Thank you all for being here today.
I'm going to start with Mr. Tanguy and Mr. Christiansen.
First of all, I thank your department. Over the last few years, unfortunately, my riding has been the recipient of your help in probably three different years. In 2015, we had major fires in the south Okanagan and Rock Creek areas that unfortunately burned a lot of homes. We had a break in 2016, and then in 2017, we had floods in the Okanagan and fires in all sorts of places. This year, it's the same. We had a big flood in Grand Forks, which I know your department helped with, and the army came in to help there and that's still going on. There were a lot of fires as well. We are seeing this need for assistance from emergency management groups, and I thank you for that.
The modern version of this started in B.C. in 2003 with the Kelowna fire and fires in Louis Creek and Barriere that destroyed more than 300 houses. We had the Filmon firestorm report in 2003. This picks up on the FireSmart program that the province was supposed to take on. It provided money for municipalities and first nations but it was really just a drop in the bucket. I think the report identified some 13,000 square kilometres that needed to be treated and thinned to protect communities, and less than 7% has been done over the last 13 years or so.
Is this a place where the federal government can really play a role? You mentioned the disaster adaptation and mitigation fund, which I'm dealing with now with Grand Forks, because we need big money. With that fund, as I recall, you need to have a project of over $20 million and.... Is that something that municipalities can tap into for prevention of these emergencies? I thought it was a response type of fund. Just answer that question and I might expand on it later.