Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for your presentations today.
I'd like to ask specifically, initially, Dr. Sanders to tell us a little bit about how the recommendations are made public. I know we've touched on this before, but could you elaborate on that, and on whether it's just the actual recommendations--the decision--that's made public, or whether, as is the case in the U.K., they're giving much more information, as you noted, justifying why that particular decision has been made?
What I have gleaned from a lot of the witnesses, and I think others here have as well, is that this frustration seems to be significantly related to a lack of information and understanding. Of course, you can't have understanding without information, and it is completely related to the accountability of any process.
What are you presently making available to the public?