:
First I would like to thank you, Mr. Chair, and your colleagues for inviting the department to appear before the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates.
Today I am accompanied by: Patrick Borbey, Senior Assistant Deputy Minister of the Treaties and Aboriginal Government sector; Françoise Ducros, Assistant Deputy Minister of the Education and Social Development Programs and Partnerships sector; Élisabeth Châtillon, Assistant Deputy Minister of the Resolution and Individual Affairs sector; and Janet King, Assistant Deputy Minister of Northern Affairs.
[English]
As you know, I'm here today to discuss the supplementary estimates (B) for fiscal year 2011-12 for Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada, as tabled on Thursday, November 3, 2011.
The estimates, consisting of the mains and supplementary estimates, give the department the resources necessary to help improve the quality of life for aboriginal peoples and northerners. The supplementary estimates seek authority for revised spending levels during the fiscal year that Parliament will be asked to approve in an appropriation act. Access to the supplementary estimates by the department is a regular process. For this fiscal year, Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada is seeking authority for $544 million in supplementary estimates (B).
To begin with, I would like to provide you with a high-level overview of the department's activities and resources in an effort to provide you with some context.
Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada supports aboriginal peoples—first nations, Inuit, and Métis—and northerners in their efforts to improve social well-being and economic prosperity; to develop healthier, more sustainable communities; and to participate in Canada's political, social, and economic development.
AANDC is the federal department primarily responsible for meeting the Government of Canada's obligations and commitments to first nations, Inuit, and Métis, and for fulfilling the government's constitutional responsibilities in the north. The department's legal and operating environments are complex and continually evolving. AANDC delivers or funds programs and services to diverse groups of people who have varied and distinct priorities and needs and who live in a vast range of communities throughout the country, from remote settlements with extreme climates to metropolitan urban areas. Most of the department's programs, representing a majority of its spending, are delivered through partnerships with aboriginal communities and federal-provincial or federal-territorial agreements. Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada is one of numerous federal departments and agencies delivering aboriginal and northern programs and services.
Turning to the department's financial resources, the 2011-12 main estimates tabled on June 3, 2011, included approximately $7.4 billion. Of this, approximately 85% goes directly to recipients through transfer payments. Much of this funding ensures that aboriginal people have access to basic services comparable to those provided to other Canadians through provincial, municipal, and territorial governments. These services include education, housing, community infrastructure—water and sewage systems—social support services, and other benefits.
[Translation]
On behalf of the Government of Canada, AANDC is the lead department responsible for the negotiation and implementation of self-government and land claims agreements. By continuing to negotiate and implement claims and self-government agreements, the federal government improves aboriginal-Crown relations and provides Aboriginal groups with the opportunity to make meaningful changes in their communities.
[English]
The department is also responsible for the promotion of economic development and the continuation of the administration of the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement as it seeks further reconciliation with former student residents of Indian residential schools, their families, and communities.
The main estimates are the first step in the fiscal cycle. Additional adjustments of $18 million were approved by Parliament as part of the 2011-12 supplementary estimates (A) for the renewal and extension of a series of Yukon comprehensive land claims, the implementation of several Yukon self-government agreements, and the implementation of the Teslin Tlingit Council Administration of Justice Agreement.
As mentioned, the investments requested in these supplementary estimates (B) would increase appropriations of the department by another $544 million and will bring total spending to nearly $8 billion for this fiscal year. Specifically, supplementary estimates (B) will provide the financial resources to take action on a number of key initiatives, and I'll now describe them briefly.
The first item of funding is $179 million related to the Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, which will allow the Government of Canada to continue fulfilling its commitment to fund awards to claimants resulting from the independent assessment process and alternative dispute resolution. The $179 million is composed of $136 million in new resources to address the increased volume of payments and $43 million that is requested to be reprofiled from the previous fiscal year. With this incremental $179 million this year, total overall funding for these settlements will reach almost $2 billion over six years. The department anticipates there will be over 2,500 decisions resulting in compensation this fiscal year.
For the second item, the Government of Canada continues to support the federal contaminated sites action plan for the assessment, management, and remediation of federal contaminated sites. The $109 million will target sites of high priority, including the Giant Mine, a former gold mine in the Northwest Territories, and the Faro Mine in the Yukon.
The third item of $95 million identified for emergency management assistance will allow the department to meet its responsibilities to assist first nations communities living on reserves in managing emergencies. This fiscal year the costs are primarily related to extraordinary spring flooding in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta; forest fires in Ontario and Alberta; as well as storm surges in Atlantic Canada. This funding is used to reimburse first nations, emergency management organizations, provinces, other emergency management organizations, and host municipalities for the response and recovery costs incurred related to emergency situations on reserve.
On the fourth item, the department continues to address the resolution of specific claims to deal with past grievances of first nations that relate to Canada's obligations under historical treaties or the way it managed first nations funds or assets. This fiscal year the pace of the resolution of specific claims is such that the department is requesting an additional $77 million from within the $2.5 billion set aside in the government's action plan for accelerating the resolution of specific claims, “Justice at Last”.
To date, in 2011-12 the department has spent $234 million to resolve the Fort William First Nation boundary claim in northwestern Ontario—$154 million—and the Roseau River Anishinabe First Nation's 1903 surrender claim—$80 million. A number of other claims are expected to be resolved this fiscal year.
Other smaller initiatives included in these supplementary estimates are $14 million for education funding in British Columbia and Nova Scotia; $12 million to implement the Eeyou Marine Region Land Claims Agreement, once implementation legislation to bring the agreement into effect has taken place; $10 million to upgrade, replace, or repair essential fuel storage tanks in first nations communities across the country; and approximately $50 million for various initiatives, including funding for improvements in the northern regulatory system and cumulative impact monitoring program, $10 million; implementation of a prevention-focused approach for child and family services in Manitoba, $6 million; registration of applicants for Indian status as a result of Bill C-3, Gender Equity in Indian Registration Act, $6 million; and the aboriginal peoples survey, which will focus on education and employment income, $4 million.
[Translation]
In closing, I would like to thank you, Mr. Chair, and your colleagues for inviting us to appear before the committee today and permitting me this time to provide you with a summary of AANDC's activities and outline the requests in Supplementary Estimates (B). My colleagues and I would be happy to respond to questions and comments from committee members.
Thank you.
:
The major challenges in the north. Okay.
[English]
I will be speaking to north of 60, largely in the northern territories. In particular, small and very isolated communities, extreme weather, and limited capacity are some of the challenges they face. These challenges lead to difficult social situations that are fairly common across the north.
We support the northern communities through the programs we're responsible for in a variety of ways. We support the broad regulatory regimes in the north and both informed resource development and environmental management. So we support broad economic development in that way.
We also support the communities through governance relations with a variety of first nations. For example, in Nunavut we support the Nunavut Land Claims Agreement implementation, which then supports a suite of communities across the north.
We have a particular program to reduce the price of nutritious foods in the north called Nutrition North. It was implemented last spring as well. That's a direct program that's contributing to enhanced access to nutritious foods in the north.
Thank you, distinguished guests. It's good to see some of you.
I participated earlier this fall in the aboriginal and northern affairs committee, and we talked about the resolution of native claim lands. I'm glad to see a large number here.
In your presentation you talked about $2.5 billion that's been set aside for the resolution of specific claims, and that's a big number. I can understand the need to resort to supplemental estimates, because these kinds of negotiations are inherently unpredictable. There are lots of twists and turns.
Could you describe what's involved in the implementation of the resolution of these claims and some of the creative approaches the department is using that might differ from what was done 10 to 20 years ago, and why those things are perhaps leading to additional costs? Hopefully that will lay a framework for long-term benefits for first nations, in terms of resolution of the claims, better governance, and then ultimately some form of self-government.
Certainly this is an area in which a lot of progress has been made over the last two years. In 2007 the government announced a new initiative called “Justice at Last”, which responded directly to the frustrations expressed by communities about the slow pace of these outstanding claims. Some of them went back decades without any resolution or solution. So we put in place a fairly aggressive process by which within three years of receiving a claim we would have completed the assessment and made a decision as to whether we accepted the claim—whether or not there was a legal obligation—or we refused the claim. Then after that would be another three-year timeframe within which the claim would be negotiated and an offer would be made and hopefully resolved.
After three years, the first nation has the option of taking the claim directly to the specific claims tribunal, which is now up and running and hearing cases. It has five cases now.
In terms of assessments, we have completely cleared the backlog that existed back in 2007-08. Now we're in the process of negotiating many of those claims we have accepted to negotiate. There are over 300 claims currently under negotiation. Some of them are fairly small. Some of them are fairly big. We've made some changes. For example, for the small claims, in order to avoid a lot of the legal costs, the negotiating costs, we have a fast-track process through which we can simply resolve the claim very quickly without the first nation incurring loans. That's one of the approaches.
The other approach we've taken is to do shared valuation studies, so that at the end of the day when a settlement number is put on the table, the first nation is not surprised, because they were part of the valuation. So if they lost 10,000 acres of land 100 years ago, we know how to evaluate what that land is worth today; they will have all that information, and that hopefully will lead to a quicker and easier solution and settlement.
The progress we've made so far does demonstrate that we are making progress, having settled about $1.2 billion worth—over 70 claims—since the introduction of “Justice at Last”.
I'd like to come back to the Indian residential school thing, just so I understand the budgeting of it. I want to be clear that I'm in favour of resolving these issues. I just want to make sure I understand the money when I'm looking at these books.
Vote 45 has residential schools in supplementary estimates (B)...well, it's not in supps (B); it's from already approved authorities to date. The figure is $33.5 million, based on what's printed in your book.
The item we're talking about today was $179 million, which is $136 million of new money, with $43 million reprofiled. In my understanding, that means we had a budget last year, we didn't spend it, so we're reprofiling it into this year's estimates.
Am I right? Are we talking about the same line item, the same area, or am I mixing two things up?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members.
[Translation]
Mr. Chair, committee members, I am pleased to appear before you this afternoon as the Chief Financial Officer for Human Resources and Skills Development Canada.
[English]
For simplicity's sake, I will use the acronym HRSDC throughout this presentation.
I would like to introduce my colleagues who are with me today: Kathryn McDade, assistant deputy minister, learning branch; Paul Thompson, assistant deputy minister, processing and payment services branch; and my colleague, Nancy Milroy-Swainson, director general, office of disability issues, income security and social development branch.
Allow me to offer the committee an overview of the HRSDC portion of the supplementary estimates (B), tabled on November 3, 2011. Through these estimates we are providing Parliament with an update to one statutory program, mainly an increase of $43.8 million in forecasted expenditures for the Canada disability savings program.
[Translation]
Introduced in Budget 2007, the Registered Disability Savings Plan is a long-term savings and asset building plan for people with disabilities.
Our revised forecast is based on two factors. First, provincial and territorial exemption announcements were made sooner than expected. To date, all provinces and territories have announced a full or partial exemption of Registered Disability Savings Plan income and assets. Second, financial institutions who offer Registered Disability Savings Plans have increased awareness, and individuals have greater access to the program given the financial institutions offering it.
Committee members can see this item on page 77 of the Supplementary Estimates (B). Because the Canada Disability Savings Program is a statutory program, this update is provided for your information only as Parliament has already approved the purpose of these expenditures and the terms and conditions under which they may be made.
[English]
In addition to this statutory item, HRSDC is asking for an additional $166 million in spending authorities, of which $149.5 million is related to a request for the writeoff of debts owed to the crown for unrecoverable Canada student loans.
Mr. Chair, this student loans writeoff item is the same item contained in our supplementary estimates (C) of last fiscal year. Given that last year's supplementary estimates (C) did not receive royal assent, we have reintroduced this item in the supplementary estimates of this fiscal year.
[Translation]
Allow me to provide a little context. A large percentage of students respect and repay their loans. Some borrowers have difficulties with repayment, and we have measures to support them through the repayment process. Nevertheless, some loans go into default. We have a vigorous recovery process, including working with our partners at Canada Revenue Agency.
[English]
The Canada Student Financial Assistance Act establishes a limitation period of six years between the time the borrowers last acknowledged their Canada student loan and any legal activity the crown can undertake to recover that debt. Once this period has expired, the crown no longer has the authority to take action to collect on the debt. Ninety-nine percent of our writeoff request has been deemed unrecoverable for this reason.
Other requests are itemized on page 80 of these estimates.
Committee members will note that we have several items listed under vote 5, grants and contributions. Of these items, all but $9 million represent carry forward of unspent funds from the previous fiscal year. One of the non-carry-forward items is the new horizons for seniors program to support projects that ensure seniors contribute to and benefit from activities in their communities.
As for our requests under vote 1, operating expenditures, our largest item is for $9.5 million, related to the government's advertising program. This request is to fund campaigns to promote skilled trades and raise awareness about elder abuse and financial elder abuse. Another item is the $2.6 million for the implementation of the enhanced guaranteed income supplement for those low-income seniors who rely almost exclusively on their old age security and the guaranteed income supplement.
[Translation]
I hope this overview has given you a more precise idea of the content of the Supplementary Estimates (B) for HRSDC.
[English]
My colleagues and I will be happy to answer your questions.