Thank you, Madam Chair.
My question will be with regard to the Hazardous Materials Information Review Commission, and it's going to be addressed to Mary Hill or Sharon Watts.
Basically, the commission only gets to review a small number of hazard sheets per year, and we know that there are about 20,000 hazard sheets in Canada, so that means there's probably about 250 to 300 that get reviewed a year. When called on to review these data sheets, what we've noticed is that there have been a lot of errors and inaccuracies found by the commission, and it's been actually quite high, 8.5 to 9 errors per sheet, and some of these deal with toxic effects, and there other issues, of course.
The commission has a limited mandate and limited resources. We're just wondering, to address what appears to be a considerable amount of disinformation in an area where sharing accurate information can save health and lives, is there more that you could be doing? Or have you brought the problems to the government's attention? What is it doing in response and what role are you playing?