Thank you, Chair.
Thanks to the witnesses for being here today.
Dr. Smart, I appreciated all of your comments throughout the pandemic. Like many other Canadians, I was sitting in my living room watching way too much TV, but your comments were well voiced during the pandemic.
I want to start my comments, and then ask questions ultimately. I'm probably going to ask all three witnesses to comment at the end.
As a bit of background, I had the privilege of serving as health minister in Alberta from 2008 to 2009. One of my first observations was that health care had multiple structural problems. We were already spending 50% of our provincial budget on health care, and what has happened since then, as you have described today, Dr. Smart, similar to being on life support and a crisis. One of the first things I did when I was health minister was to fire 12 regional health boards, three other boards and to create the Alberta Health Services Board, which runs all of the health system in Alberta today very successfully.
For too long, in my view, politicians have simply buried their heads in the sand and said they can't look at making changes to how we do health care in this country. What do we do as politicians? Well, we do another study, like we're doing here today.
I can just about tell you what's going to come out of this study, with all due respect to all of the witnesses who have appeared before us. I know Mr. Long doesn't liked to be called part of a “coalition”, so I'll call it an “NDP-Liberal marriage” that happened last week. I can predict what this report's going to look like when we table it, and there will be another report—