Mr. Chairman, my point was really that I think there should be one source of truth and that information is one to many. Over the years Canada has built up an enviable electronic real-time system of one to many. Anybody can sign up to that, so we all get the information at the same time.
When you have the complications of a rolling recall--and, as Mr. Wilcott pointed out, this was a difficult recall--there is a temptation to have some sidebar conversations, and then the media start to speculate and report on things. I think we all play a role in this, but I would encourage support for the CFIA system to be out there. We know it works.
In the bisphenol A situation, the media were speculating on what the standard would be. From our standpoint, we did not react to that. We waited until Health Canada actually made a definitive statement, and I'm glad we did, because the speculation was based on wrong information. I would encourage total and absolute respect for the CFIA system, because that is the only trigger we respond to. When there are discussions with media, etc., it can sometimes complicate things.