Mr. Chairman, I thought you framed some of the questions we might be dealing with very well in your opening remarks.
Let me turn to the panel. Welcome.
Last week I met with three councillors from the FCM, the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, to discuss some of these issues. Very briefly, they shared with me infrastructure concerns, the concerns of the absence of a national transit strategy—I think we're the only OECD country that does not have a national transit strategy--with the environmental fallout that this obtains. There were water treatment concerns and less so urban conservation concerns.
Maybe I would put my question to you, Marguerite, because you are the vice-chair of the FCM.
How does the federal government prioritize among these concerns? To go back to the chairman's question, what is the role of federal leadership here? Let me make it more specific to assist the reply. You chaired the FCM's brownfields committee. You also served on the brownfields task force of the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy, which developed a national brownfield strategy in 2003. Regrettably the national round table, formerly chaired by our Governor General, has been terminated, as has the invasive alien species partnership program, to which you referred.
Do we have alternative or replacement instruments or frameworks in place for these two instruments or initiatives that I found were fairly important in this regard? Reference has been made to the green municipal fund. That has played a very important role.
How do we secure funding for the urban conservation strategy? What kind of policies should there be? For example, should there be a doubling of the gas transfer tax for that purpose?
Those are just some of the issues I thought you might address. If any other members of the panel wish to answer, that's fine.