Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Members of the committee, dear colleagues, good afternoon. I am truly pleased to be here with you.
I'd like to begin by acknowledging that we are gathering today on the unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe nation.
It's truly an honour for me to be here to discuss this subject and to field your questions. It's not only important from a general standpoint but also personally. I'll explain why afterwards.
In Canada, over 70 languages are spoken by first nations, Inuit and Métis, but none of them are protected. In fact they are all threatened, in one way or another.
Our job is to continue to take concrete steps to maintain, revitalize and strengthen them. We want these languages to be strong, and we need them to be so.
It is our duty to listen and to take our indigenous partners' lead on their language priorities, because it's not about us. It's about them.
We cannot afford to lose the wealth of knowledge, wisdom and beauty that is held in each of the indigenous languages spoken in Canada. This is why we developed the Indigenous Languages Act, which I have had the honour of tabling during my time as Minister of Canadian Heritage. It is, sincerely, one of the things I'm most proud of. At this moment, as you know, we're working very closely with indigenous partners to implement that bill.
We have done much since June 2019, in spite of the problems caused by the pandemic. We established a joint implementation steering committee with representatives from the three national indigenous organizations. We have been working together on it. We have held 26 consultation sessions with indigenous peoples across Canada. We organized a symposium that had more than 800 participants.
We made the initial appointments to the Office of the Commissioner of Indigenous Languages. You have had the opportunity to meet the people in question.
And of course there was our support to the international Decade of Indigenous Languages, through the development of a national action plan specific to Canada.
We have also worked toward advancing access to federal services in indigenous languages. In particular—I know how important this is—we're working with Inuit partners to identify pilot projects that can help us develop regulations for access to federal services in Inuktut. We have established a cross-government steering committee that will work toward this goal, as the act intends.
Since the adoption of the act, we have funded more community indigenous projects than ever before. Everything is moving ahead quickly. We went from only 180 projects in 2018‑2019, which is not insignificant, to over a thousand projects in 2022‑2023. The number is still growing.
By increasing funding, we were able to support all eligible Inuit and Métis language projects since 2020, through investments from the 2019 and 2021 budgets, totalling more than $840 million over a seven-year period, and $118 million per year afterwards.
That's a lot, although it will never be enough. The needs are huge, but if we compare current funding to the $5 million available for indigenous languages in 2016‑2017, it's a giant step forward.
Indigenous partners have consistently told us that funding for indigenous languages must be long term, stable and predictable, and we agree. They've said that the processes for receiving funding must be indigenous-led, accessible, responsive, timely and transparent. We totally agree once again.
What do we do to make this a reality, to make it happen? We already have been working with communities to take the lead in decision-making and to increase flexibility in their funding. We're also working in developing new distinction-based funding models, being implemented this year, that would better meet the respective needs and goals of the communities, no matter where they live across the country.
This will allow for long-term funding agreements with indigenous governments, organizations and communities. It will also put funding decisions in the hands of indigenous people and ensure that they can make decisions based on their specific and unique priorities. So far, we have also been able to support six innovative agreements through sections 8 and 9, and we're working on more.
In spite of the rather negative picture I painted at the beginning when I said that all of the indigenous languages were threatened, there are some positive factors too. Indeed, the 2021 Census gives us some hope. Since 2016, for example, the number of indigenous people whose mother tongue was not an indigenous language and who can now speak one of these languages, grew by 7%.
There are therefore 7% more indigenous people whose mother tongue is not an indigenous language who have now learned one of these languages. More and more indigenous people are therefore speaking an indigenous language as a second language.
We've made much progress together, but there's definitely a lot of work to do. It takes years to properly implement a law like this one, and we're definitely—definitely—committed to this journey in true partnership with our colleagues and friends from across the country.
I'm ready to take your questions, Mr. Chairman.