Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'm following up on my last point in relation to funding.
Mr. Tupper, I don't believe your argument—that this is a provincial jurisdictional issue—will hold up in court. Jordan's principle is a good example. Not too long ago, another deputy minister said the exact same thing—that it's the provinces that are holding.... Luckily enough, indigenous people fought the government and now indigenous children have the opportunity to live in this country. Who suffers from this jurisdictional football passing? The answer to my question is that it's indigenous people. I'm confident that, should your analysis and advice to the government be challenged in a court, you'll lose the decision and indigenous people will, yet again, win—just like we do most cases at the Supreme Court when it comes to jurisdictional battles.
I suggest that the Ministry of Justice give you better advice as to what the constitutional promises and limits of Canada are, and their relationship to indigenous people. I fundamentally disagree that we should continue to suffer under a model that says jurisdiction has to take a front seat to the lives of indigenous people.
I now want to turn to the fact that indigenous police services have to fight tooth and nail for the minimum funding.
In early spring 2023, funding negotiations between the federal government and Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario fell through. On March 29, the Indigenous Police Chiefs of Ontario, which represents nine stand-alone indigenous services, filed a human rights complaint against Public Safety Canada, claiming that the underfunding and under-resourcing of indigenous police services amount to systemic racism. The funding agreements officially expired on March 31, 2023.
Are you aware of this, Mr. Tupper?