38th PARLIAMENT, 1st SESSION
EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 005
CONTENTS
Friday, October 8, 2004
Mr. Ed Komarnicki (Souris—Moose
Mountain, CPC): Mr. Speaker, this is also my first
time speaking in the House. I would like to thank my constituents,
the people from Souris--Moose Mountain, for their trust and
confidence in me, and I thank the many volunteers for their
hard work. I would like to thank my wife and family for being
part of the process that brought me here. Parliament is quite
an institution, and I am certainly proud to be here.
I knew some of the members. I knew the hon. member for Wascana.
He and I went through law school in 1971-73. I was curious as
to what he might be doing in the House. Not very much, I find
after being here for a week, and that incrementally.
It is an honour to be here. I can say I am heartened that one
of the issues of the throne speech will deal with equalization
payments, because my province of Saskatchewan has been very
much affected by the formula that was changed in the 1980s and
1990s. For every dollar of oil we produce in Saskatchewan, we
lose $1.08 or more in equalization payments. It is time for
that to change.
I am heartened to see that the government also will be dealing
with work skills and apprenticeship programs and literacy programs,
but more important than that is the creation of jobs. We need
to have the jobs that will require the skills, which will take
some tax reduction, not only for large business but for small
business, and also for individuals, to ensure that we have the
climate for the creation of the jobs we need in this country.
The government boasts about its labour management abilities;
it talks about working in collaboration with labour. Yet this
week we saw evidence of the fact that the government was not
prepared to negotiate with the Public Service Alliance of Canada
and it put everything on hold because it was politically expedient
to do so. It was not until there was pressure put upon the government
by third parties and by our party and myself as critic that
it decided to go back to the table as it should have. The government
says one thing, but it does another. If this government respects
employees it should not be garnering large surpluses in the
EI account and using them for purposes for which they are not
intended. Those accounts and that surplus must go for employees.
I am also encouraged that the government has made shelter and
housing a high priority and is addressing homelessness. Home
and shelter are very important to every individual. The manner
in which these goals are attained is very important. We must
have adequate housing with the least investment. We must have
affordable rental accommodations. We must encourage the market
by the building of further rental accommodation and utility
shelters.
We must address the plight of our aboriginal people in this
area and, in particular, provide education and skills training.
Yesterday I met with the White Bear aboriginal leaders. I am
encouraged with what I have seen in the initiative they intend
to take. They simply need to be freed up to do it, as my colleague
just before me suggested in his speech.
The main issue I wish to address relates to the constituency
of Souris--Moose Mountain, which is largely comprised of grain
farmers and cattle farmers. I have been in the business for
some 30 years in that constituency and I have not seen as great
a challenge as these farmers are facing at this time. The circumstances
are dire. They are actually at the crossroads of existence.
They may or may not exist in the condition that we know them.
The situation is so dire and the time is so short that if there
is no action taken now it may change forever.
In spite of all of that, in spite of the fact that they are
the backbone of our communities and if they are shut down our
communities are shut down, we find that the Prime Minister has
not had the courtesy to address that issue in the budget speech
except incidentally by saying that agriculture is a significant
industry.
It is one thing to make a promise. It is another thing to break
a promise. It is one thing to talk about something, but this
government has not even talked about agriculture when it is
facing the greatest crisis it has ever faced in the history
of our country.
As someone who comes from western Canada, I find it appalling
that there was barely a reference to the farmers of Saskatchewan
and no plan as to what will happen: no plan, no vision, not
even an inkling of what the government is going to do.
Not only will people perish without a vision, as my learned
colleague said, but our farmers will perish if there is no vision,
and this government is devoid of vision. We need bold vision.
We need bold steps that must be taken now. Our party will see
to it that we will continue to press the government until it
sees the picture and does something about it.
The Prime Minister has made a few flybys in Saskatchewan. In
fact, he dropped into the Regina-Wascana area, but he could
not possibly have attended at the various farms in Saskatchewan
for he would have seen the frustration, and in fact the desperation,
of some farmers. If he had seen that, there would be some programs
directed specifically to meet that situation.
I am not talking about $800 million or $1.6 million. I am talking
about an investment of billions. Our finance minister has said,
previous to the various announcements of the billions of dollars,
that there was no money to be found and there was no wiggle
room, yet the government came up with billions of dollars. We
are having a national catastrophe on the prairies and there
is not even a mention of a plan that would take care of the
situation.
It is easy to understand that western alienation continues to
grow. From my Estevan constituency, from my Weyburn constituency,
in my Ottawa office and personally, I have received calls time
and time again in the last number of weeks in respect to the
situation farmers find themselves in, and particularly with
the CAIS program. Some of them have expected dollars and have
been told they are receiving very little. Some have said they
will be receiving nothing. These farmers have bills to pay.
They have fuel bills and fertilizer bills and there is no money.
The programs for farmers require the help of accountants and
lawyers. It is time we made the programs simple enough such
that farmers can figure them out at their kitchen tables and
understand what they will be receiving at the end of the day.
Saskatchewan farmers have suffered poor yields, frost and grasshoppers.
They have suffered not only in that area but also in the political
realm, with the BSE border closing and with low commodity prices,
and the government has done nothing. People on the farm maintain
two jobs and they do not maintain two jobs because they want
to work more than 12 hours a day. They do it because they have
to.
I recently received a letter from the Rural Municipality of
Benson No. 35. It portrays what all of the RMs in my constituency
are concerned with. At a meeting they held, they discussed the
crisis facing agriculture “due to the failure of the federal
and [provincial] government[s] to properly address the BSE outbreak
and the low income of grain farmers”. They said the agricultural
crisis facing producers today “requires immediate action
on behalf of [both] government[s] if agriculture is to remain
a viable way of life in the province and this country”.
In the middle of all of that, there was nothing in the throne
speech.
The crisis facing agriculture producers is not limited to livestock
producers but extends to grain farmers as well. With the elimination
of grain transportation subsidies by the federal government,
there was a direct impact on grain farmers due to the dramatic
rise in costs for transporting their commodities to the market.
Furthermore, they have continued to be hit with low commodity
prices as well as frost.
I have here the grain ticket of a farmer, in the amount of $719.
After deducting cleaning charges, elevation and handling charges,
Canadian Wheat Board freight charge, trucking premium and weighing
and inspection, the net cheque is $270. The rest is taken up
by one cost or another, and the government is not concerned
that the farmers are not earning enough to pay their costs of
operation.
The administrator of the RM says in closing that council urges
both the federal government and the provincial government to
“step up to the plate and assist agriculture producers
before it's too late”.
I think they have capsulized what is important. The window of
time is short. It is time for the government to act now. It
has failed in the throne speech to indicate what it is going
to do. It is important that it do so.