Sure. With the deficit reduction action plan, CFIA is not immune, nor is any other department or agency of this government. We're all looking for efficiencies, and that's what CFIA strove to do. They have identified a number of efficiencies. Absolutely not one nickel affects front-line food safety, not one nickel. I would challenge the opposition to actually point to that in any way, shape, or form. We do hear some noise from the unions on how this will affect such-and-such, but they cannot show where that is actually true.
You mentioned the $56 million outlined; that's over a three-year period. During that same timeframe, and there are still moneys to be announced, we also have sunsetting programs. This is the problem with Kevin Page's report; it's an incomplete report. It doesn't speak to the renewal of sunsetting programs. We fully expect to renew two for some $25 million, but that takes a vote in the House. You can't claim it until you've actually voted it through.
During the same timeframe that we're removing $56 million in efficiencies, we have on the table $223 million in new money, plus the go-forward over the next couple of years when we buttress or take sunsetting moneys and put them back in again.
This idea that somehow this is a horrendous slash to their budget is absolutely ridiculous. Since we've formed government, the overall budget of CFIA has gone up by 20% because it needed at certain times to do certain things. We fully expect the inspector modernization to be funded out of the $100 million in the 2012 budget over the next four years now, and we have a year under our belts.
Someone pointed out that we'd only spent $18 million. Well, that's the first year, and it takes time to build the capacity and train and get them all in to E-Certs and all those types of things to enhance commerce and still maintain our food as safe.
We've increased traceability from gate to plate. We've done that under other jurisdictions. The Health of Animals Act takes precedence on the farm, but as soon as that animal hits the farm gate on its way to a feedlot or a slaughter facility, then Bill S-11 starts to pull in to play. It's the next step, the logical sequence in maintaining that traceability part of Bill S-11 to make sure that our food is safe right from gate to plate. We have to be able to trace food from a processor on, which we do in a recall, but we also have to be able to trace it back to the farm.
There are people in these slaughter facilities who simply check the head of an animal and the brain to make sure there's no BSE. We also check lungs for TB. We check liver for cysts. A number of different operations are undertaken. That's really the traceability back to the farm.
There all of those things in Bill S-11 that start to build a stronger food safety system from gate to plate.