I think what I was planning to say is still relevant.
When I was first elected in 2021 and appointed fisheries critic, in my first meeting with the minister I raised this issue. In her first appearance before this committee I raised it. In letters to her after that meeting I raised this issue with her, in addition to everything Mr. Epp has been doing.
In response to that, the minister said in committee that she believed the government should pay its bills. The evidence is pretty striking that it has not been, given what the treaty obligation is.
In last year's budget, in 2022, there was bragging about the allocation of solid funding that would finally be committed to the commission. It was to the extent that the minister, in June, went to Lake Erie and made a big to-do out of the fact that they were finally going to get all the money the treaty obliges the government to give. Then they didn't get it.
How do we know that? Before this committee, not too long ago, the Great Lakes Fishery Commission said they didn't get it. In a meeting around that at the same time, the officials said they did get it. If we do that again, we're going to get the same result since we'll have them separately. It's “he said, she said”, as Mr. Arnold said. All we keep getting is the runaround from the officials.
Put the two in the room together, and let's sort this out. I support it being reduced to two meetings, because we have an important study coming up on the corporatization of the fishery. We need to get on with that and finish this study.
I suggest that if we have two meetings, we have a witness—in addition to Global Affairs—from the American side of the commission.