Thank you very much.
Welcome to the committee.
It probably has not escaped your attention that the Minister of Indian Affairs was in the north this week. A major reason he was there is that the regulatory system in NWT has become a reason for investors to vote with their dollars to go somewhere else. This has become a concern and a refrain that is reflected in feedback we get from the local politicians in NWT, and our own department recognizes it as well. That's a backdrop to much of what we're doing.
Part of chapter 4 dealt with monitoring cumulative impacts on the environment. There was money in Budget 2010 for that activity; of course, Budget 2010 came out after chapter 4, very shortly thereafter. That was more formally announced this week when the minister was in NWT. More importantly, the minister has appointed a chief federal negotiator to lead consultations and negotiations on structural changes to the land and water boards as part of the work to amend the Mackenzie Valley Resource Management Act, Northwest Territories Waters Act, and Territorial Lands Act. These are all significant and major changes since your work was done.
As a result of the economic action plan, obviously there has been a lot of stimulus spending in the north. We're getting feedback right now that some of the little economic activity actually being generated in big parts of NWT is a result of government stimulus spending, and that this could actually be a much worse picture than it actually is if you look at other sources of investment. There is definitely a need to make some changes, so I congratulate you on pointing it out and offering some direction in that regard.
I'll come back to where I originally was going to start: why did the Auditor General pick NWT? You had three northern jurisdictions. First, how did you get there? Once your office has done a study such as chapter 4, do you actively continue to follow up, or is it just the next time? Consequent to that, is there some kind of report card or not?