Back to you, Ms. Fraser, the second area is an issue of transfers to other levels of government. My concerns are general, but my example will be specific. I'll deal with the $1.5 billion ecoTrust fund. The budget plan was presented in Parliament, the budget was debated and passed, and supply was given. And in regard to the ecoTrust fund, I quote:
The Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change will provide support to those provinces and territories that identify major projects that will result in real reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and air pollutants. The provincial initiatives supported by the Canada ecoTrust for Clean Air and Climate Change will complement industrial regulations and existing federal initiatives. Projects could include provincial technology and infrastructure development, such as carbon sequestration, and clean coal and electricity transmission, that will lead to a significant decrease in greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution. The Government will invest over $1.5 billion in the trust.
That trust fund was referred to in your report on the public accounts; it just refers to the $1.5 billion for clean air as an expense. For a parliamentarian and a member of the public, these are very laudable goals. One would think this actually happened, that the money was transferred to the provinces and spent on these projects. Now, everyone sitting at that end of the table knows that's not the case. The provinces take the position that the money is received in revenue. They take it into revenue and they do not have to spend it on environmental initiatives; in fact, they can spend it on anything they want.
It is my position that there is an absence of accountability here. The provinces rely on some of the directions coming from the Public Sector Accounting Board to support their position when they take the money and don't spend it in any way, shape or form as appropriated by Parliament. It's also my assertion there are other fundamental accounting principles being violated, the principles of consistency and transparency, and that the statements of the Government of Canada should reflect the underlying economic transactions, which I assert is not the case here.
So my question for you, Ms. Fraser, as an officer of Parliament, as the Auditor General, is, can you give this committee and Parliament the assurance that these funds, the $1.5 billion, are being spent on environmental projects? If you can't give that assurance, is it a concern to your office? If it is a concern to your office, do you have any plans as to what you might do with it?