Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Welcome to the Auditor General and the officials today.
We're having a challenging discussion today. I think everybody recognizes that the coast guard has been through a very difficult time that preceded Mr. Murray. I think he came on in 2003, and Mr. Da Pont came less than a year ago, and started to address concerns that go back quite a way.
I think the restructuring, when the coast guard was pulled out of Transport Canada, was back in 1995. From my involvement with the MCTS people on my coast, they went through a very challenging period of cross-training, amalgamation, reorganization, and downsizing. Everybody worked hard to try to make things work with fewer resources. Looking at the military, there was a period when they also had very severe budget restraints, and their top officer called it a decade of darkness.
In a sense, the report the Auditor General has brought here goes along with the concerns this committee has been trying to address for a number of years about the coast guard. We have the greatest respect for our hard-working officers who have been doing their best to make things work, with budget restraints and so on.
On what we want to see, I think all of us have a role in getting the coast guard on a new track. I hear some encouraging things like, “Let's look at the good things that come out of a reality check.” The Auditor General's report clearly delineates where some of the problems are, and I'm glad to hear that some improvements are being made.
My first question is to the Auditor General. Looking back over the challenges of the past many years with the reorganization of the coast guard, your reports of 2000 and 2002, and reports from this committee concerned about some of the issues related to the coast guard and MCTS, was the coast guard given a budget to accomplish the objectives that were laid out for it?