Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you all for your attendance again today and for your thorough report. I would like to return to the Parliament buildings.
Having served 13 years at Queen's Park, I'm no stranger to this issue. They're going through exactly the same thing. The buildings are of an age in the cycle of our country that these costs are coming up. Having served municipally and provincially, I know the easiest thing to do is push off maintenance costs when you're in a tight budget. It doesn't cause you an immediate crisis and problem. Of course, if you do that long enough you get into trouble, and this is the gold standard of trouble.
I read your report, and in a number of places you go out of your way as much as possible to make the case that we need a new governance model. It was interesting to note that this isn't the first time, though. In 2005 there was a Public Works task force that reviewed this very same issue.
If I'm reading this correctly, they came out with a recommendation half a decade ago that the governance model was problematic. Yet when I look on page 16 of your report and the response of Public Works, I don't see them agreeing with your recommendation and saying it's consistent with what they found five years ago. They say:
The Department acknowledges the recommendation, which is broader than PWGSC and in fact the Government, and will, within its mandate and authorities, work with other stakeholders to strengthen governance.
It doesn't really mean much. And it certainly doesn't mean they agree there should be a new governance model. So help me understand it.