Thank you.
I just want to lay some of the groundwork in terms of some of the things we see in the field, as opposed to--as you referred to it--how the policy works.
I have a wonderful little community--one of my most isolated communities--Peawanuck. Being isolated, it relies on a diesel generator for electricity, and of course everybody knows that fuel prices have gone through the roof. They are paying probably two to three times the provincial average. So at any given time in that community, I have maybe 25% of the population faced with having their power cut off because they either don't turn the lights on or they can't pay.
At the federal level there would be money for a study, so we will get a study and it shows that wind power is actually phenomenally easy to access there. Then you put the proposal in to actually build wind power--so you could move this community out of something that is crippling it--but there is no money.
I worked in another community where we had a fire in February and three families were left homeless. Two of them moved in with relatives and one moved into a shed because there was no money; there was no housing built in 20-some years, and there was no plan for building housing.
My community of Attawapiskat has 400 children with no school and no money for a school.
Yet I look at the reports from last year that the federal government--the Department of Indian Affairs--returned $109 million from their capital budget back to Treasury Board. These same bureaucrats get paid bonuses for--it seems to me--not doing their job. There is such a dire need in these communities for funding. There are so many reports, they're stacked to the ceiling, and yet every year the bureaucrats send back phenomenal amounts of money that Canadians expect are being spent.
I know this wasn't in the purview of your study, but I don't know of anybody else who has the power to fix this. If you ask a minister, he'll shrug. If you ask a bureaucrat, they'll shrug. There seems to be an incredible inertia around the fact that money is being clawed back from these communities year after year and spent on anything from tax cuts to something else.
Is there something you can do, as the Auditor General, to examine how money is being spent, and why it's not being spent?