Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank the Auditor General for her report, which I think is very timely when Canadians are feeling the pinch of this affordability crisis and many folks are feeling very little hope. We also had a very similar experience during COVID, when a lot of folks were losing hope. They were losing their will, in some ways, to understand how the pandemic interrupted their lives and how it's continuing to interrupt their lives.
None of us here were fans of the pandemic. That is a fact. The reaction of our national Parliament in making sure we ended poverty or at least reduced poverty with strong measures was something the New Democrats fought for.
Something we didn't fight for was in relation to the Canadian emergency wage subsidy. There are some loopholes within that subsidy, which we called for the closing of early on, that resulted in disproportionate effects on workers. We've seen the use of the Canadian emergency wage subsidy to break unions and lock out workers in my province of Alberta. This is very real.
We don't have to look very far in Edmonton, my city. There's a large corporation called CESSCO, which, as early as June 28, 2020, decided to lock out its workers and apply for the Canada emergency wage subsidy. The Canada emergency wage subsidy then went to subsidize the wages of scab labour, replacement labour, while the union was forced to be locked out.
It took the power of the union out from under it and forced replacement labour into the group. That replacement labour is still there today. Boilermakers in my city of Edmonton are locked out again, still. This is a critical issue that we need to address in a real and responsible way.
When I look at these numbers, they're quite damning: $4.6 billion in ineligible employer expenses. Was that the number you mentioned, Ms. Hogan? Can you confirm the total amount of ineligible funds paid to employers under the Canada emergency wage subsidy?