Good morning, Mr. Chair. My name is Dave Neville, and I'm director of disaster financial assistance and preparedness programs at PSEPC.
In response to the question, I think one thing that's important to keep in mind is that following a disaster, it's the province that designs and delivers its assistance program to those affected by disaster, and the DFAA reimburses the province for eligible costs after the fact. The province is free to set its eligibility criteria as it sees fit. The DFAA in no way restricts the province from providing assistance.
In terms of eligible costs, eligible costs are clearly outlined in a manual of guidelines that we provide. When it comes to what is eligible and what is not, some of the main ins and outs of the DFAA are that anything that is insurable is not eligible under the federal program; large businesses or crown corporations--and this gets to the issue of electrical providers in certain provinces--are not eligible. Where assistance is provided in whole or part by another federal program, those costs would not be eligible under the DFAA.
So the DFAA's guidelines are clearly there, and once the provincial government has completed making its payments, we then assess those expenditures in accordance with our guidelines and reimburse the province after the fact.