I thought it would give us an annual macro-picture of when this tool was used by the federal government. It would give us a list of the infrastructure projects for which a community benefits analysis was done and tell us whether those benefits were in fact delivered. So it gives us not just a snapshot for a particular period but a much broader picture for a whole year, and we would see the federal spending on these projects and the tools that the minister used and then, finally, whether those benefits were indeed delivered. You would be able to actually follow through on that report, almost like a spreadsheet, and you would see how much money the federal government spent on this particular project, what benefit the community identified and then whether those benefits were in fact delivered fully or partially.
On November 1st, 2016. See this statement in context.