Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Before I get to my question, Ms. Maynard, let me first congratulate you. This is something that we rarely see here, by which I mean being so efficient, being proactive, trying to improve things without constantly looking to create another bureaucracy to manage an inefficient one. Kudos to you.
You say that you have fewer subcontractors. So you will not be among those asking the government to invest more than $20 billion a year in subcontractors. Well done, I'm really glad to hear that. We like to see that.
You talked about transitory information earlier. Obviously, there's a lot of information in the digital era, texts and so forth. When there is a request for information, do you sometimes sense that the person might use the pretext that the information is transitory?
We had a witness here who said that he had installed an app that automatically deleted his messages. He said that, in any case, it was transitory information. If it's not you or us who make that decision, how does someone decide that the information is merely transitory? The thing is that you don't have access to the information after the fact.
