Perhaps I can stop you there, because your first part causes me significant concern. The government made a commitment that on April 1 the money's getting out. I'd like to know how much money went out, you know, today.
We do understand that there are timelines. That's why, in the discussions, it was clear that $3 billion, to have the impact on shovel-ready or whatever it is, to be able to generate results at a critical time, at a time when Canadians need the jobs related to these moneys, the discussion always centred around the fact that you may not be able to provide in detail where all this spending is going, but all of the programs will have the lead time necessary to identify them, to work out the details, to fine-tune them, to get the approvals, the requests, the authorizations. That takes time.
A lot of that, necessarily, has already been done. I'm asking you whether or not it's realistic for this committee to start to monitor the stage at which dollars are in the process of leading to getting the cheque out. If the committee starts to detect, a couple of months out, that very few of the dollars are really out, or if you go past and there's lapsing at the end of June, that may destroy the whole strategy of having vote 35.
The strategy is that the cash has got to be out. This committee, I think, wants to be accountable, to report to Parliament, to carry the ball to Canadians that the moneys are there. We understand that even once the money is put in the hands of the third-party program provider, there will be economic lags for them as well. It doesn't happen instantaneously.
Again, June reports are fine, but I think this committee really needs your advice here. How can we monitor the progress of the process of getting $3 billion of cash into the hands of program providers before the end of June? Are there mechanisms or resources available to the committee to do that, or people who are better suited? I don't think the committee has to know very much about the micro-detail of projects, but to know, rather, that the representations of the departments are consistent with the objectives of the budget.
I think we need some words of advice. If it can't be done, the committee should know now.