Thank you.
In regard to Canada's international reputation, we did hear a different level of discourse from witnesses here, from our own agency officials, which is interesting. There's no question that our officials are doing a good job and our systems are working, but I think the issue of money laundering and terrorism financing has certainly changed, which you pointed out, and there is a lot of work to be done. I worry that Canada's reputation as a good place to launder money might be growing. We're seeing correlations—and this is what we heard from testimony—that the human traffickers and then the drug runners come where the money launderers are. The money launderers don't care who they're laundering for, and that seems to be the client base.
From this committee's perspective on the changes and the investments to move our system to where a lot of other countries are, is that commitment in your department as well as Public Safety? That's what we certainly saw in the U.S. and the U.K. It's a joint program between their equivalents of the Department of Finance and Public Safety. Have you given any thought to maybe bringing them into the fold, not just on a committee discussion basis, but as overseers of the policy formation process for any reviews moving forward?