Thank you very much, Chair.
I appreciate the expertise around the table, both in person and virtually.
Let me start by acknowledging and thanking you all for that expertise and the feedback here today.
As a practical matter, the testimony you provide, as Mr. Green mentioned, goes into our writing a report and making recommendations. Because we have limited time in this meeting, if there's anything further you would like to add—specific recommendations you maybe didn't have a chance to address during the course of the meeting—please feel free to send them to the committee, as that also gets considered.
I'm going to ask all four of our witnesses the same questions I've asked each panel.
There are two questions, and the first requires just a yes-or-no answer, and then I'll get into some more substantive items.
My question is, how important is a good, accessible access to information system for a modern democracy and everything that entails, including things like understanding our history, reconciliation and that sort of thing?
I'll start with Mr. Koltun—yes or no?