Thank you very much.
Commissioner, I think your report on the Veterans Affairs department was certainly one of the most alarming reports that Canadians have seen. I feel that in your commentary on it, you feel that this may not be just in this one department, that it may indeed be the stock in trade of diminishing the reputation of people who criticize this government.
In fact, last week I heard from an injured worker in British Columbia who, because of his workers' compensation status, was being denied mental health access to regular care in British Columbia. It was a very straightforward letter of complaint about this practice and against the Canada Health Act. He was called back from the health minister's office, the Health Canada office, and the person seemed to have every detail of his situation in terms of his relationship with the Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia.
I will write to you under separate cover for this, but it did make me feel again that it seems that if anybody complains, this government feels it's perfectly okay to open their files and discredit them.
What are you going to do to find out whether these two well-publicized ones in Veterans Affairs are just the tip of the iceberg?