I was telling some of the members before the committee started that we are absolutely delighted from a public policy perspective to have this gender statement, and not as an add-on but as an actual chapter in the budget. It really is historic. There's a lot of work to do in terms of improving it for next year and the years after. What it does show is that the push by the Auditor General's report on GBA+, your report on GBA, and the government's commitment to doing GBA and taking it seriously have really pushed everybody within the bureaucracy to take it seriously.
They've made it mandatory for all MCs and all Treasury Board submissions to have GBA in the documents. When you think of the minister's mandate commitments, every part of this policy cycle has GBA, from consultations to policy development to programs—because now we're going to have to look at it in the departmental results framework and the performance reporting and the indicators. That work is just beginning. We're at the very early stages, but it's all moving in the right direction.
To have this kind of statement...and it acknowledges that there are data gaps. There's no question that there are lots of data gaps and we all need to do better, which we are going to try to do. The work of all these past years has led to this. We're working with the OECD, which is mentioned in here as well, to help us with this—gender-based budgeting, learning from other countries, learning from the OECD—and internally, we're working with Finance very closely.
As the minister said, at Status of Women our phones are ringing off the hook because everybody wants to work with us now to ask, “How do you do a good GBA? How do we collect the data? What are the diverse stakeholders that we should be talking to?” The system is in overdrive right now. The analogy I use with our team is that the government is like a big ship. To try to turn it in all those facets from consultations to program evaluation at the end is going to take some time. But we're moving in the right direction and there's no turning back now. To me, it's irreversible. It's fantastic.