Mr. Speaker, the member obviously did not listen to the answer to his first question.
He asked a question about PCBs. I told him that I cancelled the program because we had spent $20 million travelling around the country and we had not destroyed a single PCB. I did not think it was a very good use of taxpayers money, given that there is a licensed facility in Alberta. I am working with the Department of Public Works. We will meet our agenda. We will meet the 1996 deadline. We will probably have all PCBs destroyed by the end of this year.
I also reiterated the position that we will take responsibility and we will clean up all federal contaminated sites. We will not endorse the concept of orphan sites because we believe in the unanimous resolution of ministers of the environment from every province, which was stated two years ago and restated last year, that the concept of orphan sites leaves polluting companies off the hook.
The commissioner for sustainable development would be the first one to underscore that if company x makes a mess of the environment company x should pay the liability for the clean up. That is not a liability to be borne by the taxpayers and that is why the federal and provincial governments have banned the concept of orphan sites.