Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here this afternoon.
I'm going to start with Ms. Perron.
I would suggest that the Government of Canada has a lot of work to do when it comes to making up for lost opportunities for women-led indigenous businesses, particularly tourism opportunities and the tourism sector. We have a former minister of tourism and employment who misrepresented himself as indigenous, and then proudly proclaimed this during his time in office, particularly when they were doing consultations on the national tourism strategy. When that strategy was tabled, it included a pillar for a national strategy, including indigenous tourism. Yet, it over-promised and under-delivered, which is typical of this government's record of disappointment.
Just think: In budget 2022, the only mention of tourism was the $20 million for indigenous tourism. It was a two-year program, but the funding never flowed for, essentially, two years. Ten million dollars was promised to the Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada. Yet, they had to wait two years for that funding.
The other $10 million—Ms. Perron, that's why I'm going to be coming to you—was promised to the National Aboriginal Capital Corporations Association. That $10 million is going to the signature indigenous tourism experiences stream. It's a pilot project with grants from $500,000 to $1.25 million, and it's going to fund from eight to 12 projects.
Now, have the criteria been developed for that, have applications been submitted and, in particular, are you seeing women-led businesses applying for it?