Thank you, Mr. Chair.
On offences, again, it's standard legislation. I was surprised to hear that industry was unaware. “Unusual and unnecessary”, I think, was the phrase.
We were just in Grise Fiord in Nunavut last week. People said that an airstrip had been ploughed and made without their knowledge and without their consent. If someone violates the land use plan and there's no offence, what's the point of the land use plan? Offences are standard in land use planning. If we look at downtown Ottawa, they're redeveloping areas. If you go ahead in contradiction of the land use plan, you receive a stop work order. Your building could be torn down or altered. It's standard land use planning practice.
Grandfathering, again, is standard land use planning practice. I and my associates here have been working on this legislation, this file, for seven years, the three of us. Grandfathering is a big deal for land use planning. What we were looking at when we first introduced grandfathering is, again, standard professional practice. The feedback we got was that in Nunavut, 60% of the area was staked, so as soon as you registered your interest through a mineral claim, you were exempt from new terms in the land use plan. Then the land use plan would have applied to only 40% of Nunavut.
This is why grandfathering, again a standard practice, is so important to land use planning. Otherwise, once I've staked a mineral claim, I'm exempt from the plan forever. That's not how land use planning works. The point is that you use a piece of land for a particular period of time. Once you're done with that particular land, if you're in contravention of a land use plan, eventually the next user has to comply with the land use plan.
Regarding the five-year review of the act, I don't know if we have any comments on that or not.
Sharon will speak to funding.