I'm an engineer, so I love to dive into stuff about data. I was referring to the comparison between what the United States has—something called EJSCREEN, which stands for environmental justice screen—versus the paucity of what we have in Canada. The closest thing I can point to is the national pollutant release inventory, which has no information at all on demographics. All it does it provide pollutant discharge information on a facility basis across the country. If you were to look at the website for the NPRI, you wouldn't even get close to being able to find out the type of information you can from the U.S. EPA's EJSCREEN, which is a system that was set up after the executive order. You can zoom in on a community. You can see exactly what the demographics of that community are and what the exposures are.
I was really contrasting the gap that exists between the U.S. and Canada, and how much we need to catch up to make this information transparent. Collect it, analyze it, put it on the web, make it transparent, and then everyone start using it when they're making decisions that could impact racialized or indigenous communities.