Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you for leading us through what was probably a historic vote that we had on the last segment.
There are a couple of things happening that I want to ask about with regard to Mr. Musson. We have historic government spending on a number of different programs and services right now. We have a lot of innovation that's taking place. We also had a directive prior to this, but even more so now, to move more Canadians online, whether it be at home, through education, through business or even on personal matters. In fact, it's for everything from your home family experience to getting your daily banking and a whole series of things done. Expectations have risen even in applying for government services during all of this.
We also heard from a number of witnesses and, just recently, our Privacy Commissioner that our laws are outdated with regard to protecting privacy for individual Canadians and even for the business sector.
From my own work on the Competition Bureau, I know that it's antiquated in terms of bringing down penalties on those who are bad players. We also don't have international agreements to go after bad operators with regard to even some of our own trading partners. We've done some work here on the committee, and I thank the committee again for its work on fraud.
I'd just like to know a little more about the particulars of your program. You mentioned a phrase about leaving “the side door” open. Can you flesh that out in terms of how as we ramp up our speed in going online, at the same time what's happening that's really vulnerable...? How does your not-for-profit program fill that void? I think you mentioned 25,000 unfilled positions before COVID-19.