Okay.
My name is Bertha Rabesca Zoe and I'm legal counsel with the Tlicho government. I'm here to talk about self-government funding. As we all know, the Prime Minister has stated that nothing is more important to him than the indigenous people and the reconciliation efforts. He has also said that building nation-to-nation relations is key and front and centre for this government. We applaud the government for that.
The Prime Minister's words are also reflected in the mandate letters that ministers Bennett and Philpott have received. Currently, one that came out with the splitting of the department, the mandate letter to Minister Bennett talks about building capacity and developing a whole-of-government strategy. As land claim bodies, that's something that the Tlicho negotiated. We have a self-government and land claims agreement that has been in effect for 12 years now. We've always talked about a whole-of-government approach to our land claims. We didn't sign the agreement with INAC, but with Canada. In the mandate letter, it says the minister should work with the Minister of Finance to establish new fiscal relationships based on sufficient, predictable, sustained funding. These are the kinds of words that industry likes to hear and work under: predictability and sustainability. We do as well, as land claim bodies.
I bring this matter forward to this committee because you're going to be looking at what should or what could possibly go in this coming year's budget. One of the things that the Prime Minister has been talking about, as well as the minister of Indian affairs—it's a new name now, it's not INAC, it's INAN, I think...acronyms—is gaps. As we all know and as you've been hearing here, there are infrastructure gaps. There are social gaps and housing gaps. There are so many gaps here for indigenous people. We're down here and the rest of mainstream Canada is up here.
Through the financing arrangements we have with Canada, one of the things that we have is an agreement.... The previous government came up with a new funding model. We call it the Valcourt document or the blue book, which is based on the Indian Act model, which we tried to get away from. As you know, this government is committed to doing away with the Indian Act, so since the new government has come into place, the minister has agreed to work with self-government groups across Canada on collaboratively developing a new fiscal policy, which is unheard of. It's a whole new beginning. It's a process that we're very involved in and out of this process, we've come up with a funding model that reflects the real costs of governance.
We've gone through the whole exercise of figuring out how much it would cost for each self-government that's out there in Canada. There are about 20-something self-government groups in Canada. There are four proposals that we've submitted. One is on a new methodology for determining governance funding that determines actual costs for a government. We've worked out a methodology for that and we've submitted some proposals.
The other three proposals are for what we call catch-up funding. One is on infrastructure. When you take over a community in a self-governance situation, you also acquire a lot of assets and liabilities and a lot of these are buildings that you end up owning are dilapidated and unusable, but you don't have a choice. There's a lot of these infrastructure gaps that we'd like to look at, as part of this proposal.
Another proposal has to do with public housing. One of the questions here is about how to be more productive. What would it take for people to be more productive? There are ample studies out there that show that if you improve social housing, you improve a lot of other things that come along with that, so we've put together a proposal on housing.
The fourth proposal has to do with social gaps. This government has been talking about bridging that gap. Social gaps are huge, so these proposals talk about what those gaps are, how to identify those gaps, what our baselines are and what we have in our communities right now. We need to do a lot of work in those areas to be able to say, “Here's the problem and this is the gap, so now what do we do to close this gap and move forward?”
Those are the proposals that we've submitted. Again, I'm not speaking only for the provincial government, but on behalf of all my colleagues who have worked collaboratively with Indian affairs on these proposals that we submitted to them, but the collaborative process itself is going very well. It's a whole new relationship building that this government is pushing and very committed to.
When we talk about self-government situations or land claim agreements, there are 4,000 citizens and we own 39,000 square kilometres of land surface and subsurface. That's about half the size of Nova Scotia. Those are the kinds of relationships that we have with Canada, in terms of treaty building and building those kinds of relationships that deal with jurisdiction, resources, lands, access, and industry. Industry is very crucial in our territory and we have relationships with industry. We have IBAs and other arrangements as well. Our businesses are very dependent on that.
We did a study on our land claims and the impact on the northern economy about four years ago. The study said that we've contributed about half a billion dollars to the northern economy through our land claim agreements. Even by themselves, land claim agreements are crucial to the economy of the north, and to capacity building, and all of those things that come along with that. Self-governance is also crucial because in order to be adequately funded, we need to be productive in our involvement in nation building, not only for ourselves, but for the north, as well as Canada.
My submission today has been to make you aware that there are these proposals that have been submitted to Indian affairs and we hope to have them included in the 2018 budget. We're really hoping that the self-government funding model would be put in this year's budget.
That's my submission.