Certainly there's a benefit to having an external party evaluate what the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has done. Obviously the Auditor General has a strong authoritative voice. That has to be complemented by information. It's possible it's already been collected but certainly not reported.
We don't know how many people, according to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, die from food-borne pathogens every year. They don't report the number of people who are dying from nutrition-related illnesses. We get that from World Health Organization multipliers. It's fine to say we've got the safest food supply in the world, but you have to demonstrate that with evidence. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, maybe because it has a conflicted mandate, isn't reporting that kind of evidence.