Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thanks you, Ms. Bossé and Ms. Kenny. Ms. Kenny, congratulations on your appointment.
You said that the Department of Canadian Heritage seems to be listening to you. It's one thing to be listening, but it's another to get results. It's all very well and good for departmental officials to say that they also have to deal with red tape, but it was not members of Parliament who created the ton of paperwork you have to fill out. Officials from the department have to show leadership and reduce the paper burden. They complain that the process is complicated, but they are the ones who have to streamline the process.
You have to fill out several forms, and often it is volunteers who do the work. Some organizations may have several employees, but others do not. Therefore, volunteers are found to fill out the ton of paperwork, and the situation is made much worse because there is no guarantee that the funding will come through.
I talked about achieving results. You said that some organizations are not able to deliver services to Canadians. Three problems were mentioned. First, the time an organization has to wait to receive confirmation of funding. Second, the loss of employees because of this wait. Third, services could naturally not be delivered if organizations don't hear from the government in six months or longer.
On top of all of these problems, when an organization has not received confirmation, especially when the wait exceeds six months and there remain only five or six months before year-end, when the organization receives confirmation, followed by the funding, it might have to hire people to compensate for the previous loss of employees, and it might not be able to provide the service or the program to Canadians.
The government sends you money and then reminds you that it's December 31, so don't forget to pay it back. It's as if it was asking you, since you finally got the money, not to “bug“ it anymore, but not to forget to pay it back. It looks good on paper when funding has been given, but it would be interesting to look at the government's books and see how much funding had to be returned by organizations because they received their confirmation much too late, or because the funding still had not been approved six months later. There are several other factors, including the fact that the files are still sitting on the minister's desk. I can't believe that the minister reviews each application.
I worked for the Business Development Bank of Canada where I was responsible for evaluating funding applications, which I then passed on to my boss for final authorization. The applications were not sent to the president of the Business Development Bank of Canada. Under the organization's hierarchy, decisions were taken at a lower lever for greater efficiency.
If the minister, who has other responsibilities, has to review the applications, he will never get the job done. He might be able to review a couple of applications, but don't believe for a moment that the minister of Canadian Heritage, while on a plane between Ottawa and Vancouver, will pull out his binder of applications and decide to approve one of them this week because it seems to make sense. What about the other applications, then?
I'm not giving you time to respond, but I would like to come back to what I said. The fact of the matter is that organizations can't deliver services to Canadians because they have to wait too long for confirmation of funding; they are losing employees and are not getting approval even after six months. This means that even if they wanted to, they cannot fulfill their mandate. Is that correct?