Oh, geez; you'd think I'd know after a few years of this.
What I was saying that was all of the data on the waste-water surveillance, in particular the viral load assessments, is provided to our regional public health units but also to Public Health Ontario and the Public Health Agency of Canada. It's used in assessments for public health policies across Ontario. Similar systems have been set up in other provinces as well.
In addition to that, we do assessments whenever there is a high level of SARS-CoV-2 in the waste water at ports of entry, and then also in large urban areas where we're assessing this through Health Canada. Three groups—University of Waterloo, University of Guelph and Western University—do that surveillance. That is a more in-depth analysis of what types of variants are circulating in the population and the proportions of those variants.
That information is shared, again, with the Public Health Agency of Canada, the public health units and Public Health Ontario. There is an attempt to provide that information through the Ontario science table. It's a little bit more complicated in terms of its reporting. We hope that the information will be shared.
There is some confidentiality in relation to that information that is assessed. That is more in relation to understanding when something is coming into the country and how it spreads. That is up to the Public Health Agency of Canada to assess and determine when they want to release that information.