Sure.
What Perrin said is absolutely true. I wasn't with the chamber at the time, but I've spoken with a couple of people who actually sat on the round tables, and they've said they were there as individuals. They were brought to the round tables because of their expertise in the sector. They weren't there necessarily representing their company.
When the round tables report came out, we did have several members come to us. They took issue and had difficulty with the establishment of an ombudsman when the OECD-mandated national contact point already existed and could, through increased resources devoted to it, do the job that the round tables felt it should.