Absolutely. I'm the chair of a thing called the global task force for Public Media Alliance, and that group is six of the largest public broadcasters. We meet regularly, and we talk about challenges.
I'm delighted to say that we'll be hosting the annual meeting of public broadcasters here in Ottawa in October to talk about the issues that we all face— issues of disinformation, issues of financial challenges, issues of identity—and the role of public broadcasting in the future.
I can reassure the committee members that our industry is in crisis, not just CBC/Radio-Canada but the entire industry. You've heard it from other witnesses.
Rather than be over-indexing on performance pay, I would urge this committee to think about the solutions for the future of domestic media in this country—not just public, but public, private, news and entertainment, because we are in crisis. I've been in this business 40 years, and never before have I seen such great pressure on our domestic industry, and it is very worrisome. We see people disappearing, companies disappearing and production houses shutting. It is extremely worrisome. It's terrible to lose one individual employee, let alone 140.