Thank you, Chair, and thank you to all of our witnesses. We apologize for the technical difficulties.
I think this is an important study. It's a very broad topic, and as you may be able to tell, I think the committee is struggling a bit to define the scope and focus in, because we have only 13 meetings to look into what is a very broad topic and series of subtopics.
I'm going to start by diving into this issue around waste-water effluent, because it's something that hits close to home for communities in the region I represent in northwest B.C. My home community of Smithers is a town of about 5,000 people. Its waste-water effluent goes into the Bulkley River, which is part of the Skeena watershed. This is British Columbia's second-greatest wild salmon watershed. It's home to a world-renowned steelhead fishery.
Smithers has been getting letters from Environment Canada saying it's not in compliance and that it's violating the Fisheries Act. The town has done its due diligence. It's created a plan. It's submitted it to the federal government for funding, and the federal government has been sitting on it for a year and a half. It won't give them an answer as to whether they're going to get the funding. There's a very short construction season in northern B.C., because the ground freezes and gets covered in snow, so every year that goes by and every construction season that gets missed means another year that the fish in the river and the water quality of the river are potentially compromised by the effluent.
The question here is really around the communication between ECCC and Infrastructure Canada, whether ECCC creates a priority list of waste-water projects that it feels should be prioritized for funding, and how we break down those silos so that we don't have communities that rightfully feel frustrated because they want to address this very serious situation. Rather than getting support from the federal government, they're actually getting threatening letters saying that they're contravening the federal legislation.
Perhaps one of the witnesses could speak to this and help us understand how ECCC works to ensure that Infrastructure Canada gets the money to the projects that are the most important for protecting fresh water in our country.