FINA Committee Report
If you have any questions or comments regarding the accessibility of this publication, please contact us at accessible@parl.gc.ca.
List of Recommendations
As a result of their deliberations committees may make recommendations which they include in their reports for the consideration of the House of Commons or the Government. Recommendations related to this study are listed below.
The House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance recommends that the Government of Canada, in accordance with the powers of each jurisdiction:
Recommendation 1
Present, as soon as possible, a plan to return to a balanced budget that includes several scenarios to adjust for economic conditions.
Recommendation 2
Maintain a gross debt-to-GDP ratio following the trajectory in the 2021 Economic and Fiscal Update and, should economic growth and/or fiscal efforts permit, revise these targets downward.
Recommendation 3
Factor in population aging in the provinces and territories in the formula for calculating the Canada Health Transfer.
Recommendation 4
Provide, on a regular basis, an update on the state of public finances, as recommended by the Parliamentary Budget Officer, including making it a practice to provide economic updates in the fall.
Recommendation 5
Amend the legislation to change the release date of the public accounts.
Recommendation 6
Conduct a systematic review of tax and budget measures in order to redirect efforts and funding away from less effective measures and toward the most effective and efficient policy instruments.
Recommendation 7
Undertake a public review to identify federal tax expenditures, loopholes and other tax avoidance mechanisms that particularly benefit high incomes, wealthy individuals and large corporations and make recommendations to eliminate or restrict these.
Recommendation 8
Examine additional ways for the federal government to reduce wealth and income inequality through the tax system, while generating additional revenues to pay for improved public services.
Recommendation 9
Address growing income inequality and generate revenue for poverty reduction programing by eliminating tax loopholes, closing tax havens, taxing extreme wealth, and implementing excess profit tax focused on corporate pandemic windfalls.
Recommendation 10
Amend legislation to remove taxpayer signature requirements for the T183 and RC71 in a manner that is consistent with the Department of Finance Canada’s 2022 legislative proposals as part of Budget 2022 enabling legislation.
Recommendation 11
Expedite permanent approval for e-signature use on all remaining forms that are necessary to meet tax filing requirements.
Recommendation 12
Initiate discussions with the Quebec government to reach a practical and innovative agreement on the matter of a single tax return, focused on the taxpayers’ best interests.
Recommendation 13
Proceed with its General Anti-Avoidance Rule consultation immediately.
Recommendation 14
Respect the spirit of Bill C-208, An Act to amend the Income Tax Act (transfer of small business or family farm or fishing corporation), by holding consultations if there are amendments, as promised, in order to facilitate intergenerational transfers.
Recommendation 15
Undertake a broad review of how the federal government could significantly increase the amount, detail, quality and timeliness of information publicly available on the financial conditions of individuals, corporations and trusts, including ownership, assets, income and taxes paid.
Recommendation 16
Continue to improve corporate transparency and make public the country-by-country financial reports of large transnational corporations.
Recommendation 17
Amend the Income Tax Act to ensure the continuation of the tax-deferral program.
Recommendation 18
Consider how federal and provincial governments could, in a post-pandemic world, more effectively deliver the many benefits that are delivered through the Canada Revenue Agency’s tax and benefit system infrastructure, including the introduction of free automatic tax filing.
Recommendation 19
Fund the Canada Revenue Agency so that it is equipped to address high-profile tax loopholes, while maintaining strong leadership at the Organisation for Economic Co‑operation and Development for a more ambitious and fairer application of the base erosion and profit shifting initiative for developing countries.
Recommendation 20
Provide the Canada Border Services Agency and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency the resources and training they need to adequately enforce dairy import regulations at the Canadian border, and to conduct audits of foreign farms and processors to ensure all imported products are produced according to Canadian production standards.
Recommendation 21
Implement community benefits agreements or workforce development agreements on federally procured infrastructure and construction projects.
Recommendation 22
Support the modernization of Employment Insurance (EI), whose limitations were laid bare during the pandemic, through social dialogue with the main stakeholders in the labour market.
Recommendation 23
Contribute on an ongoing basis to EI and make improvements such as a higher replacement rate or a minimum amount on what the unemployed receive such as the $500 per week provided under the Canada Emergency Response Benefit and the Canadian Recovery Benefit and a lower threshold for hours of entry into the Employment Insurance program.
Recommendation 24
Make improvements to EI by increasing flexibility in the program and recognizing the uniqueness of the construction labour force.
Recommendation 25
Develop a comprehensive plan on how to better integrate the self-employed into the EI system.
Recommendation 26
Fund the forecasted actuarial deficit in the EI account through a payment from the consolidated fund.
Recommendation 27
Substantially increase amounts for labour market development agreements.
Recommendation 28
Develop an action plan to promote retaining and hiring experienced workers that addresses awareness, training and labour market re-entry assistance.
Recommendation 29
Introduce a tax credit for experienced workers.
Recommendation 30
Streamline the Labour Market Impact Assessment process by reducing the requirements for applicants, lowering the fees per application, using modern telecommunication tools and ending the duplication of responsibilities between the two governments. The process should be streamlined and its outcome more predictable for in-demand jobs.
Recommendation 31
Ensure the sustainability of the agreement between the federal government and Quebec on relaxing Temporary Foreign Worker Program requirements.
Recommendation 32
Process immigration applications and issue work permits faster so that applications from candidates selected by Quebec are processed as quickly as those from other provinces.
Recommendation 33
Make changes to the immigration system to respond better and more quickly to labour shortages in residential construction through permanent immigration solutions.
Recommendation 34
Establish coordinating officers to organize and dispatch labour resources in areas with high rates of seasonal employment.
Recommendation 35
Increase the Canada Workers Benefit and expand it to people with no employment income.
Recommendation 36
Increase the maximum weekly earnings threshold for caregiving benefits.
Recommendation 37
Extend the EI benefit period to a maximum of 52 weeks for caregivers who must leave work temporarily to care for a family member.
Recommendation 38
Offer a three-year enhancement to the Ready, Willing and Able inclusive workplace program.
Recommendation 39
Commit to a fair transition to better offset the negative effects of perceived labour and labour market changes and to adequately finance the necessary measures to this end.
Recommendation 40
Enact a national post-secondary education strategy in cooperation with provinces and territories, and commit—in support of this strategy—an additional $3 billion through transparent transfer payments to provinces and territories.
Recommendation 41
Allocate $300 million per year, over two years, to improve on-campus mental health services. The fund, modeled after the Post-Secondary Institutions Strategic Investment Fund, would allow post-secondary institutions to apply for federal grants to improve on‑campus mental health services.
Recommendation 42
Extend eligibility for Canada Student Grants to graduate students.
Recommendation 43
Increase funding for student scholarship programs by $120 million on a recurring basis, thus re‑establishing the importance of student scholarships within the overall envelope of the Canada Research Granting Agencies.
Recommendation 44
Maintain current funding levels to Canada Student Grants past the 2022‑2023 school year, permanently doubling grant maximums for eligible students from $3,000 to $6,000 per academic year.
Recommendation 45
Ensure workers enjoy the full benefits of the recovery from the pandemic by ensuring collaboration between governments, educators and employers on projects that will create and maintain good jobs, are good for the environment, are inclusive, and address socio‑economic inequality.
Recommendation 46
Commit to working with the Canadian Colleges for a Resilient Recovery to train up to 50,000 Canadians across the country to develop the specialized skills needed to work in high-growth sectors of the low-carbon economy.
Recommendation 47
Provide funding for training and skills programs at college, cégeps, institutions, and polytechnics in the form of tuition support, curriculum development, indigenous and youth support programs and direct funding support to the Canadian Colleges for a Resilient Recovery in Budget 2022.
Recommendation 48
Support a green and inclusive recovery by ensuring that the physical and digital infrastructure of colleges are included within the scope of national infrastructure investments, and contributing up to:
- $5 billion to make college campuses more sustainable, accessible, advance innovation and improve learning spaces for Indigenous students; and
- $1.4 billion to upgrade colleges’ digital infrastructure, technology and cybersecurity systems; integrate simulation and virtual/augmented reality in hands-on courses; and provide digital support services for student success.
Recommendation 49
Accelerate sustainability initiatives at colleges and in communities by investing $100 million over 5 years in a new network of 50 College Sustainability Centres across Canada to leverage college assets such as industry and community partnerships, as well as campus infrastructure to meet Canada’s net zero goals.
Recommendation 50
Boost Canada’s talent pool through the development and implementation of permanent residency streams for international students graduating from colleges and equip colleges to improve labour market outcomes of international students by providing additional support throughout their transition to Canada.
Recommendation 51
Ensure Canada remains competitive in its ability to recruit, retain, and reward workers in a new post-pandemic economy that is increasingly distributed, global, and digitally dependent by establishing reliable pathways to permanent residency for high-growth company recruitment, accelerating support for upskilling and re-skilling programs in Canada and establishing a $40 million fund to develop national micro-credentials for key labour market sectors.
Recommendation 52
Strengthen Canada’s technical/trades training capacity by investing $50 million to develop over 1,000 shared online resources for college technical/trades programs available on a national collaborative platform.
Recommendation 53
Continue to invest in people through apprenticeship loans and grants and make improvements to the Union Training and Innovation Program to better equip training centres to meet new challenges and demands in the labour market.
Recommendation 54
Increase Canada’s commitment to international development to support skills training and applied research for the transition to a net zero world.
Recommendation 55
Invest $57 million in core community mental health services and programs in order to ensure that all Canadians have access to the care they need, no matter where they live.
Recommendation 56
Increase investments in supportive housing for people with mental illnesses and substance use problems in order to ensure that they have safe places to live as they recover.
Recommendation 57
Support the health and well-being of Canadians through funding of ParticipACTION for $50 million over five years.
Recommendation 58
Establish a federal interdepartmental task force on the promotion of physical activity, working with provinces, territories, and external stakeholders on developing a new national physical activity strategy.
Recommendation 59
Review how the prices of patented drugs are set, including through a reform of the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board.
Recommendation 60
Work collaboratively with patients, caregivers, and provincial and territorial governments to develop national care standards for home care and long-term care, regulated by the same principles as the Canada Health Act.
Recommendation 61
Establish new national standards to ensure that seniors receive universal, public, comprehensive and portable health care, and ensure that new federal funding to provinces is subject to these conditions.
Recommendation 62
Require provinces and territories to offer the same public health care to international students as is provided to domestic residents, in accordance with its duties under the Canada Health Act.
Recommendation 63
Establish a federal workplace strategy for health care workers.
Recommendation 64
Establish a responsibility point within government, accountable to a designated minister, with staff, expertise and other resources required to develop options for a national income security program that is federally led and consistent with basic income principles, especially unconditionality.
Recommendation 65
Engage with the Government of Prince Edward Island, as it has requested, and invite other jurisdictions (such as Newfoundland and Labrador, where similar basic income modelling has recently been done), to design a national basic income program. Such a program could use a Federal—Provincial-Territorial framework for transitioning to a new system, similar to collaboration that ushered in the national child benefit system in the 1990s.
Recommendation 66
Engage with stakeholders in developing design options, including former basic income pilot participants, recipients of other income security programs, and people with research, policy design, and implementation expertise on basic income type programs.
Recommendation 67
Create a system for income support eligibility determination and benefit distribution for marginalized people outside of the personal income tax system.
Recommendation 68
Implement a Canada Emergency Response Benefit repayment amnesty for everyone living below or near the low-income measure.
Recommendation 69
Address the growing inequalities laid bare and exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic by increasing funding for public services that benefit everyone.
Recommendation 70
Invest substantially in the base amount to allow the Canada child benefit to continue to reduce child poverty rates across the country.
Recommendation 71
Adopt more ambitious poverty reduction targets and invest in reducing overall poverty, and poverty in marginalized communities, by 50% between 2015‑2025 based on the after-tax low-income status of census families based on Census Family Low Income Measure using annual T1 Family File data.
Recommendation 72
Speed up the design and implementation of the new federal disability benefit.
Recommendation 73
Create a federal disability benefit for children.
Recommendation 74
Create a skilled trades workforce mobility tax deduction to allow skilled trades workers to deduct work-related travel costs when these costs are not covered by their employer.
Recommendation 75
Eliminate the capital gains tax on donations of shares in private corporations or real property to charities.
Recommendation 76
Make the caregiver tax credit refundable.
Recommendation 77
Adopt a progressive excise tax system, similar to the U.S. Craft Beverage Modernization and Tax Reform Act, to help small Canadian distillers (and other craft alcohol producers) compete in Canada and abroad.
Recommendation 78
Increase Old Age Security benefits by 10% for all seniors eligible for the program.
Recommendation 79
Extend the Old Age Security benefits of deceased individuals by three months for the surviving spouse.
Recommendation 80
Revise the Old Age Security indexing method to account for wage growth in Canada.
Recommendation 81
Increase the Guaranteed Income Supplement by at least $50 per month for all seniors.
Recommendation 82
Increase the income threshold below which Guaranteed Income Supplement benefit amounts are not reduced.
Recommendation 83
Release the funds that have been earmarked in the Economic and Fiscal Update 2021 to repay seniors who lost a portion or all of their Guaranteed Income Supplement benefits as a result of receiving Canada Emergency Recovery Benefit.
Recommendation 84
Review the limits, conditions and tax implications of converting RRSPs to RRIFs to ensure that experienced workers who wish to continue working or return to the workforce are not penalized.
Recommendation 85
Set up a pension fund insurance plan for federally regulated retirement plans.
Recommendation 86
Introduce a tax credit to incentivize businesses to make investments in cybersecurity and data protection.
Recommendation 87
Modernize the Accelerated Investment Incentive to include advanced technology asset classes such as software, machine learning and artificial intelligence.
Recommendation 88
Consider implementing a rural development tax credit similar to the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit to other regions, notably North Shore in Québec.
Recommendation 89
Follow through on its commitment in the last budget to ensure that all sectors, including the web giants, pay their fair share of Canadian profits, while maintaining strong leadership in building a global agreement on cross-border digital taxation.
Recommendation 90
Make it impossible for companies to repatriate tax-free dividends from tax havens.
Recommendation 91
Exclude aircraft from the manufacturing tax in Budget 2021 and that its implementation be delayed until its impact on the industry can be more accurately assessed.
Recommendation 92
Allow commercial tenants to receive the Canada Emergency Rent Subsidy for all months that they have been eligible for it since the start of the pandemic and for which they were unable to receive Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance.
Recommendation 93
Increase the loan forgiveness portion for all government-backed business loans and extend the Canada Emergency Business Account repayment deadlines.
Recommendation 94
Allow small businesses that created their companies during the pandemic to access COVID-19 programs, while doing verifications beforehand to prevent illegitimate requests.
Recommendation 95
Adjust its investment programs to reflect the needs of the aerospace industry, including revising the Strategic Innovation Fund and the Aerospace Regional Recovery Initiative, and provide better coverage for the aerospace industry through the Hardest-Hit Business Recovery Program.
Recommendation 96
Update the current narrative used by government around travel, eliminate barriers to travel, correct the current perception consumers now have about traveling to and from Canada, and provide a clear timeline for removing travel restrictions, including removing all testing and isolation requirements and blanket travel advisories.
Recommendation 97
Rebuild consumer confidence and brand Canada as a premier travel destination by increasing efforts to market and promote Canada's exceptional offerings to the world. This includes investments to create new initiatives that support the building of destination infrastructure and the development of new products.
Recommendation 98
Modify the Tourism and Hospitality Recovery Program to allow all seasonable businesses to access the program.
Recommendation 99
Ensure the Canada Border Services Agency has enough resources to effectively accommodate the COVID‑19 requirements of travellers crossing the Alaska‑Yukon border.
Recommendation 100
Ensure travellers have access to the Internet in remote locations so the requirement ArriveCAN app can be accessed, such as the Skagway-Fraser border.
Recommendation 101
Develop a comprehensive pan-Canadian tourism workforce strategy that complements new investments in marketing and other recovery efforts.
Recommendation 102
Conduct in consultation with Tourism HR Canada, a comprehensive review of all current Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada programs to identify opportunities and align policies that will work for tourism, and to create a dedicated immigration pathway for the sector.
Recommendation 103
Provide direct assistance to farmers to help them accelerate the adoption of practices that promote soil health, develop a Canada-wide soil health strategy, develop a Canada‑wide network to share information and resources related to soil health, finance research into cost‑effectiveness to identify the economic benefits of best soil health practices on various production systems, and provide funding for training and hiring 1,000 additional advisory services officers.
Recommendation 104
Maintain all existing business risk management programs and enhance them so that they are better tailored to emerging risks.
Recommendation 105
Implement a new program, called Agri-green, to compensate farmers who meet certain environmental requirements or apply certain practices.
Recommendation 106
Provide a cost-sharing program for organic certification and a permanent funding to review and maintain Canada’s organic standards.
Recommendation 107
Create a limited statutory deemed trust, similar to the U.S. Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act, support needed liquidity and protect produce sellers during bankruptcy.
Recommendation 108
Improve service standards and processing times for applications under the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program and the Agricultural Stream of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, including by working with source countries and implementing measures to further streamline the collection of biometrics and visa and work permit application processes.
Recommendation 109
Provide funding and resources at the federal level to support expanded efforts to reduce food loss and waste throughout the supply chain.
Recommendation 110
Continue to prioritize Labour Market Impact Assessments for key occupations related to the agriculture and agri-food sectors, as well as for work permits.
Recommendation 111
Provide a stable and predictable budget for agronomic and agri-environmental research and innovation.
Recommendation 112
Accelerate recovery, growth and competitiveness by expanding participation in Canada’s research and development ecosystem through an additional and permanent investment of $40 million per year in college applied research capacity and the delivery of innovation solutions.
Recommendation 113
Increase the capital supply to support budding companies after start-up and before they become attractive to venture capital funds.
Recommendation 114
Introduce a production modernization tax credit to adopt existing technologies and significantly improve business productivity as a complement to the Scientific Research and Experimental Development tax credit.
Recommendation 115
Bolster intellectual property generation in Canada by allowing IP-related costs to be recognized as eligible Scientific Research and Experimental Development expenses for income tax purposes.
Recommendation 116
Establish a government action plan with the objective of fostering the commercialization of innovative technology in Canada and around the world.
Recommendation 117
Develop a strategy for the manufacturing sector to drive investment in advanced manufacturing and make products more technologically sophisticated, thereby enhancing their value, and including intangible assets to prepare for a digital shift in the manufacturing economy.
Recommendation 118
Invest in Quebec’s existing pharmaceutical infrastructure by providing support for local industry, increasing the stockpile of critical drugs, and enhancing tax credits and/or subsidies for modernizing or expanding manufacturing facilities in Quebec.
Recommendation 119
Support the local manufacturing of medical products.
Recommendation 120
Build on the national quantum and artificial intelligence strategies and drive innovation in advanced technologies by making targeted investments in initiatives at the intersection of commercial opportunity and research excellence; where there is a strong potential for Canadian companies to capture a significant share of resulting high-value activity.
Recommendation 121
Work with industry and stakeholders to develop a long-term national aerospace strategy to ensure that Canada can reach its full potential in addressing the global generational challenges we face. Key elements would include a:
- technology roadmap for aerospace sustainability;
- defence industrial strategy;
- cutting-edge air mobility strategy;
- space policy and plan;
- workforce and skills development programs; and
- plans for SME supply chain resilience and competitiveness.
Recommendation 122
Make significant investments in the certification and regulation of Canada’s aircraft through Transport Canada Civil Aviation and in the National Research Council of Canada’s proposed national flight research centre.
Recommendation 123
Make the financial assistance delivered to the aerospace industry in the 2021‑2022 budget permanent and ensure that it is delivered quickly and with the least amount of red tape possible for recipients.
Recommendation 124
Champion Canada’s mining advantage by supporting electrification at mining locations across the country and promoting sustainable mining development and operations.
Recommendation 125
Implement a first patent program or patent incentive program similar to Quebec’s Passeport Innovation, to cover both the initial searching and establishment of an intellectual property strategy as well as the drafting and filing of—at least—a first patent application on an invention.
Recommendation 126
Fund the stimulus program directed to Canadian small and medium-sized enterprises for brand protection strategy to cover costs associated with clearance searches and trademark applications.
Recommendation 127
Implement legislation or policy mandating that all federal government subsidies and research grants must earmark a small percentage of the funds to be used on intellectual property strategic advice and professional services to ensure our public investments in Canadian innovations are protected and commercialized by Canadian companies.
Recommendation 128
Maximize the benefits of COVID-related research and development and address leakage of publicly funded intellectual property by expanding Canada’s Intellectual Property Strategy.
Recommendation 129
Promote the proactive nature of the communities and use the instincts developed during the COVID-19 pandemic. For example, by promoting short consumption cycles, local purchasing, and ensuring that entrepreneurs can develop other types of practices and clienteles while developing other daily practices.
Recommendation 130
Consider some decentralization of interventions by the Department of Finance so that the agencies and organizations represented by la Société d'aide au développement des collectivités et Centre d'aide aux entreprises could play a more significant and obvious role in our communities.
Recommendation 131
Move forward with open banking and implement the recommendations that came out of the advisory committee on open banking, with clear timelines for legislative implementation, accompanied by the designation of a government lead to shepherd the process.
Recommendation 132
Deliver on the election promise to cut the average overall cost of interchange fees for merchants and ensure that these cuts go primarily to small and medium-sized businesses that currently pay the highest fees.
Recommendation 133
Reform the Code of Conduct for the credit and debit card industry in Canada to improve the transparency and consistency of fees charged by credit card companies, and introduce an independent dispute resolution process.
Recommendation 134
Prohibit credit card companies from charging fees on sales taxes or find a way to offset the additional costs to small and medium-sized enterprises by reimbursing them for these amounts.
Recommendation 135
Continue working with provincial governments on financial sector governance, specifically in relation to consumer-directed finance, retail payments, privacy and consumer protection.
Recommendation 136
Adopt a clear, thought-out action plan to achieve its 100% zero-emission vehicle sales target by 2035.
Recommendation 137
Develop a Canadian electric mobility strategy to achieve Canada’s climate and electrification targets, with considerations for rural and remote communities.
Recommendation 138
Renew and expand eligibility for the Incentives for Zero-Emission Vehicles Program for individuals, businesses and vehicle fleets by restoring funding to the program and increasing the base manufacturer’s suggested retail price threshold for eligible light-duty vehicles to $60,000, with a cap of $69,999.
Recommendation 139
Create a green version of the Retire Your Ride program that is focused on Canada’s long‑term climate goals, meaning that the funds should only be available for the purchase of new or used zero-emission vehicles, transit passes and active transportation equipment (e.g., bicycles, electric or otherwise). This program should be stackable with other incentive programs.
Recommendation 140
Provide targeted incentives for the research and development of heavy and commercial electric vehicles, including the development of electric ambulances.
Recommendation 141
Support the development and increase economies of scale in the Canadian zero-emission vehicle supply chain to accelerate the reduction in battery prices and zero-emission vehicle technologies by leveraging research and development, Strategic Innovation Fund, resource exploration and other economic development funding.
Recommendation 142
Publish a roadmap for eliminating ineffective fossil fuel subsidies by 2025 with a robust definition to meet Canada’s G20 and G7 commitments, adopt robust legislation and a fair transition plan that supports workers and communities that depend on fossil fuel development, and reorient public finance in line with Canada’s climate change commitments.
Recommendation 143
Support energy workers impacted by the transition to a green economy—particularly workers in the oil and gas sector by ensuring that retraining opportunities or relocation supports are available and by introducing a sector-specific task force that includes labour, industry stakeholders and government representatives to assess the industry’s needs during this pivotal transition period.
Recommendation 144
Develop and implement a national electrification framework to help Canada reach its decarbonization targets.
Recommendation 145
Assess Canada’s climate change adaptation needs in the energy sector and establish an Energy Climate Adaptation Fund.
Recommendation 146
Prioritize discussions on modernizing electricity regulatory frameworks with provinces and territories.
Recommendation 147
Coordinate and complement energy efficient financing and incentive programs.
Recommendation 148
Implement a coherent, green, inclusive industrial strategy with enough funding to meet post‑pandemic challenges, spur economic recovery and build a resilient and inclusive economy in the long term. This strategy must include concrete ideas, such as:
- investing in the energy transition and the fight against climate change;
- consolidating operations in existing industries, strengthening secondary and tertiary processing operations and adopting procurement strategies that shorten supply chains; and
- investing in infrastructure projects, including those with a social mission, and supporting businesses through targeted and conditional financial assistance for job creation, better salary conditions, environmental progress, as well as Canada-wide investments.
Recommendation 149
Adopt a national circular economy strategy by working with the provinces, territories and municipalities.
Recommendation 150
Provide permanent funding to reach Canada’s protected areas targets, to effectively manage terrestrial and marine protected areas, and to support Indigenous-led conservation and stewardship, as well as to support local conservation-focused economies. This would include support for protected areas established and/or managed by the federal government as well as by Indigenous, provincial, territorial, and municipal governments, and other partners.
Recommendation 151
Invest in a Pan-Canadian Approach to Fresh Water with shared responsibility between federal departments and other levels of government.
Recommendation 152
Work closely with industry to adopt a systemic approach to finding ways of reducing plastic waste. These solutions must be evidence-based and involve a combination of education, innovation and investment in key infrastructure.
Recommendation 153
Expand the size and scope of the Natural Heritage Conservation Program to propel Canada toward becoming nature positive by 2030 and carbon neutral by 2050.
Recommendation 154
Contribute $19.44 million to the Great Lakes Fishery Commission, which would fulfill a binational promise and help improve the fishery.
Recommendation 155
Establish a new high-level office of environmental justice, learning from a model already in place in the United States since the early 1990s.
Recommendation 156
Invest $200 million to withstand the direct and indirect impacts of climate change through targeted strengthening of individual and household resilience capacity.
Recommendation 157
Appoint an advisor on national disaster resilience to scan for future tail-risk events, such as earthquakes, pandemics, cyber attacks and catastrophic floods, and to advise on the measures needed to prepare Canadians and their governments and businesses properly.
Recommendation 158
Extend and enhance its recent work to reduce the risk and impact of flooding across Canada.
Recommendation 159
Expand the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund to $4 billion, and from this amount dedicate $500 million to natural infrastructure solutions.
Recommendation 160
Establish the Canadian Centre for Climate Information and Analytics as a first priority under the Sustainable Finance Action Council to help public and private sector organizations assess, disclose and manage escalating physical risks.
Recommendation 161
Fund and prioritize the completion of the National Climate Adaptation Strategy, ensuring it protects people and infrastructure from the threat of increased flooding, wildfire, heat, drought and other extreme weather events.
Recommendation 162
Implement the measures requested by the Coalition for a Climate Proof Canada to further protect Canadians, create a culture of preparedness and build a country that is resilient to natural disasters.
Recommendation 163
Renew the mandates of the institutions created by the First Nations Fiscal Management Act to provide greater fiscal authority to First Nations, improve financial and statistical management frameworks, and support more First Nations.
Recommendation 164
Supports amendments to the First Nations Fiscal Management Act to improve First Nations access to capital, facilitate the exercise of First Nations jurisdiction and build capacity and resources for innovation and provide decision-making power to First Nations.
Recommendation 165
Amend the First Nations Fiscal Management Act to enhance the mandates of the institutions created by that Act, support the publication of more First Nations Fiscal Management Act statistical information, and provide statutory funding for these institutions.
Recommendation 166
Support the development of an Indigenous land title and registry system framework for additions to reserve as advanced by the First Nations Lands Management Board.
Recommendation 167
Deliver on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action, including those directed to postsecondary institutions by supporting the development of:
- Indigenous language revitalization and diploma/degree programs in Indigenous languages in partnership with Indigenous institutions and communities;
- open educational resources to train all students, faculty and staff on the history of Indigenous peoples and the legacy of residential schools, Indigenous rights, legal and health issues; and
- skills-based training for all students, faculty and staff in intercultural competency, conflict resolution, human rights, and anti-racism.
Recommendation 168
Establish multi-year funding for community-based youth organizations to deliver programs on reconciliation, and establish a national network to share information and best practices per Truth and Reconciliation Commission Call to Action 66.
Recommendation 169
Fund full implementation of both the 94 Calls to Action from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the 231 Calls to Justice from the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.
Recommendation 170
Look at the 12 levers of Indigenous economic design and invest into those structures, moving outside of the emphasis particularly on programs and services.
Recommendation 171
Look at investing into structures, systems and tools, and convening an economic space for Indigenous-led leadership.
Recommendation 172
Renew and enhance the sunsetting Friendship Centre funding at a minimum of $60 million per year for at least the next 10 years.
Recommendation 173
Include Indigenous peoples in climate initiatives, such as working towards net zero, carbon capture in the agriculture sector, and liquified natural gas projects.
Recommendation 174
Commit to a fourth urban and rural Indigenous housing strategy.
Recommendation 175
Increase funding for Indigenous-led mental health initiatives, including doubling the budget of the Aboriginal Health Human Resources Initiative.
Recommendation 176
Allocate funding toward immediate compliance with the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruling to provide equitable funding for child welfare services on reserve, ensure the full application of Jordan’s Principle and the Spirit Bear Plan.
Recommendation 177
Reduce poverty in Indigenous communities by investing in those communities in a manner that allows them to direct how those funds are used.
Recommendation 178
Work with municipalities to drive economic growth by empowering local expertise and prioritizing smart investments in infrastructure and public transit.
Recommendation 179
Provide more funding for the Permanent Transit Fund to cover the maintenance costs of public transit assets and help close the gap in necessary investments in order to ensure that public transit infrastructure is up to service and safety standards.
Recommendation 180
Increase funding for the Rail Safety Improvement Program from $21 million to $50 million to support additional rail safety projects.
Recommendation 181
Create an accessible capital funding program for short-line railroads, such as the Gaspé peninsula railway.
Recommendation 182
Review the Airports Capital Assistance Program with a view to improving the quality of regional airports, expanding air service in rural areas and ensuring overall economic development, by making the program more responsive to the needs of smaller airports, increasing access to programs, streamlining administrative procedures and earmarking funding for infrastructure investments.
Recommendation 183
Ensure that federally owned airport infrastructure that is located in certain regions and contributes to local development is maintained and improved.
Recommendation 184
Make the National Trade Corridors Fund a permanent funding program and initiate additional programs that support port and supply chain infrastructure, which are necessary to continue achieving the economic benefits export industries provide.
Recommendation 185
Promptly announce infrastructure investments through the National Trade Corridors Fund and prioritize the development of the trade corridor that runs through the St. Lawrence River, the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Northern Quebec.
Recommendation 186
Earmark enough funding to allow the Coast Guard to increase the availability of the St. Lawrence icebreaking fleet so that the Coast Guard can meet its target level of service.
Recommendation 187
Allocate funds within the Community Infrastructure Fund and additional infrastructure programs to support communities in strategic trade corridors, such as the Prince Rupert Gateway.
Recommendation 188
Support the expansion of sustainable operations through relevant capital investments in the Prince Rupert Gateway that support the ongoing work to reduce carbon emissions.
Recommendation 189
Include electric vehicle charger installation or electric vehicle readiness as part of energy efficiency programs to help Canadians who live in older houses retrofit to the electric infrastructure requirements for electric vehicle charging.
Recommendation 190
Accelerate timelines for Measurement Canada to enable energy-based billing for charging services.
Recommendation 191
Establish a greater focus on charging infrastructure investment needs by:
- Setting and funding higher one and five-year targets for electrical vehicle charging station deployment sufficient to meet Canada’s zero‑emission vehicles sales targets.
- Setting a goal to make 1-million existing apartment and condominium/strata parking stalls electrical vehicle-ready by 2030 and establishing new funding programs to achieve this goal.
- Focusing dedicated charging investments on cities’ downtown areas where millions of Canadians cannot charge their zero-emission vehicles at home, as well as rural, remote and Northern communities where charging deployment may be less developed.
- Focusing on highway side charging investments to close the gaps in Canada’s charging infrastructure along long-distance travel corridors, and on increasing density of charging in high-travel areas where charging demand is growing fastest.
Recommendation 192
Put underutilized government lands to work by facilitating multi-service provider charging hubs, particularly in high density and high-cost real estate markets.
Recommendation 193
Incorporate zero-emission vehicle requirements into the National Building Code and National Energy Code for buildings and/or support municipal zoning regulations related to zero‑emission vehicles.
Recommendation 194
Raise greater awareness of the needs for increased investment in charging infrastructure.
Recommendation 195
Provide additional investments for infrastructure that helps to fight climate change, including public transportation.
Recommendation 196
Help regional businesses move forward on issues of particular interest to them, such as with needs in sustainable mobility, public transit and transportation electrification, the implementation, sooner rather than later, of extremely growth-generating programs such as Via Rail's high-frequency train and the very pressing need for investments in a number of regional airports in Canada.
Recommendation 197
Maintain investments in infrastructure and remove barriers that exist between the different levels of government to ensure funding for infrastructure projects flows more smoothly and quickly.
Recommendation 198
Encourage different levels of government to improve their approval processes, their housing density rules and the way they charge development fees.
Recommendation 199
Increase the supply of new homes for Canadians across the housing spectrum by adding housing clauses in Infrastructure Bilateral Agreements between Infrastructure Canada and provincial and territorial partners.
Recommendation 200
Establish a permanent National Housing Roundtable bringing together federal, provincial, and municipal authorities along with builders, real estate professionals and civil society organizations to help understand the scale of the housing supply challenge, document the multiple challenges to increasing supply and identify solutions to these obstacles.
Recommendation 201
Increase affordable housing providers’ access to affordable land.
Recommendation 202
Scale up of the Rapid Housing Initiative and expand it to entry-level market-rate housing to address persistent housing supply and affordability challenges along the entire housing continuum.
Recommendation 203
Make new investments to create at least 500,000 quality, affordable homes over the next ten years.
Recommendation 204
Enhance commitments in the National Housing Strategy to end core housing need and homelessness.
Recommendation 205
Double the federal investment in the Canada housing benefit to $8 billion.
Recommendation 206
Work with the industry to educate seniors and caregivers on their options and ensure a robust market for aging-in-place services, including reliable, trained, and transparent renovation experts.
Recommendation 207
Support workforce capacity building, critical to achieving Canada’s long-term climate targets in the building sector.
Recommendation 208
Support and incentivize the public and private sector to accelerate deep energy retrofits.
Recommendation 209
Enable an energy-efficient renovation wave, in partnership with the provinces, with annual investments of $10 billion to $15 billion per year for 10 years.
Recommendation 210
Incentivize and support Canadian manufacturers to produce building components required to construct and retrofit high-performance buildings.
Recommendation 211
Invest $2 million to introduce a parallel “ResiliGuide” home resilience rating system and certification that extends the existing EnerGuide label and scoring system and extends building retrofits programming to include resilience.
Recommendation 212
Work with municipalities to promote inclusivity and community well-being by addressing housing affordability, prioritizing access to digital infrastructure, and ensuring a rural lens on federal policies and programs.
Recommendation 213
Create a $50 million fund to support victims of pyrrhotite, following the government’s recognition in Budget 2021 that an additional federal contribution might be needed.
Recommendation 214
Implement permanent funding to support to festivals and events for a new cultural and economic resurgence by:
- ensuring the ongoing nature of the investments made in 2019‑2020 and 2020‑2021 and extended by the Fall Economic Statement 2020 for 2021‑2022, and by Budget 2021 for 2022‑2023 and 2023‑2024 (an increase of $8 million/year to the Canada Arts Presentation Fund and $7 million/year to the Building Communities through Arts and Heritage program);
- investing an additional $30 million in these programs ($15 million each) starting in 2022‑2023;
- creating an indexing mechanism for the programs over the next five years that takes into account inflation and the growing number of festivals and events to be supported;
- creating a new complementary program with $25 million in funding to support festivals and events that are catalysts for tourism and the economy, especially festivals and events that are not cultural by nature and receive no support from Canadian Heritage; and
- extending the duration of the Major Festivals and Events Support Initiative announced for 2021‑2023 in the 2021 budget to March 31, 2024, earmarking an additional $100 million for it and expanding access to festivals and events with annual revenues of more than $5 million.
Recommendation 215
Support the long-term capacity of the live music sector and implement a permanent $50 million Canadian Live Music Support Fund.
Recommendation 216
Increase funding and support for Indigenous, Black, and artists of colour, to create, develop, present and enhance theatre, and begin to address historic imbalances and systemic inequities against these artists—inequities that have been exacerbated due to the pandemic realities and pressures on equity seeking organizations and cultural workers.
Recommendation 217
Increase funding for the Canada Cultural Spaces Fund to prioritize climate change and environmental protection in the performing arts, allowing theatres to adapt and find innovative and sustainable solutions to creation, production, presentation, and touring of live theatre across Canada.
Recommendation 218
Increase the Endowment Incentives component of the Canada Cultural Investment Fund by $6.5 million annually, starting in 2022, for existing performing arts recipients.
Recommendation 219
Ensure that digital platforms generating revenue from publishing news share a portion of their revenue with media outlets, following the Australian model, which would level the playing field between global platforms and our media outlets.
Recommendation 220
Fund initiatives for digital transformation in museums.
Recommendation 221
Expand the Endowment Incentives of the Canada Cultural Investment Fund to include museums and heritage organizations.
Recommendation 222
Provide an additional $15 million in funding per year for the Public Lending Right program, bringing the program’s budget to $30 million annually.