Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and thank you all for your attendance, those of you who are here today.
I want to say right at the outset that I, and I'm sure my colleagues, all have a great deal of sympathy for the complexity of the ministry. It's arguably one of the toughest in government, no question, and we all acknowledge that. What's frustrating, though, is that the ministry makes commitments and then they're not followed up on. That's what we find unacceptable.
It's not that this is an easy job and you shouldn't have problems. It's the fact that once we find out where there are some weaknesses and work that needs to be done, particularly when it affects citizens' health, you make commitments in that regard and you should be taking into account the complexities you have. You know the challenges you have, and if you can't do what needs to be done, then tell us why and we'll work that through. What's absolutely frustrating and unacceptable is to have you make commitment after commitment because it maybe gets you out of this meeting, only to find out that it doesn't get resolved.
And that's what we're going to hold you to account on: why these things weren't done. There are policy issues and committees that can deal with moving forward, and we can talk about some of those things, but our primary responsibility here is to hold the ministry to account for what you committed to do and what you're expected to do.
From that point of view, in terms of commitments you've made, I look at what the Auditor General said in her report. I'm quoting from paragraphs 5.12 and 5.13. It states:
We expected that federal organizations would have made significant progress in implementing the 37 recommendations in seven chapters published between 2000 and 2003.
Overall we were not satisfied with the progress made by the five federal organizations.
The Auditor General went on to say:
We found that they made unsatisfactory progress in implementing 15 recommendations---generally those most likely to improve the lives of First Nations people.
So here we have these 37 recommendations. It's my understanding that 22 of them have been implemented satisfactorily, but only three of them have been completed in terms of their implementation, and the balance have not had satisfactory progress. The difficulty for me is that the ones you acted on are the administrative matters. You made yourself more efficient in terms of moving paper around, but on the recommendations that affect the quality of life of first nations citizens, that's the area where we didn't have satisfactory progress.
Had it been the other way around, you'd probably have a little more sympathy here. This is very problematic, and again, that's why I'm hitting this so hard. It's not because I think it's an easy job and you should be able to do it. It's because the ministry makes commitments and they aren't done. That is what is enraging.
I want to move quickly to the issue of mould. Again, these are the Auditor General's words from her report: “Mould is a fungus that, under certain conditions, produces poisonous substances that can cause headaches, dizziness, and nausea.” We're not just talking about it not looking nice. We're talking about serious poisonous substances.
A previous audit found that you were not doing enough to address this issue. Specifically, it turns out that the three of you had meetings but that basically nothing came out of those meetings because nobody would take overall responsibility for ensuring that there was an overall management plan. And I have to tell you, in the absence of anybody else rolling in here offering, I hope at the very least you're going to take that on today, and if not, give us a reason why not you and somebody else. But please do not leave this meeting with us still wondering which one of the entities in government is going to take responsibility, because the Auditor General has pointed out that this is the key to getting this resolved--somebody takes responsibility for pulling together those strategies. It didn't happen, and it sounds to me like there were some meetings, but that nobody came out of those meetings saying, “I'll take final responsibility to make sure this thing moves”. And so it doesn't get done. I don't know how many times they met, but it certainly didn't produce the changes we want.
My first question would be: why isn't your ministry the one taking a lead on this? Why haven't you in the past? In the absence of anybody else doing it, why haven't you stepped forward rather than just letting it go on and on? We don't see the strategies and we don't see this health issue being resolved. Why? Please.