Thank you, Mr. Allen.
You're certainly correct in stating that the primary responsibility for search and rescue in Canada does in fact fall to the responsibility of the Department of National Defence. But you're also right in pointing out that in many cases we share those responsibilities and work very closely with other departments.
On this issue of the return of funds for search and rescue purposes, it was in essence a transfer back to the department from the Department of the Environment for unused funds for participation in the search and rescue new initiatives fund. There was an earmarking of funding.
Since 1988 the federal government has been funding search and rescue new initiative funding, which provides this annual funding budget of $8.1 million for new projects, new projects that relate to the national search and rescue program and search and rescue responsibilities managed by the National Search and Rescue Secretariat.
Funding within DND's reference levels--and that is the annual budget with respect to national search and rescue programs, in partnership with all of the participating partners, including Environment Canada--essentially is shared. In some cases, it's shared with provincial and territorial organizations.
In 2007-08, for example, the annual reference level for Environment Canada received $475,000 in search and rescue new initiatives, all of which went to enhance humidity and temperature measurement for weather forecasting. The money we're talking about here was for weather prediction capability. It was used to enhance information and to provide information flow to the departments so they could respond and try to have, as accurately as possible, predictability over weather patterns and therefore determine the type of equipment, and the type of response that we would make, in search and rescue missions.
This transfer of roughly $60,000 represents the unspent portion of the Environment Canada budget that was approved for this project. Due to an economic downturn that severely impacted the aerial mechanical services they were providing, they were unable to produce a full, stand-alone, and low-cost weather-sensing package for small aircraft operating in remote areas. That was the purpose of the project. They were not able to fully deliver it. As a result, they transferred that money back to the Department of National Defence.