Thanks very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you, Minister, for being here today.
I want to focus on estimates, but before I do, I want to make one remark regarding the Mali peacekeeping mission, which you've mentioned, and that is, of course, that the New Democrats welcome a recommitment to peacekeeping internationally. Even if the promise doesn't seem to be exactly what it was before, we believe there's a role for Canada in supporting efforts for peace and stability in Mali, and we hope there will be an agreement among the parties for further debate in the House.
Let me turn to more estimates-related questions. You probably have guessed that the first thing I'll ask you about is the last thing I asked you about when you were here the last time, and that's the Phoenix pay system. I know you're not the minister responsible for the system, but as the defence minister, in terms of all your civilian employees we're still seeing very severe problems in morale, recruitment, and retention as a result of the pay problems. I asked you at the end of November, and you promised to fix the cases for three individuals. They were fairly egregious. That finally did happen, but it took months. Despite your good intentions, it took months to do that.
After I asked you about it in the House of Commons, Minister Qualtrough's office approached me and said to give them our worst cases. We gave them 14 cases on February 2. Nothing has happened on any of those cases.
My question for you as the minister is, what is it that you can do as the minister to help out the civilian employees of DND—in my riding, literally hundreds of them—who are still suffering from incorrect pay? There are impacts on their child benefits and impacts on their tax systems. What are you, as minister, able to do to assist them with these problems?