In each of these cases it's slightly different.
In the case of flood-plain maps, Environment and Climate Change Canada has not been producing them since 1996. The national guidelines are obsolete, and we've made a recommendation that Public Safety Canada develop guidelines and standards for flood-plain maps. Public Safety Canada did a study and indicated that it would take about five to 10 years to update the current maps, costing about $365 million.
It's important for people to know that about 35% of Canadian residences are not flood-plain mapped. Of the 65% that are mapped, 50% of those maps are out of date. These maps are important, particularly if you want to try to get flood-plain insurance.
In the case of the intensity duration of frequency curves, Environment and Climate Change Canada produces a few. They're not done consistently and systematically, but they do provide some methodology. Because it's such an important tool, what we've suggested is that they figure out, with the provinces and territories, and any other partner, how to get that information produced.
The bottom line is that we did not see an overall strategy. Have they gone out and asked decision-makers what information they need, and then tried to figure out how to meet those needs? What we found instead was that departments did what their mandate was and decided “yes” or “no”, we'll provide it, but there was no overall strategy to find out what decision-makers needed at the municipal level, what we can produce, and how we can provide that.