I would see a response linked to mould having a few elements. One is recognizing the need to understand the magnitude of the problem, which means being able to collect from all communities what they may see as their concerns around mould, how many housing units in their community have mould and which are priorities versus others. Our audit has shown that the needs are far greater than the funding currently available, so you need to prioritize that limited funding to those most in need, especially when it comes to a very serious health hazard.
I believe you need to have information. As I mentioned earlier in another response, one of the regional offices in Alberta was gathering information and they stopped gathering it. The reason they gave us was to eliminate the reporting burden on first nations communities, but then you're not making well-informed decisions.
It needs to start with data. That would be the first step of a good comprehensive plan. Then you need a plan that you're going to stick with and implement. There is a mould strategy plan that, as a previous member mentioned, was developed many years ago in consultation with first nations communities, Indigenous Services Canada and CMHC, but it's no longer being used and no one knows why.
Have a plan to know how to tackle the problem once you've identified it, and then figure out how to fund it and systematically go after it, keeping in mind that you should try to go get to those most in need first and bring them forward.