Thank you.
Mr. Lauzon, by a happy coincidence, your five minutes are up simultaneously to your exhausting your questions.
That concludes one round of questioning, by our accounting. We have time for one more round, and the NDP has expressed an interest in one more time slot.
I do have one question. I was involved in the early days from the creation of the office of the whistleblower with the Federal Accountability Act, and even earlier when we had a very high profile case when the former privacy commissioner himself had a whistleblower come to this committee and expose wrongdoing in that office.
There was expectation, I think, that when we finally beefed up the Office of the Integrity Commissioner through the Accountability Act, there would be a windfall of whistleblowers coming forward, that there would be a flurry of wrongdoing exposed in the public sector, but we really haven't see that. Either there isn't a great deal of wrongdoing going on or whistleblowers still don't feel confident that they can come forward and tell their story without fear of reprisal.
Briefly, in your opinion, which is it?