Thank you, Mr. Chair, and welcome to our guests.
I find that the 14 follow-up audits point out something very obvious. I think the climate change debate has sucked up most of the oxygen on environmental debate in terms of the political arena for quite a long time, and these 14 audits point back a long time to a lot of work not done for a number of years. It shows the breadth of the long-term environmental neglect.
With 14 follow-up audits, obviously governments have to make priorities, and I think we're starting to see some of those priorities emerge from this government. We talked earlier about the chemicals management plan, of course, and $225 million for habitat preservation. We're starting to see some of the announcements rolling out now. Funds have to go into programs. Programs have to be set up, as to their requirements, and so on, and then the money starts to flow. We're starting to see some of that now.
On green infrastructure, of course, we've announced $33 billion in infrastructure funding—$8 billion for the Building Canada Fund—which is being negotiated. Some negotiations with the provinces are complete. For Ontario right now it's an ongoing negotiation, as I understand it. With the $8 billion in that fund particularly, one of the pillars addresses issues of clean water, waste water, those types of things. So when you're calling for funding, some of that negotiation is going on now.
Of course, we've seen in some budgets now some money set aside for sediment cleanup. In your report here on the Great Lakes, you said the $90 million estimated cost of Randle Reef, for example, was still unfunded as you ended your audit. Of course, our government has announced $30 million as the federal share, the one-third share of that particular project.
So I think we're beginning to see a sequence, because these audits not only have to approve something in terms of a management plan, which you're addressing, but they also have to translate into budgetary dollars and programs to actually do something about it.
One of the things I find insightful in regard to the areas of concern in the Great Lakes is that in five years, between 2000 and 2005, four goals didn't get it done. There was a new agreement signed in 2007, for the years 2007 to 2010, a new Canada-Ontario agreement. Does this agreement address your concerns regarding cleanup of the Great Lakes, or does it address most of your concerns, or some of them?
Secondly, is there a planned audit in another three years to follow up on some of these commitments, or are you going to revisit AOCs again?
I've read a lot of reports from the CSD and the Auditor General and other departments, and usually the recommendations that are responded to by the government are fairly bland. I see some extremely specific commitments here, with timelines and actions linked to timelines. Will you be revisiting that to see if in fact they have been met?
From our side, we can look at this and say, “Okay, now I can look at budgets ahead and ask, are we setting aside the money; are we doing some of these things to achieve our goals?” But will you revisit it?
So the first question is on your assessment of the new Canada-Ontario agreement. How far does it go in addressing your concerns that weren't fulfilled in your previous audits? Secondly, will you revisit, and when?