Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to now pick up on questioning related to some of the emergency benefits that the government rolled out and to talk specifically about some of the instances where I believe misuse of the funds occurred. I believe Canadians would agree.
I want to highlight an issue that began in my city of Edmonton and is related to a company called CESSCO. CESSCO locked out their employees. They were given a notice. They've been locked out for over 300 days now. I think it's something around 400 days now that they've been locked out.
During that period of time, CESSCO applied for and received assistance through the CEWS program, the Canada emergency wage subsidy program. The program itself was intended to ensure workers could continue to operate and that workers were to get the benefit from this.
In this particular instance, this company did not provide that benefit to any of their employees. Rather, it locked them out and then hired scab labour in order to accommodate that deficit at a lower wage. To continue in that vein, that same company then paid over $2 billion to its shareholders between April and September. This is all well documented and was reported on in the news. However, the company continued to take in the benefit.
To all the Canadians whose taxes for the purpose of protecting workers went to a for-profit company that kicked them out, what do we tell those members and how can we get justice for the Canadian taxpayer when for-profit companies walk out with $2 billion? What does that process look like? You mentioned a process to my honourable colleague from the Bloc, a process for remedying damages. How do we remedy this kind of damage by private companies?
That's for finance.