Thank you very much, Madam Chair. I am pleased to provide some comments, as well, to the department or to housing. It's one of the biggest concerns to my riding. I have my riding consisting of six communities where four of them are very small communities that look to housing to help create their growth. Of the two larger centres, Fort Liard has been, I think, increasingly on top of the agenda. I think overall, before I get into specifics of some of my communities, Madam Chair and Mr. Minister, is that, overall, the communities see the Housing Corporation as taking a lead in updating the services they offer. In fact, I've been working with the Minister trying to get a regional workshop in the Nahendeh riding, and I thought that one of the intents was to go out and ask the people how you see the Housing Corporation working, what can it better improve. That's kind of the thinking that people had when the Housing Corporation was talking about reviewing its mandate and delivery processes. That's the kind of expectation that they thought they had. Just recently we find out the mandate changed and I was wondering, well, they never really went to the communities or asked anybody. So I was wondering, how did the mandate change and what was the focus of the mandate? What caused the mandate to change without asking people about it? For one of the great foundations of our
government system is participatory democracy, and that's fundamental to the people. That's what they like. They like to participate in our decisions. Even ask them for feedback. If we're going to do it workshop style, to involve them and get all this feedback. That's what we thought we were going to get when the Housing Corporation was talking about its mandate changes.
Thanks to one of my colleagues, I just learned it's a process that began early in the term, around 2004, and now we're 2006. It's been a couple of years and nothing significant as change in terms of reviewing that mandate. Some of the things, too, in private sector they call it a comprehensive organizational study, where they look at how the organization is set up and how it can better utilize its staff, utilize its resources, utilize its delivery programs. People were happy that they were going to have input into that, but I don't know what changed, but I know that one of the worst things that people hate is top-down approaches. That's what happened, I believe, in this case with the mandate. You said we were changing the mandate and this is how it's going to be done. Then the people that I represent, my constituents, have always believed it should be from the ground up. In fact, it was one of your reports, Madam Chair, that the Minister tabled last year in the House was the actual name of the Housing Corporation report was "The Ground Up" but lately we've been trying to do things top down. I believe that if we do, if the Minister will go about and go to the communities and listen to the people like we did in the pre-budget consultations. People did mention the Housing Corporation, the program, the program delivery quite extensively. Our colleagues in the Social Programs heard that, included it in their report, and it's something that we're going to have to look at seriously.
So that's what I kind of see with the Housing Corporation, is just a follow-up on my vision and the people's vision and see if the Minister will concur if that's what should be done. It has to be all-encompassing because I believe the Housing Corporation is in a state of flux. Where do we go from here now? At one time having it as a corporation did make sense because there was some flow-through funding coming from different agencies, not only us. But now the GNWT is the primary one that gives them the transfer payments to deliver housing programs. Does it have to be a corporation any more? Can we look at it just being a department? Those are the kind of discussions that need to happen and they have to happen in this coming term, Madam Chair.
Just with that, if the Minister can comment on the overall mandate review. It has to be a lot more than just a paper review, because quite often people sit down and the consultants sit down and talk with department heads and say, okay, we reviewed it. But that's not what I'm asking the Minister today. It has to be comprehensive. I know it's going to cost a few bucks, but it's something so we have a good, efficiently run organization, if indeed it stays a corporation or a department, Madam Chair. But that's something we have to look at and have a good hard look at it. How are we going to continue this function of taking care of the housing needs of our people in the smaller communities? I think that's how we have to refocus the goal and objectives of the Housing Corporation. If I can just get the Minister to comment, Madam Chair, on how he sees, and where he sees the Housing Corporation going in the next little bit to better deliver our services. Thank you.