Thank you, Minister.
Moving on to some other issues that face communities in the riding I represent, we've had Environment Canada and Fisheries and Oceans Canada express concern about communities' waste-water effluent, which is discharged either into the ocean or into rivers, and meeting various federal regulations. Of course, with climate change, this becomes even more of an issue, because we're seeing lower flows in our rivers during drought periods.
The community of Smithers, where I live, applied for a waste-water infrastructure project in 2020. They were denied. They went back to the drawing board, revised their proposal, reapplied in February 2022—over a year and a half ago—and they still haven't heard back with a response on their application. Meanwhile, they're struggling to meet the federal regulations when it comes to discharging effluent into a wild salmon river that is home to a world-renowned steelhead fishery. This is a really treasured waterway, and of course they want to upgrade their infrastructure and do what's right to maintain the environment and treat the sewage properly.
The village of Port Clements has a similar situation with their waste-water project. This is a community of between 300 and 400 people. What they've seen over the years is that the construction cost escalation while they wait for approval of their grant applications has skyrocketed. A project that in 2021 cost $2.5 million is now estimated to cost $4.5 million, so they're struggling. I believe that in the case of Port Clements they've been granted a portion of the project.
The problem we're seeing here is that communities are applying to do these projects, but the timeline for getting them done and the construction cost escalations are making it very difficult. I wonder how your government sees that problem and what it's doing to correct it.