Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you, Minister, for being here today.
Referenced a number of times today has been the involvement of Royal Bank, the BMO, and also the Deutsche Bank in having done a preliminary study and then a post-operative study, if you like, to confirm the value for taxpayers. In addition, in the study we did here, as a committee, we had Professor McKellar from York University. He's a professor of real property. He informed our committee in many different ways that government bodies of any stripe--municipal, even school boards and other bodies--are not good managers. In fact, I'd like to read directly from the statement he made to the committee in May. He said:
The bottom line, I will say right at the outset, is that every government does a terrible job of managing its assets, so that's a given. We are no better than most former communist countries in that regard, and there are lots of reasons why. I think that now many of the assets have been so badly managed over the period of time that we have to do something about it. I think the problems we face in Canada are no different from those faced by Australia or the U.K. or France or Switzerland, etc.
And he goes on. But then he says:
To talk directly about sale/leaseback, it's essentially a financing mechanism. It's really a form of releasing capital and redeploying it in the private sector, as I've outlined. It's well used in the private sector, and more so now because a lot of industries really don't want to be managing real estate or owning real estate when in fact they're making gadgets and so forth. So over the past 10 to 15 years, most organizations, including our major banks,
which you pointed out, Mr. Minister,
have basically gotten out of real estate. Part of that is also driven by the fact that there's so much money that wants to buy real estate today.
We have three large, reputable companies that have put their clear advice to us. A professor of real property has given his advice, and there was an open, competitive process to put these buildings up for sale, and I would assume, like in any auction, the sale went to the highest bidder, and yet we have this small group of critics who are saying somehow we have a bad deal for taxpayers. I just wonder if you could comment further on the question that Mr. Kramp framed in regard to Informetrica's position that we may have lost millions of dollars here on behalf of Canadian taxpayers.