Thank you, Madam Chair, and my thanks to all of you for coming out today.
It was my request that brought you here today and there was a strong reason for that. In my former life, you guys became great partners, and now in my current life as a federal member, this is even more true. We need to consistently check in with one another to ensure that better outcomes and returns on investments are made with all three partners—municipal, federal, and provincial.
I want to say, as Mr. Chong outlined, that we are here to deal with the PBO report, and we are looking at ways to do things better in the future. We've seen some challenges in the past, primarily due to project delays, because of costs not being expensed quickly enough to allow us to react in a reasonable time, and because of bilateral agreements that took some time to come to an agreement on. Although we have faced challenges in the past, we want to ensure that the way ahead will prove more helpful to our partners.
I want to take this time to concentrate the discussion by listening to you. We recognize the current leveraged investments that were made—gas tax, infrastructure funding—through the arrangements that we have currently. More important, we will be looking at future recommendations for a sustainable funding envelope that can be accrued over time, accrued through the three levels of government. This ought to include suggesting a disciplined approach to asset management, looking at community improvement planning, and, again, attaching a sustainable funding envelope to community improvement planning and strategies. We must keep in mind that this investment is meant to offset the burden that's otherwise placed on the property taxpayers as well as water or waste-water ratepayers.
With that, I have two questions. One, notwithstanding the past experiences we have all had, moving forward, how do we better assist you in serving your partners, customers, clients—namely, the municipalities and to some extent the private sector and the residents?
In addition, I want to throw this into the discussion. Right now NAFTA is happening, and, of course, CETA, TPP, and others. How do you find yourselves being more of an asset, in a binational sense, in creating more robust binational economic clusters that are—and this is the key part—enhanced by integrated infrastructure investments? How do we all work together in collaboration with our partners on the American side to ensure that our investments are more global in nature and therefore add to a more enhanced and robust market, versus just staying contained within our country?