Thank you very much.
I think it might help to just step back at the end of our meeting today and take a little bit of a bird's-eye view. I think part of our role here on the committee is to address concerns that Canadians may have that some of the extraordinary powers granted under the emergency orders were improperly used or abused.
I'm wondering if you have any advice for the committee on who else we should be talking to, or what questions we should be asking, to discover, to the best of our abilities, if that's the case; and if that's not the case, to be able to reassure Canadians that things unfolded as they should have under the orders, and how to follow up if they're concerned about lasting consequences with, say, their financial institution or anything else; or, if there are to be no lasting consequences for them, how they might be able to feel reassured that this is the case, who to pursue those questions with, and what would count as kind of getting to a point where they should feel satisfied that those questions have been answered.
I'm wondering if you have any recommendations for the committee on how we can undertake those two tasks—satisfy ourselves that there haven't been abuses, or to find them if they're there; and then, in the event that there haven't been, how to provide reassuring advice to Canadians to that effect and some advice on how they can pursue those questions further in their individual cases to satisfy themselves.