Mr. Chair, I want to thank the member for his question.
The members of the expert panel are selected through an open and transparent process. This morning, for instance, we posted to our website information on an open and transparent process for recruiting candidates willing to sit on the official language rights expert panel. In accordance with the process established from the start, a selection committee reviews the applications. I chair that committee, and I'm here today with a representative of the Department of Justice and an outside representative from the private sector. We identify candidates who meet the criteria we've set.
Next, we conduct interviews, as necessary, with those individuals to ensure they meet the criteria and to assess their knowledge of the field, official languages in this case. We then establish a pool of potential candidates. When positions on the expert panel need to be filled, we send the minister a list of candidates. Once the minister has made a decision regarding a new member on the expert panel, we inform the University of Ottawa, which is responsible for the program, of that decision. I then contact the person in question to inform him or her of the minister's decision and to determine whether that person wishes to accept the position.
We then inform the University of Ottawa that there is a new member on the expert panel and speak with the individual to ensure he or she is well aware of the way the expert panel operates and of the program's parameters. In answering the previous question, I mentioned the criteria for what constitutes a case of national significance, test cases and so on. The members of the expert panel generally meet four times a year to review funding applications submitted to the program and to make their decisions.