I'm sorry, Ms. Fox. I have to interrupt. There's limited time.
The question was, when can these communities expect to have clean water? There was obviously thinking that went around the date of March 31, 2021. That's a commitment. This government has a tradition—not just this government but all governments—of committing to first nations and then just falling flat. That affects the relationship. When you speak of mistrust, that is the mistrust. The not answering of this question is the mistrust.
We need to know when the clean water can actually get to these communities. They want to know when. They don't want to know that we're all committed, because that's a fact. What we want to know is when they will actually have clean water. A portion of that, if you can add this, is perhaps related to the other existing deadlines. My colleague from the Bloc mentioned other existing missing deadlines.
There's a tradition of not being held accountable for when you should be doing these things. Ms. Hogan has been very clear about that. She's concerned, our Auditor General, that we're going to continue to say these things and you're going to continue to lie. When are we actually going to do this?