Thank you very much.
Thank you for your presentations.
As the member of Parliament for Churchill, a riding that includes 22 isolated communities, 18 of which have no other option but to fly in, and of course have winter roads during the increasingly short season, I and my riding are greatly concerned with the food mail issue.
Last week I had a meeting with the grand chief of the MKO, the Manitoba Keewatinowi Okimakanak, the northern chiefs' political organization, and they're very concerned about these proposed changes to the food mail program.
Number one is the lack of consultation. They are familiar with the Dargo report, but in coming up with these proposed changes, there has been a lack of consultation with Manitoba first nations that are to be impacted, and Manitoba aboriginal organizations as well. They have concerns about some of the stipulations in the report, such as the exclusion of certain items—for example, toothpaste, something that is also overpriced in many of these remote first nations.
Perhaps the need for consultation would be the most critical in terms of who is now being given the responsibility for food mail, given that many of these first nations have only the North West Company in their communities. What they see now is that an important alternative, an access to more affordable foods, healthy foods, is being given to the company that already has a disastrous monopoly in these communities.
And you know the figures—$14 for a jug of milk, $40 for a bag of flour. We're not talking about luxury items here. We're talking about pieces that people need to get on with their lives. And the same company that is taking advantage of the lack of access in these remote first nations is now being given that responsibility. This is causing great concern.
Also, there is great concern among suppliers, suppliers in Winnipeg, suppliers that have great relationships with many of these first nations and are eager to hear this information.
I'll move on to the second point. After the lack of consultation, the concern revolves around the lack of information. Reading the report today, I'm seeing some pieces that were not known by first nations in my riding, first nations who depend on the food mail program. I would like to know and they would like to know, for example, if there will be the same ability for small northern retailers to deal with the program. Will there be technology transfer support for these retailers, given that they might be coming up against possible competition with the North West Company and Arctic Co-ops?
Also, there's a reference to regulation and transparency. I'd like to hear how that will be enforced, given that the North West Company, which is the sole body that deals with our region, is a private enterprise and currently benefits from the fact that many of these communities are remote and these kinds of prices that are imposed on communities do not come out in public.
Finally, I'd like to know who the board members are from Manitoba. What kind of consultation is taking place with the first nations that I represent and aboriginal organizations in Manitoba? And similarly, where are the other board members from? I hear six.
I know many of our regions depend on this vital program, and I'd really like to hear to what extent it's comprehensive.