Good morning, and thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much to our witnesses.
As was remarked earlier, it's great to have folks here from Global Affairs who were more intimately involved in the acquisition we're discussing than some of our witnesses yesterday.
I want to start perhaps at a high level and talk a little bit about why this issue has come before the committee. I think part of it is that the properties that are selected for consular use in cities like New York tend to be expensive. They tend to be in expensive parts of town, and the opulence and the ostentatiousness of those properties make them, rightfully, I think, a target for questions about the appropriateness of those purchases.
At the same time, I think we all want to ensure that our consular staff and our diplomats have appropriate facilities for their important work.
The apartment we're talking about is located in a neighbourhood that's known as Billionaires' Row, and we're having this conversation at a time of historic wealth inequality and an affordability crisis that my colleagues have already mentioned. I think that's one of the reasons we're focusing in on this particular decision. Global Affairs chose to buy an apartment on Billionaires' Row in a neighbourhood that has some of the most expensive real estate in the world.
My first question, probably for Mr. Cousineau, is whether in the decision-making process the optics and the potential implications of buying a property on Billionaires' Row at a time of historic wealth inequality, both in the United States and Canada, came up as a potential risk factor for Global Affairs.