Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the guests. It is good to see you again, Mr. Khatter.
I want to return to the Great Lakes a bit here. Being the southernmost MP in Canada from down in the Windsor area, just outside of Windsor, we've had a number of reports down there. The Gilbertson-Brophy report--I don't know if either of you are familiar with that at all, but certainly they're beginning to document a number of the links between our air pollution and our cancer rates, our respiratory problems. We have some of the highest rates down there. Even within our own family we've seen non-Hodgkins lymphoma, a number of those things there.
Windsor happens to have one of the highest miscarriage rates in all of Canada as well. My wife works on the birth side of things. High-end fertility among couples, you name it, it's happening in our region.
You've made the comment that CEPA has not protected the Great Lakes basin sufficiently. I think that was perhaps in your opening comments, or your opening comments, Mr. Stack, but one of you will be able to address that.
I want you to expand on that a little bit more, but before expanding on that I want to ask the flip side of it: have there been any CEPA-related success stories in the Great Lakes area that you can talk about?