the first
$500,000 in payroll. (Canadian
Federation of Independent Business)
-
[The government should] eliminate the current
910-hour eligibility hurdle for new labour-force entrants and re-entrants … [,]
… reverse the 2012 changes creating tiered claimant categories, and [change]
the definition of suitable employment and reasonable job search efforts. [As
well, it should commit to] an immediate allocation of $100 million in 2016-17
to the … [Employment Insurance] program in order to improve processing times
and reduce delays in providing reconsideration of benefit decisions. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] reconsider [the] planned
premium reduction [that is set to begin on 1 January 2017] until after …
[it has reviewed] the Employment Insurance program. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[A] revised [Employment Insurance] system
[should be] built around a new concept: the Employment Insurance Savings
Account…. Working Canadians would continue to pay [Employment Insurance]
premiums … into a personal … account, which could be drawn on if they (or their
spouse or other family member) loses a job. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[T]he government [should eliminate the 910-hour
rule for new entrants and reverse the 2012 changes to the Employment Insurance
program] immediately and … restore fairness to the governance, adjudication and
appeals process[es]. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should allow] business owners to
pay into [the Employment Insurance program] and [collect the program’s]
associated benefits, or allow for the creation of an alternate, possibly
privately funded, employment insurance [program]. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should reduce] the eligibility
requirements for [Employment Insurance benefits, and] make the … program truly
accessible. (Mouvement
Action-Chômage de Montréal)
-
[The government should] improve the functioning
of the Social Security Tribunal of Canada [to reduce the delay in receiving
Employment Insurance benefits]. (Mouvement
Action-Chômage de Montréal)
-
[The government should consult with retail
stakeholders in considering the] potential for [Employment Insurance] benefits
to be divided into several periods over 18-months. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should reform the Labour Market
Agreements and Labour Market Development Agreements to ensure] that employers
are given a more meaningful and substantive voice, not only in the design but also
in the delivery of training programs across Canada. (Canadian
Construction Association)
-
The government [should] increase funding [for
training and labour force development] through Labour Market Development
Agreements. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should invest] in more and
better labour market information. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should provide] increased
funding for the collection of regional agricultural labour supply and demand
information, both through the labour wage survey as well as the Canadian
Agricultural Human Resource Council's ongoing work to develop labour market
information forecast models for supply and demand. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[At an estimated cost of $15 million, the
government should create] a new Workplace Employee
Survey through Statistics Canada to improve Canada’s labour market information
system. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
To foster growth, the government [should
support] individuals and firms in making optimal decisions. [The government
should play a role] in providing timely, accurate, and high-quality labour
market information to students, workers, and firms. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
A new organization needs to be created, or an
existing organization tasked, with responsibility for collecting, analyzing and
disseminating the required data on higher education outcomes and how these meet
current and prospective labour market needs. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should provide] sustainable
funding for the recently announced [Labour Market Information] Council [and]
[t]hrough this Council support the consolidation, promotion and publication of
supply and demand side data to provide current, consistent, granular data at
the national, provincial and municipal levels on the talent pool available and
the skills needs of employers in key economic sectors. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
Canada has to do a better job of providing data
on the outcomes of our publicly-funded higher education systems and
institutions. … The newly created Labour Market Information Council is an
important first step, … [but has] a disparate set of policies between different
levels of government. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
The recently announced [Labour Market
Information Council] should be tasked with the responsibility of developing and
disseminating a national skills-in-demand list of specialized occupations. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
The government should invest in developing a
baseline understanding of the demand for and barriers to work-integrated
learning by adding questions to the National Graduate Survey. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should] expand experiential
learning opportunities by investing $80 million per year in co-ops, internships
and apprenticeship placements for all fields of study and in all levels of
post-secondary education … [and] strengthen rules for internships to ensure
students are compensated appropriately and treated fairly. (Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations)
-
[The government should provide] incentives for
employers to offer more post-secondary co-op placements and internships and …
[create] a financial incentive for employers to retain employees through to
completion of their apprenticeship training. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should immediately]
end the practice of hiring unpaid interns within the
federal government. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
[The government should support co-operative] placements in all fields of science – health,
natural and social science – and within various sectors. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should support] public colleges
and institutes across Canada to expand the delivery of pre-apprenticeship
programs in designated, high-demand Red Seal trades and provide pre-apprentices
with the employer connections and work placements that will facilitate their
transition into full apprenticeship opportunities. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should develop a student
mobility and work exposure program] to expose college and institute students to
work placement opportunities in other regions of Canada. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should fund] increased numbers
of Pre-Apprenticeship Training Programs. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should support] the use of
apprentices by aggressively implementing previously announced measures to
require the use of apprentices in federal construction and maintenance
contracts. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
A solution to construction’s labour supply and
allocation challenges could be a labour-mobility tax measure that enables
mobile workers to deduct the costs of expenses incurred for employment
purposes—such as travel, meals and lodging—less any money paid by the employer
for these purposes. (Canada's
Building Trades Unions)
-
The existing permanent relocation tax credit in
the Income Tax Act doesn't make sense for a permanently temporary workforce, or
apply to workers our country needs to move the most.… Canada needs a change [in
its] incentive policy for in demand occupations when relocating for temporary
work. (Canada's
Building Trades Unions)
-
A solution to construction’s labour supply and
allocation challenges could be a restructuring of [Employment Insurance]
benefits, styled as a travel voucher [that would be an advance of future
benefit payments]. … For example, the … recipient could have a grant of $2,000
… for travel costs to obtain employment sooner and in a region of Canada that
is short of that worker’s skillset.... The voucher could be forgivable if the
person worked for X weeks in the new location. (Canada's
Building Trades Unions)
-
In order to address … challenges [related to
health care workforce ageing and retirements], Canada needs to recruit, train,
and retain more health care workers. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he government [should] … remove barriers to
the successful economic participation of women, older workers, [A]boriginal
people, persons with disabilities, and recent immigrants. For example, policies
such as boosting the flexibility of parental leave, subsidizing child care
expenditures, neutral taxation of second income earners, and encouraging young
women to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
could raise female employment rates. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should address] the serious
processing issues and inflexible features of the Temporary Foreign Worker
Program that are negatively affecting employers’ access to workers in a range
of sectors. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should partner with industry] to
implement [the Canadian Agricultural Human Resource Council’s] agriculture and
agrifood workforce action plan by creating a dedicated agriculture and agrifood
international worker program and promoting channels to permanent residency for
agriculture and agrifood workers. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[The government should remove] existing caps on
the duration of stay for those Agriculture stream workers brought in to address
acute, seasonal labour needs that can’t be filled through the domestic
workforce. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[The government should create] a single office
for agriculture and agri‐food Labour Market Information Assessments to ensure
knowledgeable staff, timely Labour Market Impact Assessment … processing, and
consistent treatment of these applications. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
The federal government needs to focus on finding
long-term solutions to shortages of skilled workers, rather than relying on the
temporary foreign worker program. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should expand] the federal
immigration system and the temporary foreign worker program … to develop the
workforce … [and increase] its flexibility for use by business. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
Overall, the federal government is responsible for the management
of energy resources on federal and frontier lands, and – with the exception of
interprovincial transmission of electricity – it regulates the international
and interprovincial movement of energy and energy goods. The federal government
also regulates all aspects of nuclear generation, including uranium mining, the
transport of nuclear material and equipment, and nuclear waste management.
While it regulates the nuclear sector, the federal government is not involved
in the decision to invest in nuclear electric generation.
Federal policy influence in relation to energy has expanded in
recent decades due to the growth in trans-boundary environmental concerns,
principally climate change. The federal government plays a role in
promoting and regulating energy efficiency, and is involved in energy matters
in the context of economic development and energy security.
The Committee’s witnesses highlighted the following energy-related
subjects when they appeared during the consultations ahead of the 2016 budget:
oil and gas; renewable energy; conservation, efficiency and clean technology;
and transportation.
-
[The] government [should] defend and promote
Canada's oil and gas industry, [which is] an environmental leader compared with
any other major producer in the world. (Canadian
Association of Oilwell Drilling Contractors)
-
[The 2012 changes to the role of the National
Energy Board should] be reversed [in order to restore] balance and
decision-making towards the [Board]. (Canadian
Energy Pipeline Association)
-
[Ensuring that the National Energy Board’s]
composition reflects regional views and has sufficient expertise [should
occur], particularly greater [I]ndigenous representation. [Reviewing]
governance and the [National Energy Board’s] practices and overhauling the
information management systems should be part of modernization. (Canadian
Energy Pipeline Association)
-
[T]he Treasury Board [should] grant the
[National Energy Board] greater flexibility with the cost recovery model,
allowing the [Board] to better attract and retain highly skilled employees and
to continue to fulfill its strategic priorities. (Canadian
Energy Pipeline Association)
-
[The government should achieve] a complete
phase-out of the tax preferences to the fossil fuel sectors over the next five
years [and] … review … the public financing portfolio of Export Development
Canada, as … [it] continues to provide public financing to the oil and gas
sectors for explorations overseas. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should implement] a
multi-dimensional natural resource strategy in key industries such oil &
gas, mining and forestry … that would manage Canada’s abundant resource wealth
in a socially-inclusive, ecologically-responsible and economically-beneficial
manner. (Unifor)
-
[The government should support] policies that
will stimulate innovations in environmental sustainability. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should collaborate with the
energy sector] around energy efficiency so that both the energy and non-energy
benefits - macroeconomic, jobs, industrial productivity and health and
well-being - continue to flow to Canadians from coast to coast. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[The government should] sustain leadership and
support for clean energy infrastructure … [and] ensure that recently proposed
federal policy and financial instruments …, such as the Canada Infrastructure
Bank, Green Bonds and the Low Carbon Economy Trust, are open and accessible to
all infrastructure developers in the electricity sector, and do not unduly
inhibit competition in the market. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[The government should] announce 150 energy
innovation projects throughout 2017 … [at a cost of] $375 million. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[The government should protect] the environment
and grow the economy through a refundable and permanent tax credit to encourage
the energy efficient retrofitting of existing homes and support the
availability of the EnerGuide Rating System for home energy performance
labeling across Canada. (Canadian
Home Builders’ Association)
-
[The government should focus on energy]
efficiency, public transit and renewable energy … [to] achieve … [Canada’s]
greenhouse gas reduction goals and provide good jobs for workers. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should increase] support for
clean technology and the bioeconomy … through government programs, tax
incentives, or the creation of a national bioeconomy framework similar to what
already exists in countries like the United States, the European Union, and
Croatia. Canada’s public policy must continue to find ways to keep up with the
needs and the pace of business. (Canadian
Renewable Fuels Association)
-
The budget should offer incentives for Canadian
firms to develop and adopt green technologies, and support the development of
emerging green technology manufacturing industries in Canada. Investments
should be made in green infrastructure projects, such as clean energy generation,
interprovincial energy grids, public transit, and waste water treatment
facilities. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
The federal government could implement a
financing program for [the Centre of Excellence in Energy Efficiency] so that
[the Centre] can promote the commercialization of Canadian innovation in
transportation energy efficiency while at the same time contributing to
reducing greenhouse gas emissions by promoting the emergence of a new economic
dynamic. (Centre
of Excellence in Energy Efficiency)
-
A portion of the [Sustainable Development
Technology Canada] budget could be allocated to [the Centre of Excellence in
Energy Efficiency] to commercialize innovation coming out of technology
demonstration programs. The … government could make [the Centre] eligible, or
approve its requests for eligibility for funding under the [Industrial and
Technological Benefits] policy. (Centre
of Excellence in Energy Efficiency)
-
When it comes to [the] lightening [of
materials], hydrogen, and electric vehicles, … Canada as a whole would benefit
if the Department of Transport, the Department of Environment and Climate
Change, the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development and the
Department of Natural Resources were grouped together so as to invest in a
program to advance the commercialization of [Canadian] spinoffs. (Centre
of Excellence in Energy Efficiency)
-
[The government should modernize] the electrical
distribution grid, [provide] some fiscal incentives for electricity storage
technologies, … and encourage energy conservation in Canadian homes and
businesses … [including] a national home energy retrofit plan with a grant
program that low-income families would be able to access to retrofit their
homes. (Green
Budget Coalition)
Sections 91 and 92 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 list subject matters in which each level of government
may regulate. Neither list includes “environment” as a subject
matter; rather, “environment” is a collective term referring to numerous
issues, including some of the subject matters to which the Constitution assigns
responsibility to either Parliament or the provincial legislatures. The level
of government that has jurisdiction to regulate in relation to a specific
environmental issue depends on which subject matter listed in the Constitution
best describes the core substance of the regulation, and whether the Constitution
has assigned authority for that subject matter to Parliament or to the
provincial legislatures.
The following federal subject matters are the basis of most federal
jurisdiction over environmental issues: federally owned property; sea coast and inland fisheries; navigation and shipping; the criminal law; and
Indians and lands reserved for Indians. In addition, section 91 sets out a
federal residual power. In numerous legal decisions, the courts – in
interpreting this residual power – have concluded that various subject matters
not explicitly listed in the Constitution, such as marine pollution and
interprovincial water pollution, are within federal jurisdiction. Finally,
section 132 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 provides federal jurisdiction over at least two
environmental issues: boundary waters and migratory birds.
In their appearance before the Committee during the consultations
preceding the 2016 budget, witnesses made proposals in the following
environmental and climate change-related areas: air; water, land; pan-Canadian
coordination; and climate change policy and adaptation.
-
[In relation to federally owned buildings, the
government should pursue] higher performance targets for all new construction …
and [certify] its portfolio of large existing buildings under [Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design standards]. (Canada
Green Building Council)
-
[The government should] invest in engaging and
enabling building owners and operators to benchmark their buildings and
strategically invest in improvements … to lower energy use and associated …
greenhouse gas emissions. (Canada
Green Building Council)
-
[T]o effectively move toward net zero … [carbon
emission] buildings, [the government should invest] in research and development
to support the market and the … ability to deliver these types of buildings
over the next 10 years. (Canada
Green Building Council)
-
[The government should invest] in energy
infrastructure that reduces or eliminates [greenhouse gas emissions]. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should] implement pledges to
support … [electric vehicles,] including the establishment of specific targets
for the integration of electric vehicles into the federal vehicle fleet. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[The government should] mandate the use of
Contempra cement on public infrastructure across Canada … [which] can reduce …
[carbon dioxide] emissions by almost one megatonne per year. (Cement
Association of Canada)
-
[The government should] ensure that any federal
funding for infrastructure meets some strict criteria to ensure that it meets
core policy objectives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, sequester carbon,
and enhance the resiliency of our communities against climate change. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should establish] a new tax
credit … so that Canadians can remediate the impacts of radon in their homes. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government] should provide funding and
support … to contribute to the reduction of greenhouse gases through
climate-friendly technology and practices. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should create] new marine
protected areas and … improve ocean science and monitoring. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should create] a Canada water
fund to ensure that the Canadian clean technology sector implements best
practices in waste water treatment technologies and water quality monitoring. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[Regarding the delivery of commitments under]
the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement, … [the government should establish]
new … funding. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should create] new national
parks … [and] national wildlife areas. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should ensure that] private
landowners … are engaged, supported … and compensated for their stewardship
initiatives, and that they contribute to meeting … [Canada’s] international
conservation commitments. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should invest] in … [protecting]
species at risk … and … migratory birds. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should
re-establish] an advisory committee on environmental assessments (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should re-establish] the Species
at Risk Advisory Committee … [which] provided a venue for active
multi-stakeholder dialogue on the implementation of [the Species at Risk Act].
(Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should] develop
a coordinated approach to addressing climate change ... [that would] involve
enhanced efforts from all segments of Canadian society and ... [that would] be
drafted in partnership with the provinces and territories. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[R]especting provincial jurisdictions [is
important]. … [R]esources and energy are, for the most part, exclusive
provincial jurisdictions. … [F]ederal-provincial tensions in this country
[ought not interfere with the development of effective environmental policy]. (Canada's
Ecofiscal Commission)
-
[In implementing cap and trade systems, the
government should consider how a] minimum [carbon] price interacts with the
existing provincial prices. (Canada's
Ecofiscal Commission)
-
[The government should create a] Canadian
Climate Council … that can be a catalyst to support sound policy development. (Canadian
Climate Forum)
-
[The government should adopt measures to
complement provincial carbon pricing initiatives, as such measures] are needed
to be a winning part of the overall equation for battling climate change in
this country. (Canadian
Renewable Fuels Association)
-
[The government should] engage Canadians in
nature to ensure Canadians have the opportunity to experience the outdoors and
to create employment opportunities for youth in the environmental sector. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[T]he government [should] take seriously the
impact of carbon pricing on the competitiveness of firms, and on the overall
impact on [gross domestic product] growth, but [these] need not be obstacles to
a well-designed [carbon pricing] policy. (Canada's
Ecofiscal Commission)
-
[The government should introduce] carbon pricing
throughout Canada. Substituting taxes on fossil fuel consumption for growth
retarding corporate and personal income taxes would promote economic activity
while simultaneously addressing an obvious market failure. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] develop a national
carbon pricing standard to ensure that we reach a common, coordinated carbon
price across Canada of at least $50 per tonne of … [carbon dioxide] by 2020. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should modify] its tax
legislation to create certainty and alignment between the tax [and] accounting
treatment of Greenhouse Gas Units keeping the administrative work simple for
taxpayers and [Canada Revenue Agency] auditors. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should implement] new
environmental policy only after completing a cost-benefit analysis of the
economic and distortive impacts of the proposed changes, taking into account
the increased costs already in place in regions across Canada with [a] similar
policy. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should reinvest] all new
revenues from climate policy into applied research and development grants,
renewable electricity incentives, education and awareness initiatives, energy
efficiency rebates and significant tax relief, all of which must be made
accessible to individuals and businesses. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should] slow down in its
thinking about climate policy and … make sure to get the details right. (Canada's
Ecofiscal Commission)
-
[It is important to] reduc[e] greenhouse gas
emissions … [but the government should] achiev[e] emissions reductions in the
most cost-effective way possible. (Canada's
Ecofiscal Commission)
-
[Where appropriate, the government should
transfer] many of the risks associated with climate change that can impact
infrastructure to the private sector [like public-private partnerships ] where
appropriate to build and maintain green infrastructure. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should invest] in infrastructure
that mitigates the effects of severe weather, including floods, and eliminates
reliance on winter roads [that] … bring goods and fuel into remote and northern
communities. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should renew] funding … for the
climate change Adaptation Platform. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[The government] should provide funding and
support to farmers for adapting to climate change. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should adopt] climate change
mitigation measures such as improved crop rotations and increased cover
cropping to lessen the requirement for fossil fuel-based inputs, such as
fertilizers and herbicides, and the planting of windrows to stop soil erosion
while sequestering atmospheric carbon. Programs that help farmers increase
their crop diversity will also help farmers weather the financial risks that
come with unpredictable weather due to climate change. (National
Farmers Union)
The federal budget is one of the government’s key fiscal policy
tools. As a financial plan, it provides an assessment of recent economic
performance, as well as projections for economic growth, revenue, expenditures
and budgetary balance. It also highlights the current government’s priorities,
proposes new taxation and spending measures, and shows the projected budgetary
impact of these measures. The government’s economic and fiscal update is a
related document that sometimes contains budget-like measures. Like the budget,
the update usually presents current information on economic developments and
prospects, the fiscal situation and risks to the fiscal projections.
In performing their work, Canada’s federal public servants are
guided by core values – merit and non-partisanship – and by guiding values –
fairness, transparency, access and representativeness. They serve Canadians in
a variety of ways, including through assisting in the development of public
policy, managing projects, and delivering services to Canada’s residents,
businesses and communities directly.
In speaking to the Committee about federal finances, fiscal policy
development, the federal public service and Parliament during the consultations
in relation to the 2016 budget, witnesses shared their views about the
following issues: budgetary balance; fiscal targets; provincial/territorial
transfers; fiscal policy development; tax and program spending review;
Parliament and the federal public; and federal procurement.
-
[Each year, the government should] target …
balanced (or conditions permitting, surplus) budgets, subject to recessionary
conditions indicating a requirement for deficit spending to [stimulate]
economic activity. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should avoid] chronic deficit
spending that will eventually return Canada to the days of a government that is
overextended. (Atlantic
Institute for Market Studies)
-
[The government should balance] the Budget. …
Projects [should] be prioritized and hard decisions [should] be made. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[T]he government should not run a deficit and
add to our federal debt [but] if it does so, it is essential that a concrete
plan be formulated to return to balance and begin to pay down our federal debt
over the long term. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government should] pass a Truth in
Budgeting Act, which would require [members of Parliament] and ministers to
cost-out the bills they introduce in the House [of Commons]. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[There is] no need for large [federal budgetary]
deficits. (Ian Lee, as an individual)
-
When [the debt-to-gross domestic product] ratio
[is] at 31% … [and] nominal growth [is at 4%], … you can run deficits in the
$25-billion to $30-billion range and still manage to [lower that ratio]. [The
government should] push for something less than [the $25-billion to $30-billion
range]. (RBC
Financial Group)
-
[The government should confine] program spending
to core areas of federal responsibility and limit growth in program spending to
a maximum of national population growth plus inflation. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[T]he government [should] balance the budget by
the fourth year of its mandate while pursuing the goal of a 25% [debt-to–gross
domestic product] ratio by 2021 ... [since] an explicit … ratio ... provides a
frame of reference against which to judge the numerous demands for increased spending.
(Business Council of Canada)
-
A low [debt-to-gross domestic product] ratio ...
serves as an insurance policy against future downturns. Given the fragile state
of the global economy, the government should strive to ensure that it has the
fiscal capacity to respond to another sharp downturn. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[The government should] establish fiscal anchors
… [including] the [debt-to-gross domestic product] ratio falling over the next
four years to ensure that … [it has] the capacity to add more significant
fiscal stimulus if … [the economy falls] back into the kind of recession …
[experienced] in 2008-2009. (Conference
Board of Canada)
-
[R]ather than requiring yearly reductions, it
may be more manageable to establish a medium-term target range for the
[debt-to-gross domestic product ratio]—similar to how we do inflation targeting
… [which would] be complemented with a longer-term fiscal target that would
rely on sustainability analysis and look ahead several decades. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The government should maintain the current
allocation formulae for Equalization and federal transfers to
provinces/territories for health, education and social services] to incentivize
provinces to adopt pro-growth policies that create jobs in order to keep and
attract young workers.… [Increases in these transfers should include] a
requirement to adopt growth policies and develop their [provincial/territorial]
resources. (Atlantic
Institute for Market Studies)
-
[To] protect both vertical and horizontal
balance in the federation and to enhance the integrity of federal-provincial
fiscal relations, [the federal government should] restore formula-based
equalization by removing the [gross domestic product] growth limit. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should] escalate the Canada
[S]ocial [T]ransfer and the Canada [H]ealth [T]ransfer by the average rate of
growth of provincial expenditures on social programs. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
In the short term, timely and targeted automatic
stabilizers, which would include unemployment benefits and federal
stabilization transfers to resource-rich provinces, should be allowed to work,
and some should be temporarily strengthened. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The government should enhance] federal and
provincial co-operation by seeking federal government membership in the Council
of the Federation. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[T]he government [should] consider more
progressive tax changes to fund a larger and more sustainable increase to
social programs. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
[G]rowth and job creation could be significantly
boosted by a well-designed public investment stimulus twinned with major
increases in income transfers to lower income Canadians, such as through
enhanced [Employment Insurance] benefits. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
Any proposed fiscal intervention must be
appropriate to [an uncertain economic environment] and targeted towards the
areas of our economy where help is needed most. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[The government should provide funding] for Statistics Canada to re-instate the discontinued surveys [such
as the University and College Academic Staff System, the Survey of Earned
Doctorates, and the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth] that gave …
the human resource data necessary for developing and maintaining good public
programming and policy. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should end the practice of]
charging a tax on top of another tax. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government’s approach to fostering] growth
should be inclusive.… [L]iving standards should rise for all Canadians, and not
only for a select few. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] take on a more active
role in the economy … [by implementing] further market-oriented reforms,
particularly with regard to improving taxation and lowering internal and
external barriers to trade. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
To foster growth, the government may need to
augment markets by supporting individuals and firms in making optimal
decision[s]. The government [should] … serve a mentorship role to small- and
medium-sized businesses by providing advice on investment and technological
adoption, or by assisting businesses in navigating complex international trade
roles, and securing the deals with foreign firms and clients. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] promote private
investment by broadening tax bases by eliminating preferential tax rates and
subsidies that distort markets. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Canada should take advantage of low interest
rates and the current output gap in some parts of the economy to increase
public investment. Running deficits need not be inconsistent with a goal of not
raising the [debt-to-gross domestic product] ratio, … . Several areas stand out
as potential priorities for public investment. Trade gateways such as pipelines
and rail infrastructure could raise output by preventing bottlenecks in the
shipment of commodities to market. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] be prudent in this
budget … [either] by using a fairly modest [nominal income] growth forecast …
[or] by increasing the reserves built into the budget. (Conference
Board of Canada)
-
[The government should] start setting out a plan
for stronger growth in Canada … [by] examining all possible options to try to
add greater growth to our economy going forward … [including] investments in
infrastructure … that … give the economy a long-term payback going out 20 to 25 years
... [and] rethinking the tax system … to deal with the massive tax expenditures
that leak out about $100 billion a year in federal revenue. (Conference
Board of Canada)
-
[The government should encourage] all levels of
government, in all provinces, to level the playing field [with respect to
provincial and municipal taxes imposed on businesses]. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[B]udget 2016 should be upfront about what
fiscal policy can deliver in the near term, particularly on cost-shared
infrastructure spending. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The 2016 budget should] explore … prevailing
downside [economic] risks in detail … [such as] a scenario where oil prices
stay flat at about $30 a barrel over the government's mandate. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The 2016 budget should] be transparent … [and
include] more internal analysis and technical details [to] help build fiscal
credibility. Finance Canada's analytical capacity could be augmented by
publishing staff working papers and encouraging researchers to present their
findings externally. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
Any new discretionary measures should aim to
improve Canada's economic potential over the medium term [and] should be funded
as part of a longer-term plan that preserves fiscal sustainability. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[T]he budget must be grounded on empirical
reality and not on snake oil or quicksand. (Ian Lee, as an individual)
-
[The government should] consider progressive
taxation measures to increase revenue that will allow it to invest in public
services and programs that stimulate economic growth. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
Successful fiscal policy is timely, targeted,
and temporary. [The government should] focus on the temporary component. (RBC
Financial Group)
-
[E]verything … should be looked at through the
lens of productivity-enhancing investment. …
[The government should focus] on … infrastructure. (RBC
Financial Group)
-
Gender-based analysis is essential across
government departments and should already be incorporated in the development of
this federal budget. … [I]t has been implemented in only some departments and
agencies. Correcting this will require ensuring that Status of Women Canada has
sufficient staff capacity. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[The government should undertake] a comprehensive
review of the [federal] fiscal structure, including in particular all taxing
statutes to identify and ensure implementation of simplified tax legislation
and [to] decrease compliance costs. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[A review of the federal tax system] should
include a comprehensive review of all aspects of taxation relating to
determination of tax characters, timing and calculations, including in
particular examination of the hundreds of exemptions, deductions, rebates,
deferrals, and/or credits ... to determine which ones are inefficient or
wasteful and can be eliminated. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
Going forward, [the government] should include
provisions for regular [federal tax system] reviews and updating in order to
ensure the ... system remain[s] flexible. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should implement] a thorough
[personal, corporate and international] tax system review, including a tax
expenditure review. (Atlantic
Provinces Economic Council)
-
[The government should] close lose tax loopholes
for the top 1% [of taxpayers], such as excessively favourable treatment of
stock options. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
[There is a need] for a comprehensive review of
Canada's tax system, one that answers the very simple question: if we were
designing a tax system today from scratch with the goal of maximizing long-term
growth, what would it look like? (Business Council of Canada)
-
[The government should] modernize the large
corporation tax rule to more effectively deploy … billions of dollars in
capital across the economy. (Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers)
-
[The government should convene] an impartial
panel of experts to review the tax system and recommend measures to simplify
Canada’s tax system. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] commit to a core review
[of program expenditures] over the next 12 months, with the results made
public in advance of the 2017-18 budget. A target should be to identify the
least efficient/most wasteful 5% (or $15 billion). (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[T]his budget should … broaden the [tax] base by
eliminating regressive tax loopholes, such as the stock option deduction, …
tackle tax evasion, and … move toward higher taxation of both corporate and
capital income. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[Reviewing tax expenditures is] a worthwhile
exercise, but … the scope should be broadened to review the entire tax system
to make it more efficient and more equitable. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The government should] maintain a … tax regime
that leads not only North America in competitiveness, but the world. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] control the number of
[federal] public sector workers, as well as pay, benefit, and pension costs …
[and] reduce the number of workers or lower the cost by using outside
benchmarks when negotiating contracts. (Atlantic
Institute for Market Studies)
-
[The government should better control] public
sector wages, benefits, and pensions. (Canadian
Federation of Independent Business)
-
[The government should increase] the amount of coverage that is currently offered under [the federal Public
Service Health Care Plan] to $3,500 and [offer] 15 to 20 sessions
under the Interim Federal Health Program. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should] increase the
transparency surrounding the total compensation to [federal] public sector
workers, in order to facilitate comparisons with private sector compensation
levels. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government should] use private sector
benchmarks in negotiating with [federal] public sector unions. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government] should continue its reforms of
the [federal public service’s] sick leave management system to align it better
to private-sector standards. (C.D.
Howe Institute)
-
[The government] should cap … pension plan
contributions as an employer at 50 percent of the maximum tax-deferred limit
available to Canadians saving in [registered retirement savings plans] or
[defined contribution] plans, or 9 percent of pensionable earnings, and move to
a shared governance structure that builds on the positive experiences of
jointly governed plans elsewhere in Canada’s public sector. (C.D.
Howe Institute)
-
[T]he government [should not] further weaken the
economy by subjecting the federal public sector to further austerity measures.
(Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
[T]he government should lead by example by
investing in public services and the workers who provide them. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
[The government should not try to achieve]
greater efficiencies and better service simply through improving technology. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
The government [should] reinvest in service
delivery and ensure that there are enough people employed to deliver [benefits,
such as Employment Insurance, Canada Pension Plan and Old Age Security,] in a
timely manner. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
[The Public Service Alliance of Canada] should
be among the stakeholders who provide the advice of how [search and rescue
stations] can best respond to the communities' needs, as [their] members are
among the experts who deliver the service. (Public Service Alliance of Canada)
-
[The government should provide] funding in
federal budget 2016 to support recognition of pay equity as a right,
[implement] the 2004 [P]ay [E]quity [T]ask [R]orce report, and [restore] the
right to pay equity in the [federal] public service. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[T]he government [should] achieve gender balance
in the Senate in the short-term and permanently embed a gender-equal Senate in
the Senate appointment process. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[The government should mandate] that a certain
percentage of federal government purchases must come from small business. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should support] the Innovation Agenda by creating a
Small Business Innovation Research … Program as an essential cornerstone of
federal procurement. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should continue] to maximize
Canadian content through public procurement under the National Shipbuilding
Procurement Strategy and [implement] greater transparency with respect to the
outsourcing of work under the [Strategy]. (Unifor)
-
[Under the] National Shipbuilding Procurement
Strategy … , [the government should be] requiring Canadian shipbuilding content
in offshore resource developments [and] implementing a Canadian equivalent of
the U.S. Jones Act to ensure proportionate Canadian-based shipbuilding content
in internal and coastal marine trade. (Unifor)
In Canada, jurisdiction in relation to financial issues is shared
by the federal and provincial/territorial governments. For example, the
provinces/territories have primary responsibility for consumer issues, although
the federal government plays a role through a dedicated financial consumer
agency and the criminal interest rate provisions of the Criminal Code,
for example. The federal government has exclusive jurisdiction over banks, and
a federal entity provides regulatory supervision of them. Moreover, federal
support for business financing – including for small and medium-sized
businesses – occurs through federal departments and agencies, as well as a
variety of tax measures. Voluntary codes of conduct that are overseen by the
aforementioned federal entity also exist, including in relation to conduct in
the credit and debit card sector.
Regarding credit unions, caisses populaires and other credit unions
are primarily governed by the regulator in the province/territory in which the
credit union conducts business. That said, the federal government has
established a legislative framework that provides provincial/territorial credit
unions with the ability to transfer to a federal regime, which would allow them
to operate across provincial/territorial borders more easily.
During the Committee’s consultations ahead of the 2016 budget,
witnesses that focused on financial and business financing issues addressed the
following topics: venture capital and access to financing; payment cards; and
credit unions.
-
[The government should eliminate tax support]
for labour-sponsored venture capital corporation[s]. (Atlantic
Provinces Economic Council)
-
[The government should introduce] better tax
incentives for venture capital and [a]ngel investors … [similar to British
Columbia’s] 30% Venture Capital Tax Credit. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should consider] providing a tax
exemption on the capital gains from venture capital. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should increase its] investment
in venture capital funds. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should attract] more investors
with flow-through shares for entrepreneurial companies that are financing the
long development cycles for innovative technologies. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should ensure] that there is
adequate financing available to establish small businesses. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should offer] more loan
guarantees at reasonable interest rates to allow small businesses to invest in
needed technology for the sake of productivity improvement. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should put] a moratorium on
grants and subsidies and loans to large corporations, especially [those that
are] publicly traded. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should
refocus the Business Development Bank of Canada] toward being a partner, not
just a lender ... [that expands] assistance and increase[s] approval rates
[during periods of economic uncertainty, and has] ... financial, business,
[human resources] and technological expertise all in one place. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The] federal government [should] create a Canadian
Development Bank … to provide financing for key sectors of the Canadian
economy, including energy, transportation and advanced manufacturing. [The
proposed bank should] have the power to create credit and allocate it to
innovative projects in targeted sectors of the economy[,] … take equity stakes
in firms or projects with strategic value[,] … [and] evaluate and fund
potential projects on the basis of broader criteria … than would normally be
considered by private investors. (Unifor)
-
[The government should reinstate] the tax credit
for contributions made to labour-sponsored funds. (Unifor)
-
[S]everal other countries have lowered their
[merchant fee] rates to 0.3% to 0.5%, or one-fifth or one-third of the average
rate imposed under the [voluntary agreement between the Canadian government and
credit card providers]. … [T]hese examples from other countries would serve as
an excellent model for Canada. (Canadian
Convenience Stores Association)
-
[The government should] implement greater
enforcement behind what currently remains a [voluntary agreement between the
Canadian government and credit card providers regarding merchant fees]. (Canadian
Convenience Stores Association)
-
[The government should] cap interchange rates …
[as] Canadian consumer[s] see the impact of interchange rate fees that are
triple those in Australia and five times those in the U.K. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government’s proposed infrastructure bank
should] include loan guarantees to allow credit unions to help deliver vital
social infrastructure projects. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
-
[The government should enable] stronger credit
union lending through federal loan guarantee programs … to support additional
local social infrastructure projects. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
-
[The government should enhance] competition in
the financial services sector by clarifying the transitional measures for
federal credit unions. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
-
[The government should facilitate] growth and
investment [in Canada] through a new tax measure that recognizes how credit
unions build capital. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
-
[The government should implement a] Capital
Growth Tax Credit … [to] help credit unions grow their retained earnings and
ensure competitive balance in the tax system. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
At the federal level in Canada, the executive branch is responsible
for activities related to the conduct of foreign affairs, which fall within the
royal prerogative of the Crown. Responsibilities include conducting diplomatic
and consular relations, as well as managing international negotiations on
behalf of Canada. The same authority applies to deploying Canada’s military
forces, both domestically and internationally.
As well, the federal government provides most of Canada’s
international assistance to developing countries. Funding is provided to
bilateral and multilateral development programs, including for such activities
as reducing poverty and promoting global stability, as well as in response to
international humanitarian crises.
In speaking to the Committee about foreign policy in the context of
the consultations prior to the 2016 budget, witnesses emphasized the subject of
foreign aid.
Canada’s provincial/territorial governments have jurisdiction over
most of Canada’s forest and mineral resources, with the exception of Nunavut.
In Nunavut, mining and exploration activities are regulated federally except
for lands specified in the 1993 Nunavut land claim agreement. The federal
government retains the mineral rights to non-Inuit-owned lands and surface
Inuit-owned lands where the Inuit do not hold subsurface rights. Many of the significant
mineral, as well as oil and gas, deposits in the territory are located under
Inuit-owned land where the Inuit own the subsurface rights. As well, the
federal government has jurisdiction over transboundary issues, including
natural resource trade and transportation overseas or across provincial or
international borders.
During the Committee’s consultations in advance of the 2016 budget,
a witness provided the following mining-related comments: regulatory issues and
clean technology.
-
[A]ny
future changes to [resource development regulatory permitting processes should]
be informed by meaningful consultation and make
adequate provision and capacity for transition and implementation. (Mining
Association of Canada)
-
The government should allocate $50 million to
[the Canadian Mining Innovation Council] … to support the development of green
technology. (Mining
Association of Canada)
-
[The government should ensure] adequate capacity
in responsible departments and [a]gencies sufficient for the effective
implementation of current legislation and for the management and implementation
of any future changes [to resource development regulatory permitting
processes]. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should increase] the Mineral
Exploration Tax Credit to 30% for a period of 3 years, and maintain
applicability of [the] Canadian Exploration Expense tax deduction for
non-fossil fuel exploration. (Mining Association of Canada)
While Canada’s provincial/territorial governments have primary
jurisdiction over health care, the federal government provides indirect support
in this area through transfer payments to provincial/territorial governments,
such as the Canada Health Transfer. Support also occurs through a range of tax
measures for individuals, and the federal government delivers health care to
specific groups of people within its jurisdiction, most notably to First
Nations people on reserve, Inuit people, members of the Canadian Armed Forces
and their families, and inmates of federal penitentiaries.
While access to disability supports falls under the jurisdiction of
the provinces/territories as a consequence of their responsibilities in
relation to health care, education and community services, the federal
government provides financial assistance through the Canada Health Transfer and
the Canada Social Transfer. Furthermore, it is directly responsible for
disability supports for First Nations and Inuit people, as well as for veterans
and members of the Canadian Forces. Federal tax measures are also available for
persons with disabilities and/or for their families and informal caregivers,
and there are federal grants and bonds, as well as programs aimed at increasing
the employment of people with disabilities and assisting disabled students.
When the Committee’s witnesses focused on health and wellness
issues in the consultations ahead of the 2016 budget, they spoke about
proposals in relation to the following subjects: health agreements; a pharmaceutical
strategy; care options; health information technology; health promotion; mental
health; health research; and disability.
-
[The government should work towards] a
system-wide transformation of the health care system. … [As a first step, it
should] make the federal caregiver tax credit refundable … , invest … $3 billion
in home care, create national standards of care and access, and establish a
national pharmacare plan that ensures accessible and affordable drugs. (Canadian
Association of Retired Persons)
-
[The government should increase] the federal
share of provincial-territorial spending … [from] 22% … to 25%. (Canadian
Association of Social Workers)
-
[The government should initiate] a new health
accord, … [adjust] the accord to include considerations for age, geographic
distribution of population and economic disparity … [and negotiate] an accord
that commits to the use of evidence in achieving health policy objectives.
[It should also make sure that the accord honours] the principles of the [Canada
Health Act] … [and ensure] fair and equitable access to health care [for
Canadians] … by … committing to reforms that strengthen the principle of access
to care based on need, rather than ability to pay. (Canadian
Doctors for Medicare)
-
[The government should institute] an
accountability framework that requires provinces to proactively regulate or
investigate clinics for compliance … [and that imposes] stricter monitoring of
the provinces and [that ensures] that violations of the [Canada Health Act]
are tied to funding including penalties. (Canadian
Doctors for Medicare)
-
[The government should] negotiate a new Health
Accord with the provinces and territories. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] commit to a … long-term
funding arrangement that reverses the cuts [to the Canada Health Transfer] set
in motion by the previous government [and] commit to funding at least 25% of
health care costs by 2025. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] uphold and enforce the Canada
Health Act. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should provide] new funding to
the provinces and territories to support seniors care by means of a
demographic-based top-up to the Canada [H]ealth [T]ransfer [that] would be
delivered in addition to the [Canada Health Transfer]…. Rather than opening up
the funding formula, the federal government can deliver this much needed
funding immediately. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[The government should] deliver federal health
[funds] through a needs-based top-up in addition to the [Canada Health
Transfer] to each province and territory based on demographics and population
health priorities. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
[The government should ensure] that
federal-provincial-territorial bilateral agreements include a robust
accountability framework to enable monitoring and reporting on the use of
[Canada Health Transfer funds]. Such a framework would … [s]how causal
relationships between inputs, activities and population health outcomes [and
would report] on a comprehensive set of indicators and outcome measures derived
from existing national data sources [and would link] with data on social
outcomes. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
[The government should] make access to
psychological services the priority of the new health accord. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
A new health accord should provide significant
annual funding increases strictly tied to enforcement of the Canada Health Act,
as well as improvements and expansion of the public health care system,
including a national pharmacare plan. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[A] new Health Accord … should include …
[expanded] networks of community and primary health care centres with a focus
on prevention and healthy living [and a] national mental health strategy. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
Funding for refugee health care should be fully
restored and increased. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should] implement a national
pharmacare strategy … [according] to the principle that affordable access to
drugs is fundamental to equitable health outcomes in Canada. (Canadian
Doctors for Medicare)
-
[The government should develop] a universal,
national prescription drug program. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he federal government can reduce [drug] costs
… by establishing a new funding program for catastrophic coverage of
prescription medication. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[T]he federal government [should] support …
private health insurance industry [participation] in the work of the
pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[T]he federal government
[should] work with the provinces and territories, health care professionals and
other stakeholders to improve drug access and … consider a variety of different
models and solutions for pharmacare, based on best available evidence, to …
address coverage gaps between public and private systems, protect Canadians
from undue financial hardship, … guarantee access to a stable supply of
clinically and cost-effective medications [and include] access to pharmacy
services. (Canadian
Pharmacists Association)
-
[T]he government
[should] invest an additional $15 million per year towards improving
immunization rates in Canada. (Canadian
Pharmacists Association)
-
[T]he federal government
[should] revamp the National Immunization Strategy [to] increase immunization
rates through a comprehensive approach that would include further expanding
pharmacists’ scope of practice to administer vaccines [and] target research,
comparable access and enhanced education and outreach, including building a
partnership with the provinces and territories and health professionals to
increase public awareness of the importance of vaccinations. (Canadian
Pharmacists Association)
-
[The government should develop] a multi-year,
multi-faceted national seniors strategy. (Canadian
Association of Social Workers)
-
[The government] should work with stakeholders
to develop a national seniors’ strategy incorporating additional and improved
home care and community support services, and new investments in long-term care
facilities … [including] a coordinated and systematic approach to delivering
primary care, acute and specialty care, and palliative care. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he government [should] establish a new
targeted home care innovation fund. In addition to incenting innovations, this
fund would support scaling up best practices. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[T]he federal government [should] include
capital investment in continuing care infrastructure, including retrofit and
renovation. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[The government should] improve access to
equitable, national, publicly funded home and community-based care that
includes telehealth, mental health, and palliative care. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
The federal government [should] ensure universal
access to high-quality national, publicly funded home- and community-based care
through its proposed $3 billion funding (over four years) for home care. [T]his
funding [should] include provisions for community-based mental health care and
telehomecare, in keeping with the [S]pecial Senate [C]ommittee on [A]ging
recommendation for federal support. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
[T]he federal government
[should] invest in the development of a seamless pan-Canadian
e-prescribing system … [and] work with key stakeholders, including the
provinces and territories, to develop a common national standard for
e-prescribing and then develop a plan to implement that standard. (Canadian
Pharmacists Association)
-
[The government should provide $180 million over
three years to] either [the] Canada Health Infoway or some “new structure” ...
[that] will allow [a continued] expansion of the capacity of the [health
information technology] sector and help deployment of electronic medical
records, bring care closer to the home and improve the patient experience by
providing easier access to care. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should] resist any demands for
new sugar or fat taxes. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[T]he federal government [should] adopt a
manufacturers' levy on sugary drinks ... [that would] be an excise tax based on
volume [with an increase in the tax rate as the amount of sugar rises], … be
visible at the point of purchase, and should include a broad range of sugary
drinks including fruit juices. ... [The revenue raised should] be redirected
toward subsidizing healthy living initiatives such as a national healthy lunch
program for students. (Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada)
-
[The government should increase] the subsidy for
healthy food provided through Nutrition North Canada … [and examine the
eligibility criteria of Saskatchewan’s remote and northern communities] to
participate in [this program]. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] target funding to assist
the provinces and territories [in improving] access to psychological services.
The funds could be used by the provinces and territories to adapt the [United
Kingdom's Improved Access to Psychological Therapies] program … in Canada. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should provide] incentives to
employers who offer their employees a clinically meaningful amount of coverage
for psychological services ... [in order to] afford them access to 15 to 20
sessions of psychological treatment. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should help] meet the mental health human resource needs at the [federal] level,
by recruiting, training and retaining psychologists to work in [federal]
departments. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should develop] a federal residency program to enable doctoral students in
psychology to complete practical training in federal departments where there is
[a] need such as in Correctional Service Canada, the Department of National
Defence, and Veterans Affairs Canada. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should establish] a Chief Psychologist position at the Department
of National Defence. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should remove] the physician referral requirement under [the federal Public
Service Health Care Plan and the Interim Federal Health Program]. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
Federal government
departments that enter into contracts for service from registered psychologists
[should] pay at least the recommended rate set by provincial and territorial
associations of psychology across Canada. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should] support a far-reaching
and effective national [post-traumatic stress disorder] training program for
front-line healthcare workers. (Mood
Disorders Society of Canada and Mental Health Commission of Canada)
-
[The government should invest $40 million] over
five years … to support a National Suicide Prevention Project. (Mood
Disorders Society of Canada and Mental Health Commission of Canada)
-
[The government should establish] a $100-million
national youth suicide prevention fund to [create a pilot program to be
implemented] in 25 communities across Canada to demonstrate how we can have
evidenced-informed decision-making for real change in preventing death by
suicide, particularly among our young people. [Key components should include]
building capacity in primary care[,] … media and public awareness[,] …
community training[,] … targeted supports[,] … [and] meaningful youth
engagement. (Partners
for Mental Health)
-
[The] government [should provide] funding and
support more access for more beneficial programs dedicated to more mental
health workers. (Siloam
Mission)
-
[The government should provide] funding for
psychological research via ... the [federal] granting councils, as well as
stabilized funding for operating and infrastructure support. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[T]he federal government
[should invest] in [Heart and Stroke Foundation-led] heart disease and stroke
research in the amount of $30 million per annum with investments in the
following four areas: heart failure [$10 million], creating capacity for the
future [$10 million], how heart disease affects women [$5 million] and
nutrition [$5 million]. (Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada)
-
[The government should provide financial support
for] a multidisciplinary, longitudinal study of sex abuse survivors [under
which participants would] be evaluated clinically and from a neurobiological
perspective over a 15-year period. [The estimated cost over 15 years] would be
$23 million, or $1.5 million per year. (Sheldon Kennedy Child Advocacy Centre)
-
[The government should prioritize earlier]
diagnosis of disabilities and intervention when workers first apply for
short-term leave [because this approach] may keep more individuals in the
workforce. Assistance with retraining and workplace accommodation should begin
before problems become more severe. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Processing times for [disability] benefit
applications and appeals need to be reduced…. Information and administration of
benefits should be consolidated to make accessing disability benefits as simple
as possible for those entitled to them. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Any financial disincentives inherent in
disability benefit policies should be identified and reduced or eliminated.
Partial disability benefits should be available to those with less severe
disabilities, ideally with a requirement to participate in the labour market. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
According to Canada’s Constitution,
immigration is an area of shared federal–provincial/territorial jurisdiction.
In particular, the federal government is responsible for such activities as
reuniting families, determining refugee claims in Canada, defining immigration
categories, setting national immigration levels and establishing admission
requirements. Moreover, it establishes eligibility criteria for settlement
programs in provinces other than Quebec.
The Committee’s witnesses that focused on immigrants and refugees
during the consultations preceding the 2016 budget discussed the following
issues: labour market integration; and international recruitment.
-
[The government should implement] viable
immigration programs as an integrated component of a national agricultural labour
strategy … [including work for] refugees. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should expand] the current loan
guarantee program aimed at foreign-trained new Canadians to work in their
professions in Canada [by supporting] stronger credit union lending through
federal loan guarantee programs. (Canadian
Credit Union Association)
-
[The government should] expedite special
investments in labour market supports for Syrian refugees in need of language
training, literacy and essential skills training and other basic employment
support programs to help them succeed in the Canadian workforce. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] offer more assistance to
recent immigrants with language training and skills upgrading. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] invest in growing a
talented population [and consider] the 20 recommendations set forth [in]
the Canadian Chambers of Commerce report ‘Immigration for a Competitive
Canada: Why Highly Skilled International Talent is at Risk’ as critical to
the terms of reference for establishing a proactive and streamlined economic
immigration process. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should ensure that] immigration
policies stop limiting employers’ access to the international talent they need.
(Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should establish] a “technology sector” specific consultation panel which will
address the [foreign workers access] issues that are specific to the [information and communications technologies]
sector. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
Ontario and Canada [need a diverse and robust
jobs strategy,] with clear actions to address labour market reform through …
immigration reform. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
The federal government holds exclusive legislative authority over
“Indians and Lands reserved for the Indians” by virtue of section 91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867.
This authority is exercised primarily in relation to the on-reserve registered
(status) Indian population and, to a lesser extent, Inuit residing in their
traditional homelands. Parliament approves appropriations to support the
provision of basic provincial-type services directed primarily to on-reserve
First Nations communities. Core services, such as education, health, housing,
social assistance, and capital facilities and maintenance are allocated
funding.
In appearing before the Committee during the consultations
preceding the 2016 budget, the witnesses that presented comments about
Indigenous peoples summarized the need for changes in the following areas:
funding and financing mechanisms; children; education and skills training;
infrastructure; and treaty rights and justice.
-
[The government should provide] additional
funding to close the gap between [F]irst [N]ations and the rest of Canada. This
includes funding for education, health, housing, water, capital infrastructure,
children and famil[ies], environmental stewardship, economic development,
social development, and the removal of the 2% cap [in relation to annual growth
in federal funding for on-reserve programs]. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[The government should negotiate] a new fiscal
relationship that gives First Nations communities sufficient, predictable, and
sustainable funding, … [rather than] contribution agreement-type processes …
[that use] existing Treasury Board formats and models. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[The government should address] the need for
[I]ndigenous languages to be appropriately resourced. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[The government should] consider the
Inuit-specific lens … on any sort of investments that happen in … [Inuit] regions
… [and be clear] in articulating exactly which investments will be for Inuit
[rather than other Indigenous groups]. (Inuit
Tapiriit Kanatami)
-
[The government should provide] funding ... to
ensure that … [Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami] can provide services at the community
and regional level and that [Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami can represent itself] at
the national and international levels. (Inuit
Tapiriit Kanatami)
-
[The government should provide] a $25-million
investment over five years [in a] Métis economic development strategy … [and
engage] with multiple federal ministers and in the intergovernmental process on
such key issues as the health accord and climate change. (Métis
National Council)
-
[The government should commit] to convert
funding to the Métis National Council's governing members for Métis
identification and registration into a permanent initiative. (Métis
National Council)
-
[The government should create] solutions [to
increase the participation of Indigenous peoples in the economy,] with clear
time frames, implementation plans, and full costing … [as] a critical part of
improving the lives of [Canada’s Indigenous peoples]. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[Regarding] the recent Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal findings of discrimination in funding of on-reserve child welfare,
[the government should increase funding for First Nations child protection and
child welfare]. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[The government should commit] $100 million for [I]ndigenous
communities to design, deliver, and govern early childhood education that meets
their needs and that's consistent with related recommendations from the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission. (Child
Care Advocacy Association of Canada)
-
[The government should] never allow race and
discrimination against children to … be permissible in … [government]
decision-making. (First
Nations Child and Family Caring Society of Canada)
-
Federal budget 2016 should close the
discriminatory funding gap for [F]irst [N]ations child and family services
determined in the January 26, 2016 ruling of the Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[The government should invest in First Nations’]
skills and training. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[At a total cost of $274 million, the government
should] remove the 2% cap placed on the … [Post-Secondary Student Support
Program] in 1996 … [and] fund the backlog of [Indigenous] students who are
eligible for the program but do not currently receive funding. (Canadian Alliance of Student Associations)
-
The federal government [should] honour its historical commitments
to Canada’s First Nations, … [recognize] that education is a treaty right and …
[provide] the necessary financial support. (Canadian Association of University Teachers)
-
[The government should remove] the funding cap
from the Post-Secondary Student Support Program … to ensure that Aboriginal
Canadians have equitable access to post-secondary education. (Canadian
Federation of Students)
-
To improve access to high-quality education for
[Indigenous youth in northern, rural and remote communities,] … a four-year
annual federal government commitment of $100 million (to be funded through the
proposed social infrastructure fund or any unspent federal funds earmarked for
infrastructure projects) for … educational infrastructure initiatives [is
needed]. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
[The government should] offer additional support
to address social problems plaguing Aboriginal communities. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Further investments in facilities and educators
on reserve are necessary to ensure all Aboriginal children have access to a
high quality education. Greater control over education on reserve should be
placed in the control of First Nations people, along with assistance in
administrative capacity and accountability. And the government needs to ensure
that financial barriers do not prevent Aboriginal youth from pursuing
post-secondary education. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should remove the barriers]
plaguing [A]boriginal communities [by] closing the [A]boriginal education gap,
and assisting firms in engaging the [A]boriginal workforce [to] strengthen
[A]boriginal labour market performance. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should increase] access to non-repayable
student financial assistance for Indigenous students, including increased
allocations to the Post-[S]econdary Student Support Program …, to fund all
eligible First Nations and Inuit students. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should renew the Aboriginal
Skills and Employment Training Strategy] beyond March 2016 and strengthen the
capacity of Indigenous organizations administering [the Strategy’s] funds to
improve essential skills training and career counselling. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should extend the Northern Adult
Basic Education] Program at the three territorial colleges and provide similar
support for colleges and institutes in other jurisdictions serving Indigenous
learners and communities. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[In partnership with the Métis Nation, the
government should renew and increase funding through the Aboriginal Skills and
Employment Training Strategy, and enhance] existing scholarships and bursaries
available to Métis students at various colleges and universities. (Métis
National Council)
-
[T]he government should renew and enhance
funding for the Skills and Partnership Fund and the Aboriginal Skills and
Employment Training Strategy after they expire in March 2016. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should renew and enhance
programs for] justice around family violence prevention, [F]irst [N]ations
policing, and [A]boriginal justice strategies [that are due to sunset]. (Assembly
of First Nations)
-
[The government should implement the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission's recommendations,] the UN Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples, and the [I]nquiry [for] [M]urdered and [M]issing
Indigenous Women and Girls, [and support mental health-related initiatives,
including suicide prevention.] (Inuit
Tapiriit Kanatami)
-
[The government should] begin processes … [with
the Métis Nation] for settling land claims and advancing self-government. (Métis
National Council)
-
[T]he government [should implement] its funding
commitment to [the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women]
in Federal Budgets 2016 and 2017. (YWCA
Canada)
Most public infrastructure is owned by the provinces/territories
and municipalities, with the federal government’s role consisting primarily of
providing financial support for infrastructure projects. To that end, the
federal government administers a number of funding programs, and public-private
partnerships are another method that is sometimes used to finance public
infrastructure.
In addition to assisting with the funding of provincial/territorial
and municipal infrastructure, the federal government owns and maintains a large
portfolio of public infrastructure, including bridges, airports, ports and
border infrastructure. It also supports on-reserve First Nations public
infrastructure through a number of specific programs.
In making infrastructure-related comments to the Committee during
the consultations in relation to the 2016 budget, witnesses raised the
following issues: spending; funding mechanisms; public transit; and housing.
-
The government should be] shovel smart ... [and
prioritize] investments that will have a long-term economic impact ... [in]
those areas of the country that require stimulus and help. (Alberta Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should] plan future
infrastructure spending so that it achieves the maximum economic benefit. (Atlantic
Institute for Market Studies)
-
[The government should prioritize]
infrastructure spending … [so that it is not based on the] idea that [interest]
rates are low. [Rather, infrastructure spending should] be ranked in declining
order … [of their ability to] improve private sector productivity and build
jobs and incomes. (Atlantic
Provinces Economic Council)
-
[The government should] increase investments in
physical and environmental infrastructure, such as public transit and basic
transportation. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
[The government should] invest in [m]odern,
efficient, and world-class infrastructure [that] enables ... Canadian exporters
... to deliver their products efficiently to global markets ... [and
productivity-enhancing] infrastructure projects that ... will provide the
greatest return in future economic activity and jobs. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[T]he government
[should] ensure that [regulatory and approval processes for infrastructure projects]
are adequately funded and capable of being completed in a timely fashion. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[I]n areas related to [I]ndigenous peoples and
community investments which are very important to [the upstream oil and gas]
sector, [government infrastructure] investments are critical for long-term
growth. (Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers)
-
[The government should invest] in digital
infrastructure (networks and switching required to handle the volumes of next
generation data transfer) and reward private sector investment. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should focus] on trade-enabling,
economically productive infrastructure—roads, ports, technology, transport
corridors and borders. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should invest in a] water
management project … to mitigate the impact of the flooding of agriculture
lands [in Manitoba], [expand] port and border facilities … [and release federal
and provincial Crown land in Northern Ontario to] go back into agriculture
production. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[In partnership with community economic
development organizations, the government should ensure that] infrastructure investments
include a social finance fund and a social infrastructure grant program that
could … provide matching capital for durable social infrastructure projects, …
[that those] investments also include a social impact scoring component on all
infrastructure contracts and recipients, and that … [those investments] include
community benefit agreements. (Canadian
Community Economic Development Network)
-
[The government should ensure] that … the
additional [infrastructure] funding is available for the 2016 construction
season, … that the application process is simple, … [and that it works] with
the provinces and municipalities to ensure that there's no confusion around the
application process. (Canadian
Construction Association)
-
[Short-term stimulus is needed] and … a focus on infrastructure will be [the] best investment, even
if that means running modest deficits. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should provide increased]
investment in social infrastructure beyond historical levels and the
traditional purview of the federal government. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should add] broadband
infrastructure … to [the economic infrastructure] category. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[Every] major infrastructure project funded by
the federal government [should] require fibre [to] be laid during the course of
construction in order to allow Canadian communities to take full advantage of
the digital age. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should enhance] the protection
of electricity Critical Infrastructure through increased funding for Public
Safety Canada’s Canadian Cyber Incident Response Centre. (Canadian
Electricity Association)
-
[Although] the federal government should establish key principles and
guidelines, funding decisions have to be made at the local level. … Investment
has to take local needs into account. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The government should] invest in physical and
social infrastructure. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] adopt a strategic
procurement policy for all federally-funded infrastructure projects which would
emphasize the need to maximize domestic economic benefits for the manufacturing
sector, and in particular … fabricated steel products, while respecting our
current international trade obligations. (Canadian
Manufacturers & Exporters)
-
[T]he federal government [should] increase
infrastructure spending, particularly in public transit, green and social
infrastructure, and particularly for those most in need, including through
affordable housing, transition homes, child care centres, seniors facilities,
and community and cultural facilities. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
All federal infrastructure funding should be
tied to environmental, climate change, and social requirements. In the short
term, [the government should provide] more than a third share of the funding
for these investments, tied to achieving environmental and broader social
objectives. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
The federal government should establish a
dedicated fund to support public waste-water infrastructure investments
required to meet the new national waste-water regulations. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
Infrastructure funding should … be subject to a
gender-based analysis along with other federal government programs, as the
Auditor General called for six years ago. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[I]nfrastructure spending should prioritize
projects under federal jurisdiction where the long-term national interest makes
federal involvement uniquely appropriate, and with faster implementation times.
(C.D.
Howe Institute)
-
[When making decisions on infrastructure
investment, the government] should mandate full life-cycle cost assessment screening … [and support sustainability by
ensuring] that all new [infrastructure] projects contribute to achieving Canada’s
… [carbon dioxide] reduction objectives. (Cement
Association of Canada)
-
[The government should provide funding to the
city of Rimouski for a sports and recreation facility, through] the Building
Canada Fund … for small communities or large projects. (City
of Rimouski)
-
[The government should provide funding to the
city of Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac for upgrading a] regional arena. (City
of Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac)
-
[The government should establish] a dedicated
envelope for post-secondary institutions within federal government green and
social infrastructure investments to address deferred maintenance and infrastructure
needs to meet the increased employer demand for college/institute programs. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should coordinate with other]
levels of government … [to] identify not only the most important projects but
also the ones that are going to give … the biggest payback over a generation. (Conference
Board of Canada)
-
[The government should act as a] partner. ...
That means increasing the federal contribution to infrastructure projects and
expanding and dedicating investments in Canada's rural communities. It means
ensuring municipalities have the flexibility to make local, evidence-based
decisions they are best positioned to make. (Federation
of Canadian Municipalities)
-
[Municipalities need] both short-term repair and
renewal investments [from the government] that can create jobs immediately and
long-term strategic investments that lay the foundation for Canada's future. (Federation
of Canadian Municipalities)
-
[S]hovel-worthy should
take precedence over shovel-ready [as] the main rationale for infrastructure is
not short-term economic stimulus, but improving Canada's longer-term economic
potential, and that takes time. (Institute
for Research on Public Policy)
-
[The government should make] a concerted effort
… [in relation to infrastructure renewal, accompanied] by strategic and
sustained levels of federal investment. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should] significantly increase
its infrastructure spending program. The timeline for infrastructure spending
should be expedited in order to provide much-needed stimulus. (Unifor)
-
[Within infrastructure spending, the government
should] include provisions for made-in-Canada materials and inputs (including
sustainable building materials) … [and] local hiring requirements, especially
among vulnerable communities (e.g., minorities, young workers, women in skilled
trades and Aboriginal workers). (Unifor)
-
[The government should remove] any prerequisite
for private sector involvement [in infrastructure projects] as a condition of
federal funding support. (Unifor)
-
[The government should expand the types of]
infrastructure eligible for the Building Canada Fund, so as to no longer
restrict it to fixed broadband projects, and incorporat[e] a component
accepting cellular technology as strategic infrastructure for mobile and voice
Internet. [It should also increase] the federal share to 50% and reduc[e]
municipal participation in these projects. (Agence interrégionale de développement des technologies de
l'information et des télécommunications)
-
[The government should further study] the notion
of an infrastructure bank. (Atlantic
Provinces Economic Council)
-
[In partnership with community economic
development organizations, the government should ensure] that new
infrastructure investment[s] include criteria that prioritize funding for clean
energy projects for communities vulnerable to climate change and that financing
is made available and affordable to communities and project developers through
the Canadian Infrastructure Bank, including federal loan guarantees to support
private investment. (Canadian
Community Economic Development Network)
-
[The government should consider] the
[public-private partnership] model where there is demonstrated value for money
and appropriate transfer of risk to the private sector. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should] keep the [public-private
partnership screen]. In its absence, [the government should ensure that:]
[f]ederal investment decisions for projects over [$100 million] require the
applicant government to examine and consider alternative procurement options
including P3s[,] [p]reserve the P3 Canada Fund as a standalone fund to
incentivize smart choices in infrastructure procurement[,] … fund up to 33% of
a project … [,] … [and direct appropriate resources for] capacity building and
business case development to lower levels of government (particularly
municipalities and Indigenous governments) so that they have the tools to make
appropriate procurement decisions. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The] government [should] delay implementation
of an infrastructure bank. Uncertainty exists in the infrastructure community
due to a lack of clarity around what the mandate would be of a Canadian
infrastructure bank. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should present a] discussion
paper/guide … as the basis for extensive consultations with industry and the
intended beneficiaries of the [infrastructure] bank. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should establish] its proposed
Canada Infrastructure Bank to provide municipalities with access to low-cost
financing for infrastructure projects, while winding down PPP Canada. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should] act quickly to repeal
the public-private partnership screen on new infrastructure projects supported
by the new Building Canada Fund, replacing it with the requirement that
employers on funded projects provide a minimum number of apprenticeship
positions. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[T]he federal government [should] eliminate PPP
Canada Inc. and redirect the $1.25 billion P3 Canada Fund to public
infrastructure projects. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
The proposed Canada Infrastructure Bank
shouldn’t be used as a vehicle to subsidize higher cost private finance. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
Consistent with the new federal government’s
commitment to openness and transparency, it should implement comprehensive
[public-private partnership] accountability and transparency legislation. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[C]ities need … long-term, predictable,
sustainable, and dedicated infrastructure funding mechanisms similar to the
permanent and indexed Gas Tax Fund [as well as] streamlined and faster approval
processes and greater coordination and consistency between federal and
provincial infrastructure funding programs. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
A permanent increase in gas tax funding with
criteria that tie this investment to economic infrastructure would allow all
three levels of government to engage in building our economy in making Canada
more competitive. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
[The] Public Transit Fund should be fully
implemented and … the government could consider accelerating the fund should
transit projects be both shovel worthy and shovel ready before 2017. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should continue] with [public
transit public-private partnership] projects already in motion (ex. Green Line
in Calgary). (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should invest] a minimum … of $2
billion per year for public transit in Canada. (Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should improve] accessible
transportation [through infrastructure investments] for Canadians with
disabilities. (Unifor)
-
[The government should] broaden the tax base to
complement the increase in the top tax rate by reducing or eliminating the 50%
exemption for capital gains by considering an upper limit on capital gains
exemptions for housing. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should develop] targeted
strategies that address Canada’s most pressing concerns, such as our ageing
population and the ongoing need to support Canadians mental health; two issues
that would both be alleviated by the development of a National Affordable
Housing Strategy. (Canadian
Association of Social Workers)
-
[The government should remove] barriers to
affordability by: adjusting mortgage rules to support well-qualified first-time
buyers; eliminating federal [Goods and Services Tax] … on [top of municipal
development] tax; supporting municipal capital funding requirements for transit
and infrastructure; and, fixing tax regimes that discourage rental housing
development and encourage the underground economy. (Canadian
Home Builders’ Association)
-
[The government should expand] federal training
support to all those pursuing a career as a skilled worker; focus federal
support for housing research on cost reduction; and, harmonize codes,
standards, and trades qualifications to reduce unnecessary costs and support
[housing] industry productivity. (Canadian
Home Builders’ Association)
-
[The government should invest $1.7 billion
annually through Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation to] retrofit and rehabilitate
existing social housing assets.(Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The government should target] grants for
capital repairs, retrofits and maintenance of public, non-profit and
cooperative housing providers who need it. An emphasis on energy efficiency
should be a guiding principle of this new initiative. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
As federal social housing operating subsidies
expire, [the government should] renew funding for public, non-profit and co-operative
housing providers [to] ensure that rents remain affordable for tenants in the
long term. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The government should commit to] long term
funding so that social housing providers can leverage their assets and secure
equity financing for capital renewal, retrofits and redevelopment. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The government should commit $1.5 billion per
year from the social infrastructure fund, alongside additional contributions
from the green infrastructure fund, to build] 100,000 new units of affordable
and social housing in order to reduce core housing need and homelessness among
priority population households. [I]nvestments should be made to develop
permanent supportive housing in order to ensure targeted reductions in
homelessness, … prioritize improved housing outcomes for Aboriginal households,
… [and] vary [these units] from deeply subsidized to more shallowly subsidized
[to ensure] a cohesive mix of residents. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The] development of some forms of affordable
housing could be supported by more entrepreneurial approaches. For instance,
acting as guarantor of a community-led housing bank would enable a lending
facility that understands the distinct needs of the affordable housing sector.
Another example involves housing providers who are looking to partner or even
merge together in order to take advantage of economies of scale, increase
professional capacity and share risk. By supporting capacity building
initiatives and sector transformation pilots, the federal government can help
increase the effectiveness and sustainability of Canada’s social housing
system. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
By fulfilling… [t]he 2015 federal budget
[commitment of] $150 million over four years …, housing providers can
immediately lower interest payments and invest more working capital into
repairs[,] retrofits and redevelopment of housing assets. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[The government should invest $210 million into
the] Homelessness Partnering Strategy. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
[If] the federal government does not provide
dedicated housing funding within the broader envelope for social infrastructure
within the broader envelope, funding will be split so many ways that its impact
on social housing may be negligible. [The government should commit] to
dedicated social housing funding in the budget. (Canadian
Housing and Renewal Association)
-
In collaboration with [the Federation of
Canadian Municipalities, the government should develop] a comprehensive
national housing strategy that provides for greater policy coordination,
collaboration, and the necessary resources for actions and results. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
[T]here are innovative
approaches to affordable home ownership that can be explored through federal
tax policy that support lower-income families … [such as] down payment
assistance grants, renovation cost credits for adding secondary suites to
existing housing, and removing the [Goods and Services Tax] on certain
housing-related costs such as construction materials for affordable housing. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
The promised national housing strategy requires
a gender lens and gender-based analysis. (YWCA
Canada)
Canada’s manufacturing sector, which comprises businesses that are
primarily engaged in chemically, mechanically or physically transforming
materials or substances into new products, is supported by the federal
government in a variety of ways. Some assistance is temporary, such as
programs to help manufacturing subsectors
that are experiencing particular difficulties, while other support is
permanent, such as tax measures.
When they appeared before the Committee during the consultations
prior to the 2016 budget, witnesses that spoke about manufacturing and
value-added processing mentioned the following subjects: financial and other
supports for firms of various sizes; and financial and other supports for firms
in various sectors.
-
[The government should create] and fund a Small Manufacturing Investment Fund that is geared
toward, and restricted to small business for the purpose of technology
and [research and development] investment. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
-
[The government should be] providing support to
key firms, such as Bombardier, to ensure stability while key programs are
successfully brought to market. (Unifor)
-
The [government should] implement a national
advanced manufacturing network of excellence in the fields of automation
robotics and additive manufacturing similar to the United States National
Networks for Manufacturing Innovation. [It should also]
simplify and extend the tax credits and investment incentives to de-risk and
accelerate the adoption of new technologies …, including the re-inclusion of
capital expenditures under the scientific research and experimental development
tax credit. (Canadian
Manufacturers & Exporters)
-
[The government should implement a] national
strategy in key areas of advanced manufacturing that would nurture Canadian
production, foster international competitiveness and secure future prosperity.
(Unifor)
-
[Regarding] auto assembly & parts, [the
government should better integrate] the federal and provincial investment
attraction efforts, including the development of a ‘one-stop’ system to win new
investment in Canadian assembly and parts plants. (Unifor)
-
[The government should remove] the current
federal tax which is charged on up-front incentives [within the manufacturing
sector]. (Unifor)
-
[The government should prioritize] policies and
investment programs designed to develop our secondary and tertiary
manufacturing associated with resource processing. (Unifor)
Not-for-profit organizations and social enterprises can be of
various models, and can be created under either provincial/territorial
legislation or a number of federal statutes. Consequently, responsibilities in
this area are shared between the provincial/territorial
and federal governments. From a federal perspective, not-for-profit
organizations are supported by financial incentives, including through tax
credits for individuals and businesses that make donations to registered
charities and certain organizations. As well, the federal government provides
funding to not-for-profit organizations concerned with advancing social
development and inclusion of people with disabilities, children and their
families, and other vulnerable or excluded populations.
The Committee’s witnesses that spoke about the not-for-profit
sector, charitable giving and social enterprises during the consultations in
advance of the 2016 budget noted the following topics: tax measures; and access
to supports.
-
[In partnership with community economic
development organizations, the government should ensure] that social
enterprises, non-profits, and co-operatives be given access to existing
regulatory and tax measures and business development programs that are currently
available to small and medium enterprises through awareness-raising efforts for
government officials. (Canadian
Community Economic Development Network)
-
[S]ocial programs … [help people contribute] to
society. [A] strong bond, a strong connection to each other, creates a healthy
society, and [perhaps] we can start by fixing the person while they are still
in the womb. (Vila
Rosa Inc.)
Canada operates a progressive marginal income tax system for income
earned by an individual, and – among federal tax sources – personal income
taxes make the largest contribution to federal revenue. While taxation is based
on the individual, rather than on the family unit, tax incentives may be shared
between spouses or common-law partners, such as with personal tax credits, and
family income may be considered in determining eligibility for certain
government programs.
In their appearance before the Committee during the consultations
ahead of the 2016 budget, witnesses that spoke about personal tax measures
identified the need for changes in the following areas: rates, brackets,
credits and other measures; stock options; and succession planning.
-
[The government should] offset the benefits that
the middle tax rate cut affords the higher income groups by increasing the tax
rates in the third and fourth brackets. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
The government should modify or reverse the
ill-advised tax cut for the so-called middle class. (Broadbent
Institute)
-
As an initial step to expanding support to
caregivers, … the federal government [should] amend the caregiver and family
caregiver tax credits to make them refundable. (Canadian
Medical Association)
-
[The government should reduce] the political
party donation tax credit … to match the same level that charities receive. (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
Tax rate hikes [for the top income bracket] when
the rates are already approaching 50% are economically damaging. … [R]educing
the top tax rate or reversing even the latest increase would be a
cost-effective way to provide fiscal stimulus at this point in time. (C.D.
Howe Institute)
-
[The government should create] an appropriate
incentive structure which encourages individuals to work through carefully
designed tax and income assistance schemes. In particular, any policies which
lead to high marginal effective tax rates which disincentivize work should be
reformed. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should end] income splitting. (Unifor)
-
[The government should reverse] the elevated Tax
Free Savings Account threshold. (Unifor)
-
[The government] needs
to have fulsome consultation with businesses, especially in the technology sector,
on how [stock option plans] are used; otherwise the unintended consequences
will lead [to] talent drain and stifl[e]innovation. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
In order to ensure that agricultural rollover
provisions recognize the breadth of family relations required to maintain
family farming across Canada, [the government should replace] the word “child”
in subsection 73(3) of the Income Tax Act with the phrase “family
member”, adopting a similar definition of the word “family” as defined in
Ontario Regulation 697 under the Land Transfer Tax Act of Ontario. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
To ensure equal treatment between the division
of sibling owned farm corporations and other inter-familial corporate
restructurings, … section 55(2) of the Income tax Act [should] deem
siblings as non-arm’s length, specific to farm corporations. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[S]ection 84.1 of the Income Tax Act [should be amended] so that it no longer constrains the transfer of farm
businesses to immediate family members. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[T]he federal government [should reconsider] its
decision to amend subsection 31(1) [of the Income Tax Act] and maintain
the more comprehensive income test, as outlined in Craig v. the Queen.
This reinterpretation would maintain the intent of the combination exception
and reduce the financial burden the current, restrictive interpretation places
on new entrants and investors. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[If the change in the treatment of eligible
capital property that was announced in the 2015 federal budget proceeds], … an
exception should be established to protect the sale of [supply-management]
quota from the proposed legislative change, similar to the variety of
legislation already found in the [Income Tax Act] specific to the
farming industry. (Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[The government should reduce the tax charges
on] succession planning … for small firms [seeking to pass their business on to
their children or grandchildren]. (Canadian
Federation of Independent Business)
-
[The government should allow] small businesses
and farms, up to a defined dollar value, to be passed on to non-arms-length
parties (as defined by [the Canada Revenue Agency]) without taxes or [with]
minimal taxes. (Hunter Wire Products Ltd.)
The federal government supports those living in low-income
circumstances through a variety of tax and direct support measures; these
measures may be related to children, low-income Canadians, working Canadians
with low income, and low-income seniors, for example. As well, it collaborates
with the provinces/territories in delivering affordable housing programs,
provides a renovation program for low-income households, and makes annual
investments in social housing for low-income households through Canada Mortgage
and Housing Corporation.
In commenting on poverty and income inequality during the
Committee’s consultations preceding the 2016 budget, witnesses advocated
changes in relation to
the following issues: a basic guaranteed income; and social care and poverty
reduction.
-
[To] help those at the bottom of [the] income
distribution and to facilitate a transition to a basic income guarantee, [the
government should] make all non-refundable tax credits refundable. Enhance
them, especially the disability tax credit, and claw them back like the [Goods
and Services Tax] credit, the child tax credit, and the [G}uaranteed [I]ncome
[S]upplement. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should explore] the potential of
a basic income to support Canada’s most vulnerable, help eliminate poverty, and
reduce costs associated with a failure to address the social determinants of
health. (Canadian
Association of Social Workers)
-
[The government should] set aside a very small
amount of money in this budget exercise going forward so that [it] can work
with the provinces to facilitate a series of guaranteed annual income
experiments, or pilots, across the country. (Evelyn Forget, as an individual)
-
The proposed guaranteed annual income would
stand in place of the current arrangements for adult or working-age benefits in
this country.… [A]s family income increases, [the amount received] would
decline, but less than proportionately ... [in order to create] a work
incentive, but ... also [to establish] a minimum level of income for all
Canadians. (Evelyn Forget, as an individual)
-
[The government should implement] a Social Care
Act … to ensure equity across Canada, renew federal leadership, and develop
mechanisms for benchmarking of outcomes and information sharing between
provinces. (Canadian
Association of Social Workers)
-
[Guaranteed Income Supplement] benefits should
be increased so no senior lives in poverty. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[T]he development of a poverty reduction
strategy needs a gender lens, a gender-based analysis, and grounding in the
realities of women's poverty. (YWCA
Canada)
The main federal role in fostering research, development,
innovation, and commercialization is to provide policy and regulatory
frameworks that stimulate private-sector competition and investment. That said,
the federal government also supports businesses and commercially oriented
research and development. Federal tax measures, and federal support for the
activities of the federal granting councils, are examples of support for basic
and applied research, as well as experimental development. As well, a range of
federal programs and initiatives support the introduction of new goods or
services into the marketplace.
The Committee’s witnesses that mentioned research, development,
innovation and commercialization when appearing during the consultations in
relation to the 2016 budget summarized the need for changes in relation to the
following topics: granting entities;
basic research; applied research; an innovation/patent box; clusters,
incubators and accelerators; tax and other support measures; intellectual
property; and a science officer and science studies.
-
[The government should] improve accountability …
[for the granting agencies by allowing for student representation on their
granting boards. (Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations)
-
[The government should] reinvest in research and
innovation, specifically by increasing the granting agencies funding by 10%,
which would cost an estimated $270 million per year. (Canadian
Alliance of Student Associations)
-
[The government should ensure that] research
funding provided through Canada's research granting councils and decisions
about priorities, projects, programs and scholarships are made using
peer-review processes by the scientific committee on the basis of merit. (Canadian Association of University Teachers)
-
[The government should] invest in the Government of Canada
organizations that support applied research … [including] the [Natural Sciences
and Engineering Research Council of Canada], the Canadian Foundation for
Innovation and Canada Economic Development. (Centre national en électrochimie et en technologies
environnementales)
-
[The federal government should give colleges] access to the
Government of Canada's research support fund if the research infrastructures in
colleges are to endure. (Centre national en électrochimie et en technologies
environnementales)
-
[T]he government
[should] increase the annual budget of the [College and Community Innovation]
program by $17 million per year so that colleges and institutes are not
required to turn away so many requests from small and [medium-sized]
enterprises for innovation support. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
The [Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council’s] social innovation pilot of $5 million [should] be made permanent
with an increased budget of $10 million per year. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should include] the College and
Community Innovation Program in the Research Support Fund (formerly the
Indirect Costs of Research Program) with a $25 million annual investment that
would enable colleges and polytechnics to devote more funds to industry
[research and development]. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should increase] annual funding
by $15 million for the College and Community Innovation Program …, [which]
enables collaborative college-industry applied research in Canada. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should make] the Community and
College Social Innovation Fund … pilot [program a permanent program within the
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council]. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
The government [should] commit to increasing
funding to the tri-council [agencies] and the research support fund to their
inflation-adjusted 2007-08 levels over the next four years and commit to
indexing this funding moving forward. (U15
Group of Canadian Research Universities)
-
[The government should] increase funding for the
Research Support Fund by an amount equal to at least 25 percent of any new
Tri-Council investments, to mitigate the indirect costs associated with the new
grants. (U15
Group of Canadian Research Universities)
-
[The government should launch] an Innovative
Campus Infrastructure Program [that would emulate the Knowledge Infrastructure
Program] to finance campus research infrastructure projects that fall outside
the scope of [the Canada Foundation for Innovation]. (U15
Group of Canadian Research Universities)
-
[The government should provide] funding to
support research, transformer testing and other activities to enhance
understanding of the impacts of … [geomagnetic disturbances] on the electric
grid and to assist utilities in mitigating these impacts. (Canadian Electricity Association)
-
The budget for applied research in colleges is currently
$50 million for Canada as a whole. …
[I]t would be appropriate to increase this budget in order to be able to serve
the pool of [small and medium-sized enterprises] and allow them to take a
sustainable position vis-à-vis the competition from around the world. (Centre national en électrochimie et en technologies
environnementales)
-
The government [should] signal its strong
commitment to using science in policy-making by making further investment[s] in
the [Council of Canadian Academies] to enable more studies, from more sponsors,
on more topics, using more innovative approaches. (Council
of Canadian Academies)
-
[The government should create] a $15 million
pilot College/Institute Health Innovation Research Fund to: enable adoption,
implementation and commercialization of innovative technologies, services and
solutions to improve patient-oriented care; bridge gaps between industry,
healthcare and community organizations; [and] foster economic diversification,
particularly among [small and medium-sized enterprises]. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should provide] sustainable
research support funding to ensure colleges and institutes can reasonably cover
the costs of planning, managing and expanding their research activities. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
-
[The government should be] using government
research and development and investment support to ensure that key [aerospace]
product development programs and production are undertaken in Canada. (Unifor)
-
[The government should use] the tax system to
encourage innovation, … [including through an innovation or patent box that
would provide] a reduced tax rate for business income when we adopt and
commercialize intellectual property. (Atlantic
Provinces Economic Council)
-
[The government should] consider encouraging
innovation by flow-through share financing of [research and development]
investments so that deductions are forwarded to the owner—the equity holder. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should] consider encouraging
innovation by … studying the use of patent or
intellectual property boxes to encourage the exploitation of innovations in
Canada. (Robin
Boadway, as an individual)
-
[The government should provide] incentives to
move ideas from mind to market, such as an “innovation box” regime in Canada
that would see any revenues earned on a patent or new technology developed here
in Canada taxed at a much lower rate. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should consider] the potential
implementation of a patent box tax regime which would improve commercialization
of technologies developed in Canada. (Canadian
Manufacturers & Exporters)
-
[Regarding investments in incubators,
accelerators, and research facilities], the government should set clear funding
objectives, with a premium placed on strengthening competitive advantages and
regional strengths and encouraging collaboration and new models of engagement.
(Business Council of Canada)
-
[The government should provide] incentives that
encourage collaboration through technology clusters, incubators, or centres of
excellence. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should revisit] the review of
federal support to research and development ... chaired by Tom Jenkins,
[recognizing that the resulting report contains recommendations that include]
... making business innovation a key element of federal procurement. (Business Council of Canada)
-
[T]he government [should] task a parliamentary
committee to undertake a full review of Canada's research and development
framework with [a] particular focus on the modernization of the [scientific
research and experimental development] legislation. (Canadian
Manufacturers & Exporters)
-
[The government should] review the [scientific
research and experimental development] program with the goal of reinstituting
some of the competitive tax credits [that were reduced or eliminated through
the 2012 federal budget], including those for capital expenditures. (Canadian
Wireless Telecommunications Association)
-
[The] government should rigorously evaluate the
effectiveness of its [research and development] tax credits and consider
rebalancing … support from tax credits to more direct grants and subsidies.
Direct government spending … should also be increased, particularly in areas
where it may be able to create a competitive advantage, such as resources and
green technology. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government] should conduct a study of the
impact of changes to [the scientific research and experimental development
investment tax credit] introduced in the Economic Action Plan 2012 to determine
if the changes are producing the desired results and adjust the incentive
program to encourage [research and experimental development] investment[s]
accordingly. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should consolidate] federal business innovation
programs into a one-stop-shop that delivers [the] support [that businesses need
to] improve [their] declining innovation outcomes. (Polytechnics
Canada)
-
[The government should
work toward ensuring that Canada has an intellectual
property regime that] is at par with other advanced
economies – from the time it takes for patent approval, to enforcement
guidelines to economic disincentives for patent infringement. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government] should
consider a lower tax rate for revenues generated from [i]ntellectual
[p]roperties … than [other] revenues. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should create] a Parliamentary Science Officer, an independent officer of the
Library of Parliament who would report to the Senate and the House of Commons,
to provide independent advice and analysis to Parliament about the adequacy and
effectiveness of the nation’s science policies, priorities, and funding. (Canadian Association of University Teachers)
-
[The government should create the position of] a Chief Science Officer. (Canadian Psychological Association)
-
[The government should provide] $5 million per
year for 3 years ... [to] support a national roll-out of the [Information
Technology Association of Canada's] CareerMash program and allow ... [its Business Technology Management] program [to expand]. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should] put evidence squarely at
the centre of decision-making, and … establish a Chief Science Officer. (Council
of Canadian Academies)
With the aging of Canada’s population, there is an increasing
public policy focus – including within the federal government – on the manner
in which Canadians will support themselves in retirement. The federal
government makes payments to seniors out of general tax revenues, and a variety
of contributory pension plans also exist; in some cases, contributions to these
plans are tax-deductible. As well, additional federal tax measures are
available once an individual reaches the age of retirement.
In speaking to the Committee about retirement income measures and
seniors during the consultations prior to the 2016 budget, witnesses described
proposals in the following areas: Old Age Security and Guaranteed Income
Supplement payments; contributory pension plans; and seniors’ employment.
-
[The government should restore Old Age Security]
eligibility … to age 65, increase the [amount of the Guaranteed Income
Supplement], especially for single, low-income seniors, increase the [amounts
of the Old Age Security and Guaranteed Income Supplement payment] to bridge the
poverty gap, and introduce … [a seniors’ index, tied to wage rates, for these
programs]. (Canadian
Association of Retired Persons)
-
[The government should] work with the provinces
to enhance the [Canada Pension Plan … and establish] a supplementary universal
pension plan. (Canadian
Association of Retired Persons)
-
[The government should keep] the age of eligibility
for Old Age Security and the Guaranteed Income Supplement [payments] … at 65
years. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should gradually merge] the Old Age Security … and the Guaranteed Income Supplement …
programs into a new slightly enhanced exclusive [Guaranteed Income Supplement] program
similar to the Seniors Benefit program envisioned by the Liberal Party in 1996.
(Bernard Dussault, as an
individual)
-
[T]he age of entitlement
[for] an unreduced retirement pension should be set uniformly in all public and
private pension plans in accordance with the calendar year of birth rather than
as a uniform age subject from time to time to abrupt and inappropriate
increase[s]. (Bernard Dussault, as an
individual)
-
[The government should] improve the … [Canada
Pension Plan] by allowing employees to voluntarily contribute higher amounts to
… [the Plan], up to a maximum of 6.85% of eligible earnings. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should direct] the appropriate
department and/or agencies to create or commission demographic forecasts that
list the in-demand groups who will be most affected by any [Canada Pension
Plan] enhancement to ensure no negative impact to private business. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should not expand the Canada
Pension Plan, as it] would have a huge and immediate negative impact on small
firms. (Canadian
Federation of Independent Business)
-
[T]he federal government [should work the
provinces and territories to ensure] a universal expansion of the [Canada
Pension Plan], instead of deferring to piecemeal and provincial measures. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should work with provinces and
territories to expand] the Canada Pension Plan … [in a
way] similar to that proposed by the Canadian Labour Congress (doubling the
benefit rate from 25% to 50%). … [P]articipation in the … expansion should not
exclude workers with less than $30,000 [in] annual employment earnings. (Bernard Dussault, as an
individual)
-
In order to allow each Canadian ... to pay for
the additional contributions required by [an expansion in the Canada Pension
Plan/Quebec Pension Plan], the minimum hourly wage, which varies from province
to province and currently amounts to about $10 (corresponding approximately
only to a $20,000 annual salary), should be increased to $15 and … indexed
annually. (Bernard Dussault, as an
individual)
-
[T]hese contributions holidays [from defined-benefit plans]
should be prevented, and the surplusses should instead be amortized, as is done
with deficits by decreasing or increasing the contribution rate. (Bernard
Dussault, as an individual)
-
As [the] government develops its policy on the
[Canada Pension Plan], it should be mindful of the aggregated impact [of rising
payroll taxes and premiums] and should consider the provision of tax relief to
offset the rising burden on businesses and employees. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should] collect [Canada Pension
Plan] premiums at a relatively higher rate … but … place the threshold further
up the scale than is currently proposed in Ontario. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should implement] an age
25-threshold before a worker is required to be enrolled in an enhanced [Canada
Pension Plan]. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[While considering any enhancement to the Canada
Pension Plan, the government] should exempt those employees on whose behalf
pension contributions or investment savings are already being made above the
rate contemplated for the [Canada Pension Plan] enhancement. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should] work with the provinces
to implement the Canadian Labour Congress’s proposal for a mandatory expansion
of the [Canada Pension Plan] that would see a gradual increase in …
contributions, and eventually allow for a doubling of future … benefits. (Unifor)
-
[The government should] ensure that federally
regulated defined-benefit plans, which have already been paid for by employees
and pensioners, are not retroactively changed into target benefit plans. (Unifor)
-
[The government] should encourage employers to
provide more flexible work arrangements to older workers. Barriers to employing
workers under more flexible conditions such as ceilings on payroll
contributions which create an incentive to hire full-time rather than part-time
employees should be addressed. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The] government should take the lead in
offering flexible work arrangements to aging [federal] public sector workers. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
Time-limited wage subsidies for older long-term
workers who accept a lower paying job after being laid off may be a way to keep
[older workers] in the workforce. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
In recognizing that Canada’s rural, remote and northern communities
differ – sometimes in quite fundamental ways – from urban communities, the
federal government supports communities of all sizes through various
departments, agencies, Crown corporations, funds and strategies. That said,
there are regional development agencies that support communities in particular
geographic areas.
When they appeared before the Committee during the consultations in
advance of the 2016 budget, witnesses that focused on rural, remote and
northern communities presented proposals in relation to the following subjects:
infrastructure; and workforce development and skills training.
-
[A] tax incentive or a capital cost allowance
rate of 55% should be provided to telecommunications carriers willing to
service interregional access roads [in rural and northern areas] … [to] enable
the geolocation of users in danger on our roads, as well as 911 emergency
services. (Agence interrégionale de développement des technologies de
l'information et des télécommunications)
-
[The government should invest] in projects that
connect rural, remote, [A]boriginal, and northern communities to the [green
infrastructure] grid. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
[The government should] protect … [Canada’s]
changing Arctic from the impacts of climate change, … [which includes] ensuring
the safety of marine transportation, building climate-resilient infrastructure,
and bringing renewable energy and energy efficiency projects to Canada's north.
(Green
Budget Coalition)
-
[The government should provide increased]
infrastructure in [the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami’s 53] communities in the Arctic,
[including funding for ports, airports, roads, social housing, clean energy
alternatives to diesel, and telecommunications connectivity.] (Inuit
Tapiriit Kanatami)
-
[The] government should
establish a remote and northern fund within the context of the proposed Canada
Infrastructure Bank designed on the highly successful Alaskan Industrial
Development and Export Authority, and also consider ways that fiscal policy can
level the playing field for companies that operate in remote and northern
regions. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should create] an investment tax
credit (10%) on all capital expenditures associated with remote and northern
mines … [and] a supplementary 15% investment tax credit on specified
infrastructure [related to mining in remote and northern regions]. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
Assuming the 10% investment tax credit as a
base, [the government should create] a mechanism for conditionally repayable
contributions related to infrastructure investments (in lieu of the 15%
investment tax credit) that would cover up to 25% of specified infrastructure
investments, with the option of pardoning the loan in exchange for public
ownership of that infrastructure at mine closure. (Mining Association of Canada)
-
[The government should increase] investments
into building and maintaining northern roads and high-quality Internet
connectivity. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
The [proposed] national housing strategy
[should] address housing for women and families in the northern territories. (YWCA
Canada)
-
[The government should provide] a four-year
annual investment of $25 million for initiatives to create more locally
accessible infrastructure and learning opportunities for students enrolled in
health care training programs and health care professionals already serving in
rural and remote communities. (Canadian
Nurses Association)
-
[The government should create] and fund a pilot
project to explore innovative distance learning options for upgrading and
skills development in rural and remote communities. (Colleges and Institutes
Canada)
At the federal level, a number of departments and agencies play a
role in protecting public safety and national security. In doing so, they
undertake a broad range of activities that includes policing, preventing crime,
listing terrorist entities under the Criminal Code, combatting terrorism
and terrorist financing, determining the admissibility of people and goods
entering Canada, protecting the country’s borders, detaining individuals who
may be a threat to the country, investigating threats to the security of
Canada, issuing deportation orders, and protecting electronic information and
communication, as required.
In relation to emergency preparedness, Canada’s Constitution gives
the provinces/territories primary responsibility for emergency management
within their boundaries. Consequently, the federal government generally assists
in specific situations, such as when requested to do so, when an emergency
crosses jurisdictional boundaries or occurs on federal lands, or when such
assistance would be in the national interest. In these types of
situations, the probability of an emergency occurring may be small, but the
potential impact could be significant.
In appearing before the Committee during the consultations ahead of
the 2016 budget, witnesses that were focused on safety, security and emergency
preparedness encouraged that changes be made in relation to the following
topics: contraband tobacco; airports; and violence reduction.
-
[The government should implement] greater
deterrence measures against the illicit [tobacco] market, including additional
resources for the [Royal Canadian Mounted Police], [the] Canad[a] Border
Services Agency, and other investigative bodies. (Canadian
Convenience Stores Association)
-
[F]ines levied against illegal tobacco
traffickers are very often not collected. This is an incredible source of lost
revenue … [and collection should be pursued] as a means of deterring
criminality while also recouping lost government revenue. (Canadian
Convenience Stores Association)
-
[The government should increase] funding to [the
Canadian Air Transport Security Authority]. (WestJet
Airlines Ltd.)
-
[The] revenue the
government collects from the air travellers security charge [should] be tied
directly to funding for screening services. (WestJet
Airlines Ltd.)
-
[The government should support] continued
streamlining of border processing and security screening at our airports. (WestJet
Airlines Ltd.)
-
Federal Budget 2016 [should] allocate funds to
support development of a National Action Plan on Violence Against Women,
including a minimum of $5 million to Status of Women Canada earmarked to
support … the participation of the violence against women sector in the
development process. Funding for implementation of the National Action Plan on
Violence Against Women should be planned for future years in this mandate. (YWCA
Canada)
-
Federal budget 2016 should restore the shelter
enhancement program at $10 million per year. (YWCA
Canada)
At the federal level, tourism is primarily supported by a national
tourism marketing entity that focuses on particular countries, such as
Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Mexico, South Korea,
the United Kingdom and the United States. From a federal
perspective, the investment in this entity helps to create direct and indirect
jobs, as well as to increase revenue and exports, among other outcomes. In
addition to its economic contributions, the tourism sector is important for
enhancing the country’s image and global reputation as an attractive vacation,
business and immigration destination, and showcases Canada’s historical,
geographic, cultural and artistic assets.
The Committee’s witnesses that spoke about tourism during the
consultations preceding the 2016 budget underlined the following issue: the
need for increased support for the sector.
-
[The government should adopt] a model, similar
to Manitoba, where 3% of [federal tax revenue] from tourism are allocated to
marketing by the Canadian Tourism Commission. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
Destination Canada's marketing budget [should]
be increased to $150 million … to compensate for the loss in buying power in
key markets attributed to currency exchange. (Tourism
Industry Association of Canada)
Under Canada’s Constitution, the federal government has sole
jurisdiction over the regulation of trade and commerce. In that context, it
leads the negotiation of international trade agreements and the management of
international trade dispute-resolution mechanisms. It also provides advice and
services to help Canadian businesses succeed abroad and fosters foreign direct
investment in Canada, among other activities.
Witnesses that spoke to the Committee about internal and
international trade and investment during the consultations in advance of the
2016 budget were focused on the following topics: trade and investment
agreements; supports for internal and international trade; and supply-managed
products.
-
[The government should expand its efforts in
relation to] global trade agreements such as [the Canada–European Union
Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, the Trans-Pacific Partnership and
the Canada–Korea Free Trade Agreement], just to name a few. (Carey
Bonnell, as an individual)
-
[The government should ratify] the Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement quickly. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[The government should
work towards] the completion of the respective legal and political processes
related to the Canada-Europe [Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade
Agreement], ... while simultaneously
completing technical discussions, so that the stated benefits of the agreement
can be realized in the form of commercially viable access for all exporters. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[The government] should allocate proper
resources to the functions in charge of negotiating free trade agreements,
specifically the team of negotiators working on the [Trans-Pacific Partnership
agreement], the [Canada–European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade
Agreement], the [World Trade
Organization] and the next generation of future agreements for Canada. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[The government] should allocate proper
resources to the functions in charge of implementing free trade agreements, and
maintaining and restoring market access ... [including] the [M]arket [A]ccess
[S]ecretariat, ... so it can continue its critical work of minimizing technical
barriers to trade and restoring real access for exporters. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[The government should] help the Canadian beef
sector compete against international beef competitors … [by ratifying the]
Trans‑Pacific Partnership … [and the Canada–European Union Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement, and by fully funding] the agriculture [M]arket
[A]ccess [S]ecretariat. (Canadian
Cattlemen's Association)
-
[The government should conclude] and implement
the Trans-Pacific Partnership … and the [Canada–European Union] Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should engage] with provinces to
mobilize resources to tackle internal trade barriers and enhance alignment with
Canada’s trading partners. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should undertake] a comprehensive
study on the benefits and costs of a free trade agreement with China. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should change trade] and foreign
investment policies … to ensure high levels of labour rights and environmental
standards … at home and around the world. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
The government should [be] negotiating
[corporate welfare] provisions in any new trade agreements that bind our
trading partners to similar restrictions on subsidizing private business (Canadian
Taxpayers Federation)
-
[The government should not ratify] the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, [the Canada–European Union
Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement or] other
deals that expand corporate power at the expense of jobs, wages, the
environment, and our democratic sovereignty. (Canadian
Union of Public Employees)
-
[The government should reform] the Investment
Canada Act … by changing the default [position] to the government needing to
prove detriment in order to reject a proposal [and by creating] a professional
dispute resolution body. (Centre
for the Study of Living Standards)
-
[The government should] begin the process of
[tariff] reductions, especially where … the duty in the U.S. is lower. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should] continue to pursue
bilateral and multilateral free trade agreements like [the Canada–European
Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and the Trans-Pacific
Partnership ], and to press for accelerated tax relief under those and future
agreements. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should not implement] a major
increase to the de minimis level. (Retail
Council of Canada)
-
[The government should ratify and implement the
Canada–European Union Comprehensive and Economic Trade Agreement and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership to promote] fair and reciprocal access to both
domestic and international markets … [in order] to stimulate investment, create
jobs, and drive long-term growth. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should be] taking a cautious
approach to the Trans Pacific Partnership, and [should commit] to fixing defects
in the agreement. (Unifor)
-
[The government] should allocate proper
resources to the network of Canadian representatives abroad, particularly the
embassies and agriculture trade commissioners ... [in order to] open doors
abroad and leverage relationships with relevant government and industry
influences. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[The government] should
... continue to support relevant ministers and senior-level officials in their
activities to build and cultivate relationships at a high level in foreign
markets. (Canadian Agri-Food Trade Alliance)
-
[There is a need for greater and more
diversified] market access … for the oil and gas business in Canada, but … also
[for] natural resources. (Canadian
Association of Petroleum Producers)
-
[The government should invest] in transportation
infrastructure and improving Canada’s border services and visa administration
to make it easier for businesses to get their products in and out of Canada. (Canadian
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should expand] promotion of the
Canadian [public-private partnership] model on trade missions and highlight the
expertise of provincial partners in these endeavours. (Canadian
Council for Public-Private Partnerships)
-
Ontario and Canada [need a diverse and robust
jobs strategy,] with clear actions to address labour market reform through … a
new coordinated trade agenda shared by federal, provincial, and municipal
governments. (Large
Urban Mayors' Caucus of Ontario)
-
[The government should ensure] that Export
Development Canada’s top priority is attracting and supporting investments in
Canadian-based, not foreign, factories. (Unifor)
-
[D]airy, poultry, and egg products [should] be
excluded from the duty relief and drawbacks program by making an exception
similar to the one that exists for fuel and plant equipment. This exclusion
should be included in the budget to ensure its timely implementation.(Canadian
Federation of Agriculture)
-
[T]he government should reject both [the Canada–
European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement’s] and [the
Trans-Pacific Partnership’s] allocation of parts of Canada's supply-managed
commodities' markets to imports and should address the loopholes to stop the
dumping of dairy protein products into Canadian markets. (National
Farmers Union)
The federal government has jurisdiction over aviation,
international and interprovincial rail and road transportation, and
international and coastal marine shipping. It also owns several bridges, as
well as national airports and ports systems, and owns and operates a number of
smaller facilities. Moreover, federal Crown corporations provide national rail
passenger services, as well as ferry services between the Province of Nova
Scotia and the Island of Newfoundland.
In relation to communication, Canada’s telecommunications system is
regulated at the federal level, although the statutory doctrine of forbearance
means that telecommunications services that are deemed to be operating in
sufficiently competitive industries will not be directly regulated. As well,
the federal government administers radiofrequency spectrum.
In speaking to the Committee about transportation
and communication issues during the consultations in relation to the 2016
budget, witnesses underscored the following topic: a national transportation
strategy; the air mode; the rail mode; the maritime mode; public broadcasting;
and connectivity.
-
[The government should develop] a national
transportation/utility corridor plan linking all urban centres and regions in
Canada, and support a comprehensive transportation and utility system. (Alberta
Chambers of Commerce)
-
[The government should] engage provinces,
territories, and municipalities without delay to … develop a national transit
strategy and a national affordable housing strategy for Canada. (Canadian
Labour Congress)
-
[The government should establish] infrastructure
funding criteria for … small airports on federal land. (Canadian
Airports Council)
-
[The government should provide stable and
predictable funding to] meet the needs of Canadian air travellers, [the
Canadian Air Transport Security Authority], airports, and air carriers … [and]
to support an internationally competitive level of service. (Canada
Airports Council)
-
[The government should]
make aviation cost structure a priority issue. (WestJet
Airlines Ltd.)
-
[The government should establish] a senior level
government-industry working group to take a close and focused look at the
competitiveness of commercial aviation in Canada. (WestJet
Airlines Ltd.)
-
[The government should] establish a mechanism to
develop additional producer car loading sites when requested by farmers, and
ensure that the Canadian Transportation Agency has the funding and the
resources it needs to enforce the statutory common carrier obligations of
Canadian railways under the Canada Transportation Act. (National
Farmers Union)
-
[The government should] capitalize on all levers
available to improve rail access in terms of frequency, modal choice, and cost
competitiveness. (Saskatchewan
Chamber of Commerce)
-
[The government should amend] the Competition
Act [to] allow port authorities to collaborate, with an eye toward maximizing
asset utilization to help ease the burden of uneven pressure and demands that
are exerted on ports by shifting global trade patterns. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[The government should streamline] the
procedures and approval process for supplementary letters patent amendments to
enable Canadian Port Authorities to meet market competition in leasing or
acquiring port lands. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[The government should
review] the current funding models available to ports, including the caps on
borrowing limits to provide enhanced financial flexibility to these entities. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[The government should] invest $1.9 billion in the rehabilitation of existing port
assets ... [and, of this amount,] $792 million is
needed for waterside infrastructure, $758 million for landside infrastructure
and $358 million for intermodal/other infrastructure. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[The government should design] or amend federal
trade support infrastructure programs so that they avoid embedding barriers to
eligibility for participation by smaller ports. This may be achieved with [a]
new ports program similar to Transport Canada’s Airports Capital Assistance
Program, and ... a long-term, dedicated no- or low-interest loan pool to
enable ports to address the rehabilitation and maintenance challenges of legacy
port infrastructure. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[The government should establish] a suitable, ongoing funding program to support
the ports’ security regime ... [with] an initial allocation of $10 million. (Association
of Canadian Port Authorities)
-
[A]dditional capital would be available for
infrastructure investment if spectrum licence fees, which are currently 37
times greater than those paid by American service providers on a per-subscriber
basis, were reduced. (Canadian
Wireless Telecommunications Association)
-
[T]he government [should] join the provinces and private
sector in investing in the next-generation 5G network. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The] government [should]
consider aggressive investment to drive broadband expansion in rural and remote
areas. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
-
[The government should create] an [Internet of
Things] Secretariat in order to have a comprehensive national discourse on the
Internet of Things and to identify opportunities and public policy gaps in
order to ensure Canada is positioned for leadership in the next stage in the
evolution of the digital world. (Information Technology Association of Canada)
Like a number of countries worldwide, Canada is
experiencing certain economic and fiscal challenges. With its relatively small
economy, reliance on trade and choice as a location for international
investment, Canada – and the country’s economic growth rate – are affected by
both domestic and international forces. In recent months, for example, Canada
has been affected by the decline in the global price of oil, the fall in the
relative value of the Canadian dollar and slower growth in some emerging
markets. Some of these forces have had positive effects on certain sectors,
regions or groups of Canadians, while others have had detrimental impacts.
Without doubt, the future will continue to hold
unforeseen events that will affect Canada’s economic and fiscal conditions, and
legislators should bear this unpredictability in mind when making public policy
decisions that affect economic growth and fiscal sustainability. Economic
growth enables greater prosperity for the nation, a higher standard of living
and quality of life for residents, and an enhanced ability for governments to
undertake tax and program spending in priority areas. Like economic growth,
fiscal sustainability provides greater flexibility, including to spend as the
need arises.
In this context, the Committee makes
recommendations about measures in relation to the following areas that would
support economic growth, fiscal sustainability, and the “wellness” of Canadians
and Canadian businesses: the federal debt-to-gross domestic product ratio;
trade and investment; taxation; employment; health; education; and
infrastructure.
Regarding the federal debt-to-gross domestic product ratio, trade
and investment, and taxation, the Committee recommends that:
Recommendation 1
The federal government take action to ensure that
the federal debt-to-gross domestic product ratio falls over the next four years
as a means of ensuring that the government has the capacity to engage in
significant fiscal stimulus measures in the event that the Canadian economy
enters a recession like that experienced in 2008–2009.
Recommendation 2
The federal government – in an effort to stimulate growth, increase
consumer choice and promote employment – work with the provinces/territories
with a view to accelerating efforts designed to reduce internal trade barriers,
including those that limit labour mobility.
Recommendation 3
The federal government protect Canada’s supply-managed sectors when
engaged in international trade negotiations.
Recommendation 4
The federal government ensure stability in Canada’s forest sector
by renegotiating the Softwood Lumber Agreement that the country has with the
United States.
Recommendation 5
The federal government, in the forthcoming budget,
include a robust plan designed to encourage private-sector business investment
in Canada. The plan should include incentives, regulatory improvements, and
certainty regarding taxation and other rules in relation to business
investment.
Recommendation 6
The federal government initiate a comprehensive review of Canada’s
tax laws with the objective of making the country’s taxation system simpler,
fairer and more efficient.
Recommendation 7
The federal government review the country’s taxation policy
regarding small business transfers with a view to facilitating the transfer of
such businesses within families.
Recommendation 8
The federal government not make any changes to the
current federal taxation regime and other rules as they apply to small
businesses, including professional businesses, incorporated as
Canadian-controlled private corporations.
In relation to such “wellness” issues as
employment, health, education, housing, infrastructure and research, all of
which have the ability to enhance the contribution that individuals can make to
their communities and their country, and businesses can make to the nation, the
Committee recommends that:
Recommendation 9
The federal government, in the immediate term,
address the negative impacts of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program on certain
sectors, including livestock and fish processing.
Recommendation 10
The federal government conduct a full review of the Temporary
Foreign Worker Program. This review should study the possibility of providing a
path to citizenship for those who desire to become Canadian citizens.
Recommendation 11
The federal government, on a priority basis, amend
the Employment Insurance Act to eliminate the 910-hour rule for new
entrants and to reverse the changes that were made in 2012. As well, the Act
should be amended to restore fairness to the governance, adjudication and
appeals processes.
Recommendation 12
The federal government reinstate the Pilot Project to Extend
Employment Insurance Benefits, which provided an additional five weeks of
benefits to beneficiaries residing in areas of high unemployment and reduced
the duration of time during which a beneficiary had no income or benefits.
Recommendation 13
The federal government review the structure and operation of the
Social Security Tribunal of Canada as it relates to the Canada Pension Plan – Disability
and Employment Insurance appeal processes, and ensure the establishment of a
system that meets the needs of Canadians.
Recommendation 14
The federal government direct the Labour Market Information Council
to develop and disseminate a list of specialized occupations for which skills
are in high demand.
Recommendation 15
The federal government, as a means of contributing to economic
growth, consider the development of a labour mobility tax measure that would
enable workers to deduct the direct costs of expenses they incur for employment
purposes.
Recommendation 16
The federal government, in negotiating a new health
care accord, ensure that it honours the principles of the Canada Health Act,
particularly regarding portability of coverage, ensures fair and equitable
access to health care based on need rather than on ability to pay, and includes
an accountability framework. As well, the government should pursue the
feasibility of a universal, national prescription drug program and enhanced
investments in home care.
Recommendation 17
The federal government commit to assisting the
provinces/territories and Indigenous governments in improving access to
psychological services. As well, the government should develop, and invest in,
a national suicide prevention plan. This plan should include a national youth
suicide prevention fund.
Recommendation 18
The federal government – in an effort to help young Canadians gain
the skills that they need to enter trades that are in high demand – work with
the provinces/territories, building trade unions and post-secondary
institutions to develop and/or expand pre-apprenticeship training programs.
Recommendation 19
The federal government increase support to the
provinces/territories for training and other employment measures provided to
unemployed Canadians.
Recommendation 20
The federal government work with the provinces/territories to
transform Canada’s post-secondary education system with a view to giving
more Canadian students access to affordable post-secondary education. As
part of these efforts, tax expenditures associated with ineffective federal
textbook and education tax credits should be reallocated to federal
non-repayable grants and to increase the income thresholds for grant
eligibility.
Recommendation 21
The federal government ensure that no graduate who has student
loans will be required to make any repayment of principal until he/she is
earning an income of at least $25,000 per year.
Recommendation 22
The federal government establish a national housing strategy. In developing
this strategy, the government should review the Housing First and Investment in
Affordable Housing initiatives, housing co-operatives and measures to support
first-time homebuyers.
Recommendation 23
The federal government undertake a review of the municipal
infrastructure funding formula to ensure that – like the permanent and indexed
Gas Tax Fund – funding is long term, predictable, sustainable and dedicated. As
well, the government should ensure that access
to funding occurs through streamlined and timely approval processes, and that
coordination and consistency between federal and provincial/territorial
infrastructure funding programs are greater.
Recommendation 24
The federal government make a commitment to spending on critical
infrastructure. The primary focus of such spending should be economically
strategic projects across Canada that have, as a key component, a net
contribution to – and support for – long-term economic growth.
Recommendation 25
The federal government work with the provinces/territories and
municipalities to develop and implement a national transit strategy. The
strategy should include predictable, sustainable and long-term funding for
transit infrastructure.
Recommendation 26
The federal government increase funding to the three federal
granting councils and to the research support fund. In particular, over the
next four years, funding should be increased to reach the councils’
inflation-adjusted 2007–2008 funding levels; thereafter, funding should be
indexed to inflation. In addition to an overall increase in funding, the
government should consider the proposals for substantive increases in research
funding that were highlighted during the consultation process in advance of the
2016 budget.
In addition to the aforementioned recommendations that the
Committee believes would support economic growth, fiscal sustainability and
“wellness,” measures could also be implemented to support specific groups of
individuals and the communities in which they live. In addition to the existing
and anticipated supports mentioned earlier, children, seniors,
Indigenous peoples and other economically disadvantaged groups could benefit
from measures that more specifically meet their needs; the same can be said in
relation to the communities in which they live, whether urban, rural, remote,
northern or having a predominant linguistic profile, such as Francophone.
Within this context, the Committee makes recommendations about these
specific groups and their communities.
Regarding children, seniors, Indigenous peoples and other
economically disadvantaged groups, the Committee recommends that:
Recommendation 27
The federal government introduce
a streamlined, more generous and better targeted Canada child benefit. As well,
the government should work with the provincial/territorial governments with a
view to ensuring that they do not deduct the amount of the benefit from social
assistance payments or include the amount of the benefit when determining total
income for purposes of means-tested benefits.
Recommendation 28
The federal government ensure that age 65 continues to be the age
at which Old Age Security payments can begin to be made.
Recommendation 29
The federal government work with the provinces/territories to
enhance the Canada Pension Plan.
Recommendation 30
The federal government increase the amount of Guaranteed Income
Supplement benefits by establishing a “top-up” for unattached seniors.
Recommendation 31
The federal government, in seeking to ensure that the water in
Indigenous communities is safe, consider funding for initiatives that have been
successful in improving access to clean, safe drinking water. In particular,
such initiatives as the Safe Water Project – a First Nations initiative that
has been successful in ending boil water advisories – should be considered.
Recommendation 32
The federal government improve
the educational prospects of Indigenous children by investing in on-reserve
schools. To achieve this goal, the government should focus on better learning
environments, reforms to the current on-reserve education system, and greater
financial support for cultural and language programs.
Recommendation 33
The federal government support Indigenous learners through
providing additional annual funding to the Post-Secondary Student Support
Program. The government should ensure that funding is sufficient to meet the
growing demand for support under this program, and should specifically fund
post-secondary institutions that are Indigenous-operated.
Recommendation 34
The federal government encourage the implementation of Treaty Land
Entitlements (Indigenous economic zones) in urban areas to facilitate Indigenous
economic and social development.
Recommendation 35
The federal government, in light of the recent findings by the
Canadian Human Rights Tribunal of discrimination in funding of on-reserve child
welfare, consider increasing the funding for First Nations child protection and
child welfare.
Recommendation 36
The federal government remove the 2% cap on funding for First
Nations education, and link funding to the needs and population growth.
Recommendation 37
The federal government, in cooperation with the
provinces/territories and First Nations communities, implement the
recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on a priority basis.
Recommendation 38
The federal government undertake a longitudinal study and implement
a pilot project consistent with the concept of a guaranteed income.
As noted earlier, communities would benefit from measures that meet
their specific needs. From this perspective, the Committee makes
recommendations in relation to the environment and issues that affect
communities, including those that are rural and/or have a large Francophone or
Acadian presence. In particular, the Committee recommends that:
Recommendation 39
The federal government provide incentives for Canadian firms to
develop and adopt green technologies, and support the development of emerging
green technology manufacturing industries in Canada. Moreover, the government
should invest in green infrastructure projects, such as clean energy
generation, interprovincial energy grids, public transit and waste treatment
facilities.
Recommendation 40
The federal government implement greater deterrence measures in
relation to the illicit tobacco market, including additional resources for
appropriate federal investigative agencies. Furthermore, the government should
ensure that fines levied and penalties applied against illegal tobacco
traffickers are collected, and that relevant laws are enforced.
Recommendation 41
The federal government, consistent with its fiscal
plan, provide targeted support to those Canadian regions that are experiencing
the most severe effects of the low value of the Canadian dollar, low oil and
other commodity prices, and slower growth in emerging markets. In doing
so, the government should focus on supports that would
have an immediate impact in creating jobs and assisting those who have lost
their jobs.
Recommendation 42
The federal government implement 700 megahertz public safety
broadband network pilot programs in local communities to build systems that
would allow public safety users to test the applications and to identify the
solutions that could be used to improve the efficiency and efficacy of
emergency services.
Recommendation 43
The federal government, in order to encourage investment in
broadband and wireless networks in rural Canada, work with eligible
telecommunication companies to create a rural broadband program. To fund the
program, the government should consider changing the capital cost allowance
rates for classes 8, 42 and 46, which address communications networks
equipment, including broadband networks.
Recommendation 44
The federal government, in 2016–2017, release the funding in
relation to the Roadmap for Canada’s Official Languages, and indicate its
intention to index the funding that it invests in organizations and
institutions throughout Francophone and Acadian communities.
Finally, like specific groups of individuals and communities, some
of Canada’s sectors would better prosper – and contribute to the country’s
growth and prosperity –
if they were to receive specific supports. To this end, the Committee makes
recommendations that address the particular needs of the following sectors:
agriculture; tourism; arts; automotive; air; and forestry. Specifically, the
Committee recommends that:
Recommendation 45
The federal government implement a dairy
processing modernization program to support Canada’s dairy sector. The
program’s focus should include new processing capacity and capabilities, new
product development and commercialization, plant modernization and adaptation,
and training for a highly skilled dairy processing workforce.
Recommendation 46
The federal government encourage proactive investment in future
risk mitigation and competitiveness in the agricultural sector through changes
to the Agri-Invest Program that would allow account holders to withdraw
producer contributions (Fund 1) without first withdrawing taxable government
contributions (Fund 2).
Recommendation 47
The federal government examine reinstatement of the Kingston Prison
Farm program and consider prison farms at additional locations.
Recommendation 48
The federal government provide Western Canadian grains and oilseed
farmers with a full and transparent accounting of the disposition of the
Canadian Wheat Board’s assets since the Marketing Freedom for Grain Farmers
Act received Royal Assent, and of the effects on the grain handling and
marketing system since that time.
Recommendation 49
The federal government consider re-establishing the Prairie Farm
Rehabilitation Program. In this regard, the government should begin by
reinstating funding for two initiatives: the publicly owned Community Pasture
Program; and the Prairie Shelterbelt Program and Indian Head Tree Nursery.
Recommendation 50
The federal government provide additional funding to the Canadian
Food Inspection Agency.
Recommendation 51
The federal government expand its efforts to attract international
tourism by increasing the marketing budget of the Canadian Tourism Commission.
Recommendation 52
The federal government provide the Canadian Air Transport Security
Authority with the additional funding it needs to provide screening services at
Canadian airports that are comparable to those at international airports.
Recommendation 53
The federal government provide increased funding for
CBC/Radio-Canada, the Canada Council for the Arts, Telefilm Canada and the
National Film Board.
Recommendation 54
The federal government develop a national auto strategy that would
ensure a timely and coordinated approach to maintaining current, and attracting
new, assembly plants. As well, the strategy should facilitate innovation within
the sector – including among auto parts suppliers – through tangible and
effective supports.
Recommendation 55
The federal government, in implementing the National Airports
Policy and infrastructure policy, ensure that small National Airports System
airports are not unfairly excluded from eligibility for infrastructure funds.
Recommendation 56
The federal government strengthen its commitment to Canada’s forest
sector by supporting the manufacturing, innovation and promotion of forest
products.
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