Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I often find these studies difficult, because I've experienced in many ways, like in the last committee meeting, what this work means in communities and on the ground.
Madam Fox, you have spoken quite highly about the work that's been done here, but there are tremendous gaps. The work of our committee is to identify these gaps and to ensure that you know of them, so please don't take anything I am about to say personally. I hope that it informs your work better and we can ensure that lives are saved, because lives were lost. My uncle died on reserve during COVID, 15 days after a request from the community went out for PPE.
That is someone's responsibility. They never got the services in time. They never got what was really needed so that the community could truly protect itself, and this isn't a new story for indigenous people. We've experienced this time and time again, whether it was tuberculosis during the residential school period—when Canada failed to act to protect my grandmother and my uncles, who died in that institution—or before that with smallpox. At times, it was deliberately brought to communities.
These are the types of communities we are dealing with. They are communities that are trauma-informed by those experiences.
I remember growing up with stories from my kôhkom and cimošôm about how scary it was when the Indian agent would come with a medicine chest and they were uncertain as to what was in it, but they were even more afraid of what wasn't in it. Many of these nations have signed treaties with Canada, asking for a guarantee for health like the medicine chest clause.
The medicine chest clause is something that every treaty group in this country wanted to ensure Canada understood clearly. I have heard from Treaty 6, Treaty 7 and Treaty 8 that, on this clause, Canada failed to uphold its obligations to ensure they had the proper resourcing as per the treaty that's been guaranteed.
I really appreciated my colleague from Quebec's mention of nation-to-nation relationships. There is a lot that Canada can learn from that framework. In my community, in Alberta, we didn't have that support. We didn't even have the ability to protect our elders.
A part of this I want to mention.... I'll spread this out over a few rounds, but in particular in the report, your action plan states something that I found to be a glaring discrepancy with what the Auditor General asked for. I am looking at your action plan that was provided in response to report 11. On page four of 14, there is an action item response to what the Auditor General requests to engage first nations communities in staffing processes. You and your ministry have reported the response to that action, in item 2.1:
Working with the Nursing Leadership Council, and the Nursing Retention and Recruitment Steering Committee, ISC will examine its current recruitment model....
Does the deputy minister think that's satisfactory for engaging with first nations communities in staffing processes?