Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to both the witnesses.
Tracey, thank you for your very extensive paper and recommendations.
One of the problems with data--and I don't disagree with you that we need it in an open fashion, and that it needs to be available--is which data believe. How do you get around what's accurate and what's not?
In the most recent example, Stats Canada crime information was disputed--I think wrongly disputed--by a research think tank the other day. It seems the numbers in that crime data were cherry-picked out of another report. In any event, now you have both sets of statistics out there.
How do you see open government and information being made in a way that you can have confidence in the data itself?