Yes. Sorry for that.
Thank you very much for appearing.
I did want to talk about, if it hasn't been touched on already, the section that had been in the previous bill, and I know you had talked about it in some critiques you had provided. That was clause 55 of Bill C-11, referencing section 16 of the Access to Information Act.
In a nutshell, there were concerns you had put forward before that were talking about provisions to enable government to cloak in secrecy for 20 years the information provided.
Mr. Martin might have talked about that already. Thank you.
I'll just then cut to a couple of other things, since he stole my good question.
The other thing I want to talk about, and I've asked this of other whistle-blowers--Mr. Chopra and others--is that when we look at what's in front of us presently, that's one side of the equation, but the other side of the equation is, what about all those whistle-blowers who have already suffered? I had asked in the House and talked to Mr. Baird about compensation for whistle-blowers. I'd like you to speak to that for a moment, and the importance of doing that, to make people whole and to make sure they're not forgotten.