Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I welcome everyone.
I've been doing preliminary reading, and I think all of us on the committee are going to be doing a lot of reading in the next couple of weeks. The Library of Parliament provided a really good chart of all the agencies, be they federal or provincial. The majority are on the federal side, everybody from CBSA to CSIS, CSE, and CRA—a lot of resources and very large bureaucracies, of course.
It's great to see there are a lot of resources dedicated to the very important issue of money laundering and terrorist financing. It was interesting, because yesterday CMHC came out with a report. It was about 225 pages. I read some of the headlines. Part of the report dealt with foreign purchases of housing here in Canada.
Tiptoeing off what Mr. Albas was saying and the concerns out in B.C. specifically, there were concerns about being able to track and identify when foreign investors purchase homes in Canada and the source of their funds. I'm going to read to you The Globe and Mail tidbit from the article that was posted yesterday:
The Law Society of B.C. told CMHC that much of the information lawyers had on the identity of foreign buyers and the source of funds used for home purchases was covered by privacy laws. Lawyers have also been given an exemption to the requirement to report financial transactions of more than $10,000 to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, which tracks money laundering.
Despite the large bureaucracy that I referred to, which is using literally tens of millions of taxpayer dollars at a very granular or micro level, we can't even track and identify the source of funds that are being used by foreign investors to purchase real estate in Canada. I love foreign investment, but we don't know where the money is coming from.
Is that a correct statement?