My apologies. The roads are really bad, but that's the least of some people's problems. I'm glad I got here, and I do appreciate your consideration.
This is a really bad audit. I have to tell you that when I looked at what the week was going to be and I saw CMHC the other day, I thought, okay, that's going to be the rough one, and then we'll get Heritage, and everything will be all nice and we'll talk history and it will all be very good. In fact, it was quite the opposite. I was rather impressed with their audit the other day, and this is just an abysmal report.
There's very little in here for anybody in management to be proud of—very little. The one little nugget I can throw out goes to National Defence, believe it or not, because in one area of data collection where we've been pounding on them—and they do have that message and that was reflected here—they did that right. One thing—one—was okay.
Colleagues know that nothing incenses me more than previous audits finding the same problem and making the same recommendations, with the government making the same promises, while audit after audit it's not done. It's infuriating. That's where we are with this one.
There were audits in 2003 and 2007. Paragraph 2.7 in our 2007 audit says, “...we concluded that Parks Canada's conservation efforts since 2003”, which was the earlier audit, “were not enough to ensure federal organizations conserved heritage properties.”
Let's just jump ahead to see what the final mark was, if you will. The conclusion is on page 17, at paragraphs 2.76 and 2.77. This is the conclusion from the auditor:
We concluded that Parks Canada, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, and National Defence did not work sufficiently to conserve the heritage value and extend the physical life of federal heritage properties. They did not have a full picture of their heritage properties; for example, information on the condition of their heritage properties was not current.
The life of some federal properties was at risk—properties that are for the enjoyment of present and future generations of Canadians.
Here's my first question, before we even get into the details. There were promises made, not by you individually but by the organizations and departments you represent. There were promises made in 2003 and not kept and promises made in 2007 and not kept. What on earth would have us believe that the promises you're making today you're actually going to honour?
I want to hear from you.