Thank you, Mr. Chair. After all of that drama, it is wonderful to get back to this motion.
It's interesting how the preamble is so anti-Albertan. You, the chair—a fellow Albertan—have been given an opportunity to read this twice and have refused. I think that's partly due to how anti-Albertan the sentiment is in this very motion. Frankly, Mr. Chair, I don't blame you. I wouldn't be reading this if I were you, either. This is part of the frustration Conservatives have with this motion.
It would be different if this had been brought forward by someone who wasn't the parliamentary secretary. However, it is very clear, because it came from the parliamentary secretary, that it came by edict from the minister. It means it came by edict from the Prime Minister. This is what they want discussed. This wasn't some random person sitting on this committee who decided to bring this forward. This was the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources.
We know this is one of the most centralized PMOs in Canadian history, so it isn't something that just happened by haphazard. They decided to attack Alberta because they didn't know any better. This is a deliberate attack on Alberta, Alberta's energy industry and Albertan workers.
This program put forward by the federal government was to get energy workers to work during the challenging time of the pandemic. One of the complicating factors the members probably don't understand is that most of the workers who perform oil well cleanup are contractors. During the pandemic, the contract workforce had some struggles, because they normally don't own their own equipment. They lease it. They were in these struggling spaces where, oftentimes, their leases were in challenging circumstances. They had to retool and get new equipment, so this couldn't be operationalized with a snap of the fingers: “Go and clean up a well.”
This required a little more planning because of the dire situation and how long it took the federal government to come up with the money. It wasn't something that was rolled out in the first weeks or months of the pandemic. It was something that came in after a bit of a delay. Frankly, it saved many contractors. It was an opportunity for many contractors who were unemployed to rehire their employees, get their contracts for equipment back and save chunks of this space.
However, it didn't happen at a time when it was absolutely needed. It happened after a little delay. Because of its scope, the program was rolled out. Unlike the federal government, the provincial government that I was a member of at the time decided they weren't going to allow shell companies to do the work and perhaps, at some point, give some crumbs to indigenous partners. They wanted to engage them in meaningful work and make sure indigenous communities benefited in material ways.
There are a number of examples of these programs having massive impacts on a variety of different indigenous communities, whether it be directly in jobs or in different financial impact benefit agreements. It's more complicated than just snapping your fingers and saying, “Here's a whole bunch of money—get this out the door as quickly as possible.” That's not generally the best way to get value for a dollar. However, this government doesn't seem to always abide by getting the best value for Canadian dollars.
One of the pieces that gets to me, as an Albertan and as someone who was very proudly born and raised in Fort McMurray—a community under attack, at every possible opportunity, by this NDP-Liberal government, and one that is at the forefront of not only Alberta's energy industry but also Canada's energy industry.... Many of the benefits we have are the direct results of the amazing and hard work done every single day by the people who put on hard hats and steel-toed boots and go to work in -40°C or 30°C weather. Day in and day out, they miss Christmases, Easters and Thanksgivings. They miss children's dance recitals and hockey games, and they do that to keep the lights on. This NDP-Liberal government continually attacks them.
One of the arguments brought forward by the parliamentary secretary is that they only talk about Alberta and Saskatchewan because only Alberta and Saskatchewan got the money. Fact check: that's not true. Actually, B.C. also got the money, but they casually decided to leave out the NDP government in British Columbia when it was deciding to do their attack on the energy industry because it doesn't serve their narrative.
This is something that Albertans know all too well. This is part of the absolute frustration that so many Albertans come to my office with to share their frustrations—that the government cherry-picks. It comes here saying, “Oh, we only mention those two provinces because those are the only two provinces.” No, there are abandoned oil wells across the entire country. This isn't just an Alberta-Saskatchewan thing. This isn't just an Alberta-Saskatchewan-British Columbia thing. There are wells in Ontario. There are wells in Quebec. There are wells throughout the country. Again, this NDP-Liberal government likes to have its whipping boy be the province of Alberta.
This is something that is exceptionally troubling. It is something that I don't think we can continue doing because this tells Albertans that, to this NDP-Liberal government, they just don't matter. After all of these conversations and all of this space, I hope that this common-sense amendment that I'm going to bring forward will be accepted by the members of this committee because I believe that I and my colleagues have given a number of relevant pieces to this. I would like to amend this motion. I'm going to amend it as follows.
I propose removing the preamble in its entirety and adding this:
Given that:
The Chiefs of Treaty 6, 7, and 8 have all asked for an extension of time for First Nation communities to properly utilize federal funds allocated for orphan wells;
The Chiefs ask the federal government to return the money to the Alberta government so it can be distributed back to First Nations for the use of cleaning up orphan wells;
It is the legal and jurisdictional responsibility of the federal government to ensure the proper clean up of orphan wells on First Nations land;
The federal government revoked the funds which would be used for remediation and reclamation of more than 3,000 orphan wells on First Nations lands and territories.
Then after “the Standing Committee on Natural Resources”, I suggest striking the following:
begin a five-meeting study on the impact of this failure to clean these wells, the impacts of the pollution from not cleaning up abandoned and orphaned wells, the costs of cleaning up abandoned and orphaned wells, the federal government regulations to hold companies to account for well cleanup, and the potential opportunities associated with cleaning up...wells, and report its findings to the House....
Then replace it with “report to the House that the federal government should return the money allocated to Alberta for First Nations to use to clean up wells on reserves, which are the responsibility of the federal government.”
Mr. Chair, I think it is incumbent on us to realize that we should not be dividing Canadians. We should be working to provide hope. We shouldn't be continuing to attack the industries and the people who work in those industries, and we shouldn't be pitting one region against another. After nine years, we have, hopefully, learned that pitting one Canadian against another doesn't work long term. It creates hardship. It creates pain. It creates frustration.
I really do believe that this is a very common-sense amendment that shows that this natural resources committee respects Alberta, respects its jurisdiction, respects the jurisdiction of the Government of Alberta and, most importantly, respects having true reconciliation with first nations and indigenous communities when it comes not only to these well cleanups but also to being partners in prosperity.
Mr. Chair, I would urge every single member to consider this motion and to vote in favour of it. I believe that it has been sent to the clerk, and it should be distributed to all members here shortly.